IFC Assures Support for the Philippines Amid Global Financial Crisis
In Manila:
Karen Villalobos
Phone: +632 843 7333
E-mail: KVillalobos@ifc.org
In Hong Kong:
Andrew Mak
Phone: +852 2509 8110
E-mail: AMak@ifc.org
Manila, Philippines, October 29, 2008—IFC,
a member of the World Bank Group, will continue to invest significantly
in infrastructure, agribusiness, and loans to micro, small, and medium
enterprises in the Philippines as the world’s poor confront “the triple
jeopardy of the food, fuel, and financial crisis,” said Lars Thunell,
IFC Executive Vice President and CEO.
The investments affirm IFC’s unwavering
support for the Philippines and advance its objective of helping people
escape poverty in a sustainable manner, particularly in the frontier region
of Mindanao, where some of the country’s poorest and most conflict-ridden
provinces are located.
“Through good times and bad, IFC has
been working with its long-term partners in the private sector to create
jobs and promote economic growth and make a real difference for the poor,”
said Thunell, who is visiting the East Asia and Pacific region. “IFC looks
at the global financial crisis as an opportunity because it is in a strong
capital position to provide countercyclical finance as private markets
pull back.”
The global financial crisis will bring
about slower economic growth, Thunell said, and could hinder the ability
of governments to help poor communities. “There is as much need for a
human rescue package as there is for a financial bailout package,” he
said.
Thunell said that the per-capita gross
domestic product of all other Philippine regions is not even half that
of metropolitan Manila. For this reason, IFC is concentrating its resources
in areas other than Manila, such as Mindanao. IFC opened a Davao office,
the first outside Manila, in 2006.
The primary area of IFC activities in
the Philippines has been the power sector, in which IFC has already invested
$480 million in the past year. The investments support reforms embodied
in the Electric Power Industry Reform Act. Thunell said it is important
that the government ensures that entities such as the Energy Regulatory
Commission and the Wholesale Electricity Spot Market function effectively.
Agribusiness is another key area of
IFC’s investment and advisory services. IFC has identified the export
of fruits and vegetables, particularly bananas, as its key focus area in
the Philippines because of the country’s considerable comparative advantage.
High food prices give new urgency to the development of this sector.
IFC is also providing investment and
advisory services to promote lending to micro, small, and medium enterprises,
to design a credit information corporation, and to introduce an energy
efficiency and renewable energy financing program.
About IFC
IFC, a member of the World Bank Group,
creates opportunity for people to escape poverty and improve their lives.
We foster sustainable economic growth in developing countries by supporting
private sector development, mobilizing private capital, and providing advisory
and risk mitigation services to businesses and governments. Our new investments
totaled $16.2 billion in fiscal 2008, a 34 percent increase over the previous
year. For more information, visit www.ifc.org.
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