Jun 022014
 

• Investment Roadshow touts economic growth

• Fil-Ams could join development investments”

• Openings in IT, pharmaceuticals, etc,

Ambassador Jose L. Cuisia, Jr. and other members of the private-sector delegation from Manila hold one-on-one meetings with prospective investors on the sides of the 3rd Philippine Investment Mission in Atlanta. (PHILIPPINE EMBASSY PHOTOS/LILIBETH ALMONTE-ARBEZ)

Ambassador Cuisia thanks Estrella Cramer of UPS Global Procurement at the end of the 3rd Philippine Investment Mission business forum at the UPS auditorium in Atlanta.

ATLANTA, Georgia — Saying prospects for the Philippines have never been brighter, a high-level business delegation from Manila called on Filipino-Americans to take advantage of the opportunities offered by the improved business climate in their homeland.

In their meeting with the Filipino-American community in Atlanta, members of the 3rd Private Sector-Led Philippines Investment Roadshow headed by noted economist Dr. Bernardo Villegas urged Fil-Ams to play a role in maintaining the Philippines’ upward economic trajectory.

The meeting was part of the Philippines: Asia’s New Emerging Tiger business forum that was also participated in by Fred Austria, president of DMCI; Bong Borja, president of Expert Global; Martin Pascual, director of Pascual Laboratories; and Phillip Romualdez, president of the Chamber of Mines of the Philippines.

Villegas gave an overview of the positive investment climate in the Philippines and predicted that the country’s economic growth of 7.5 percent last year could even expand to 10 to 15 percent in the next decade.

“The economy is so strong that even if the people decide to elect a movie star to succeed President Aquino, the Philippines will survive and continue to prosper,” Villegas predicted.

The delegation, which also included Ambassador Jose L. Cuisia, Jr., said big businesses and corporations are not the only ones that can invest in the Philippines and that the Filipino-American community also has a special role to play in the country’s economy.

In his remarks, Cuisia said the Philippines is ripe for business and investment for the estimated 3.5 million Filipinos currently in the United States.

Philippine Honorary Consul General Raul Donato addresses members of the Filipino-American community in a reception for members of the private sector delegation taking part in the 3rd Philippine Investment Roadshowin Atlanta. The reception was organized by the Philippine-American Chamber of Commerce of Georgia.

“I encourage you to consider ‘development investment’ as you make your remittances. You can be a small angel investor to small- and medium-size enterprises in the Philippines that actually comprise the backbone of Philippine business and drivers of growth and employment in your country,” Cuisia said.

In the forum at the United Parcel Service auditorium that was attended by top Atlanta executives, the delegation presented investment opportunities in business process and knowledge process operations, information technology, pharmaceuticals and biotechnology and real estate and construction.

First Secretary and Consul Lilibeth Almonte-Arbez, Trade Counselor Maria Roseni Alvero and Honorary Consul General Raul Donato organized the forum in collaboration with United Parcel Service, the Metro Atlanta Chamber of Commerce and the Philippine American Chamber of Commerce of Georgia.

Coca Cola and the World Affairs Council hosted the delegation at a breakfast roundtable attended by Council founding members like UPS, Crawford and Company, AJC Corporation and the Georgia University School of Law.

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