CEO Nick Baird of UK Trade and Investment PHOTO FROM Global Trader
United Kingdom paints bright outlook on trade with  Philippines
LONDON—The Philippines is a "hugely exciting" market where  the United Kingdom is keen on boosting reciprocal investment.
Key trade officials here bared this bright outlook, noting  that the UK has been setting its sights on Southeast Asia as a priority growth  area amid the continuing dim prospects in Western economies.
They said the UK hoped to step up trade with growing  markets to combat a general sense of pessimism over economic numbers here and  in the eurozone.
Nick Baird, chief executive of the UK Trade and Investment  (UKTI), the state body that links UK firms to the global market, said that  British firms were looking at ways to tap the Philippines' robust economy and  invest in major infrastructure, health care and retail-related projects.
"I think that for us, the huge opportunities there are  certainly around big infrastructure projects, health… We're also very  interested in areas I would describe as building on and working with countries'  growing middle classes, so [it's about] providing better education, health  services, accessing the consumption of these middle classes through the retail  sector," Baird told Asean reporters on a visit here.
Baird said the Philippines enjoyed the confidence of the UK  business community, particularly of Richard Lambert, former head of the UK  employers group, the Confederation of British Industry (CBI), and now  chancellor of the University of Warwick, a top British university.
"We have a lot of very strong champions for the Philippine  market. I was talking recently to Mr. Lambert, former head of CBI, which is our  biggest business organization and he's saying the Philippines is a hugely  exciting market," said Baird.
The Philippines is currently regarded among the world's  booming markets and is expected to retain in the second semester the  6.1-percent growth rate it posted in the first half of the year.
International credit ratings agencies Moody's Investors  Service, Fitch Ratings, and Standard and Poor's upgraded the country's rating  to a notch just below investment grade, citing the Philippines' steady growth  pace.
The UK is sending a trade mission to the Philippines this  week to touch base with the government and business sector and discuss possible  partnerships in social infrastructure and transport.
Participating UK companies includes 
- Arup
- Tata Steel International
- Kier Construction
- Tony Gee & Partners
- GE Healthcare
- Ryder Architecture
- IMC Worldwide
- SKM Colin Buchanan
- KM&T
Enumerated are top firms in construction, design and  architecture, project management and consultancy, services and supply chain  management, according to the UK Embassy in Manila.
Total bilateral trade between the Philippines from January  to August this year was placed at 512.9 million British pounds (₱33.8  billion), a 5-percent growth over the same period in 2011.
Such an economic glow in the Philippines, also mirrored  across the region, is a bright spot amid continuing economic troubles in the  eurozone and the slow recovery in the United States. The latest UK growth rate  was placed at 1 percent and the struggle to raise this is expected in the next  few years.
"The ASEAN is really very important to us not just because  this is such, collectively, a huge economy, comparable in size to China and  Japan, bigger than India, but also because in many of the countries, we have  good strong positive relationships," Baird said.
He said the UK hoped to establish greater two-way trade  with ASEAN firms, stepping up both export and inward investments. Currently,  Singapore, Malaysia and Thailand are among the UK's major trade and investment  partners.
More than half of UK exports go to the developed but  currently struggling markets and it has only a 1.2-percent share of imports in  major growth markets, including the whole of ASEAN.
"Britain wants to hugely expand its export capacity, with  particular focus on the growth markets and, in that, the ASEAN markets have a  special place for us. And second, this is a country that is massively open to  foreign investors and companies of all kinds. It's very easy to set up business  here," he said.
He said the UK aimed to double its trade with each of the ASEAN  countries by 2015. And while concerns about political stability, corruption and  business ease might remain, the UK has seen "far less risk to trade with ASEAN  than there is to trade with China, Africa or India," he said.
"We have been trading successfully in the last few years in  our European backyard and with the United States, but of course those markets  are still weak and we need to get much better trading into the big growth  markets of Asia, Latin America and Africa," Baird said.
The UKTI, through the year-old UK ASEAN Business Council,  is hoping to facilitate this exchange through spreading greater ASEAN market  awareness to UK firms, said the council's executive director, Tom Burden.
"We are working on raising awareness of ASEAN markets in  the UK. It's really about giving Asia the attention it deserves," Burden told  reporters in a separate briefing.
Inquirer (http://is.gd/1un280)
 




 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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