Port
Development, II(September 29, 2003)
(Continued from September
15)
EO 59
In 1999, in an attempt to accelerate the modernization
of the Manila North Harbor and our other domestic
ports, the government issued Executive Order
No. 59. The presidential issuance mandated the
PPA to focus its efforts on rationalizing, modernizing
and improving port services and facilities.
It further directed PPA to partner with the
private sector in unifying, integrating and
rationalizing port services in order to encourage
more investments in port infrastructure, equipment
and facilities and allow labor to share in the
benefits of the program.
The domestic
port operators and consumer groups again objected
to the implementation of EO 59 and blocked its
execution by staging strikes and paralyzing
operations in the ports of Manila and Cebu.
The shipping
lines have had to incur increased operating
costs because of the delay in the planned modernization
of North Harbor.
What needs
to be done?
Much has to be done to modernize our port services
and facilities, increase port efficiencies,
and improve vessel turn around time.
We must find
ways to keep our passengers safe while efficiently
servicing cargo. Concrete steps must be taken
to rationalize cargo handling costs.
We need to take
steps to encourage (1) the development of our
ports and the creation of hub ports, (2) the
investment of more capital, (3) the implementation
of higher service standards, and (4) the provision
of better equipment.
We must also
find solutions to the socio-economic problems
connected with port modernization - the displacement
of present investors in cargo handling services,
the retraining and employment of port labor,
the relocation of informal port settlers and
other similar socio-political concerns - in
order to lessen resistance to port modernization.
Rationalizing
Port Development and Creating Economies of Scale
Programs which must be put in place include:
- Development of an overall
port master plan that will support the integration
of our transport systems including the provision
of:
- Required infrastructure
for a road-roro network;
- Ports for vessel services
on long haul routes between major Philippine
ports, and for tramp and liner services on
short routes not part of the road-roro network;
- Feeder or hub ports to service
our import and export trades.
- Creation of infrastructure
to support port development programs, the
construction of hub ports, the integration
of intermodal and multi-modal transport systems
and the generation of needed economies of
scale.
- Construction of passenger
terminals to assist tourism programs.
- Promotion of efficiency
and transparency for cargo handling operations
in our ports.
- Implementation of programs
necessary for environmental protection.
- Examination and unbundling
of cargo handling costs and other non-transparent
costs.
- Evaluation and review of
pilotage policies in the domestic trade and
revision of existing laws.
- Implementation of programs
for the constant dredging of our rivers, fairways,
ports, and harbors.
- Maintenance of a sustained
vessel traffic management and security scheme
for our rivers, ports and seas.
- Adoption of a uniform tariff
of port fees for all domestic operators operating
in the BIMP-EAGA region.
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Port
Development (September 15, 2003)
Port development
is a major concern of the shipping sector. However,
port development and its corresponding investment
programs properly fall within the jurisdiction
of relevant government agencies, the powers
of which cannot be supplanted by the Maritime
Industry Cluster. The Cluster has identified
the goals and programs that it will bring to
the proper government agency for implementation.
History
The Philippine port system was originally under
the jurisdiction of the Bureau of Customs (BOC).
Apart from its power to collect tariff and duties
from importers, the BOC was given the power
to license cargo handlers and authorize them
to collect cargo handling and other port fees
as prescribed in the Tariff and Customs Code.
In 1974, the
Philippine Ports Authority (PPA) was created.
It was given the mandate to develop our port
system and provide, on its own or through the
services of another, the necessary cargo handling
and port auxiliary services to ensure the efficient
operation of the Philippine port system.
At the time
the supervision of port services was turned
over to the PPA, there were as many as 50 cargo
handling operators in some of the busiest ports
in the country. Our ports were not mechanized
and cargo on our vessels were loaded and unloaded
manually. Operations at the port were labor
intensive, with little or no investments in
equipment on the part of authorized cargo handling
operators. Heavy reliance was put on vessel
cranes to load and unloaded heavy cargo.
Vessel-specific
service by cargo handling contractors encouraged
the proliferation of numerous service providers.
Vessels were serviced by gangs. Each gang was
headed by a "cabo". The cabo contracted
directly with the vessel owner for the loading
and unloading of his vessel at a fixed price
per piece of cargo loaded or unloaded.
The cabo served
as an independent contractor and hired his own
laborers who worked in his gang. He was paid
for every piece of cargo his gang actually handled
and he, in turn, paid each of his workers for
every piece of cargo each one actually carried.
The cabo earned his keep by pocketing the difference
between what was paid to him by the ship owner
and what he paid to his laborer.
LOI 1005-A
In the mid-1970s, in an effort to modernize
shipping operations and reduce damage and pilferage
to cargo, ship owners introduced containerized
service in the domestic trade.
The cargo handlers
were not prepared for this shift in service.
Cargo handlers had to rely on vessel cranes
to load and unload containers and shipping lines
had to purchase their own forklifts in order
to move containers from shipside to quay and
back. In order to keep their employment, cargo
handlers were engaged to operate the equipment
owned by the shipping lines.
In 1980, Government
issued Letter of Instruction No. 1005-A. This
mandated the integration of cargo handling operators
in the different ports. The integration was
required in order to maximize the advantages
of having streamlined operations including the
achievement of economies of scale, better supervision,
and control of port operations, optimum utilization
of port labor, facilities and equipment, stability
in labor compensation, larger capital and borrowing
base, savings in overhead costs and flexibility
in operations.
The integration
of services was implemented by government in
two stages - first, by limiting cargo handling
operations at a particular port to fewer operators,
then by integrating the remaining cargo handlers
in the port into just one organization.
To assist these
labor contractors and preserve industrial peace
at the port, some shipping lines assisted these
labor contractors by helping them form companies
that could serve as the vehicle that would integrate
port services. Several cargo handling companies
were born using this scheme.
Through this
integration, cargo handlers were able to obtain
temporary permits from the PPA which allowed
them to continue operating at piers they traditionally
serviced.
Return of
Investor Confidence
The change in government that occurred in the
latter part of the 1980s, encouraged the entry
of new and better capitalized cargo handling
operators who bidded for the operations of the
Manila South Harbor and the Manila International
Container Port. These operators continue to
operate these ports and they have put in place
investments and equipment that have allowed
these ports to operate at world-class standards.
The return of
investor confidence in the country paved the
way for the entry of new capital and increased
investments in domestic cargo handling operations
as well. During this period, a few of our domestic
ports saw the improvement in service brought
about by capital infusion from cargo handling
operators.
Not all domestic
ports, however, benefited from this economic
upswing. Some ports, including our premier domestic
port, the Manila North Harbor, continued to
be operated by cargo handling operators who
relied heavily on equipment provided by shipping
lines.
Through the 1990s several attempts were made
to develop and modernize the Manila North Harbor.
However, because of continuous opposition from
labor groups, the cargo handling operators,
and the consumer groups, the planned modernization
was never implemented.
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The
Shipbuilding and Ship Repair Sector (September
1, 2003)
The Shipbuilding
and ship repair sector recognizes the need to
respond to the requirements of our shipping
sector for new vessels built to international
standards that will be used to serve our domestic,
regional and international trades.
To meet the
requirements, the sector has identified goals
and consequent benefits to the economy if the
proper legal and economic environment is provided
to the sector.
History
A strong and vibrant shipping industry is required
to provide steady employment for our seafarers.
We should have the capability to build vessels
for our own shipping industry that will serve
as a base for our seafarers.
Crucial to developing
a viable shipping industry is a shipbuilding
and ship repair sector equipped to build and
repair vessels that can meet international classification
standards and safety requirements.
We have a shipbuilding
tradition. Galleons that plied the Manila-Acapulco
trade were built in the shipyards of Cavite
and Leyte. Philippine hardwood was used to build
these galleons.
The shift from hardwood to steel slowed down
the development of our shipbuilding capabilities.
The absence of a steel industry did little to
help us improve our potential in shipbuilding.
Incentives
- PD 666 and EO 226
In the mid-1970s, government recognized our
inability to source steel plates and spare parts
locally and created an incentives program for
the shipbuilding and ship repair sector through
PD 666. This law allowed the entry of foreign
investments by lifting ownership restrictions
in shipyards. However, in an effort to streamline
incentives, government repealed this law and
enacted an Investment Incentives Code (EO 226)
for all industries.
An unstable
currency in the decade from the late 1970s to
the late 1980s contributed to the lack of success
of this import-dependent sector despite the
incentives given by government. The shipowners'
shift to second-hand tonnage, because of the
difficulty in sourcing equity capital and loans
for the purchase of brand new vessels, also
contributed to the decline of our shipbuilding
sector.
The Entry
of Foreign Investments
In the 1990s, encouraged by renewed economic
activity, foreign investors through the incentives
program of the Board of Investments (BOI) brought
in much-needed capital to jumpstart the shipbuilding
and ship repair sector. New shipyards funded
by foreign investments emerged - Keppel Shipyard
in Cebu and Batangas, Tsuneishi in Cebu and
Subic Shipyard in Bataan. However, the recent
ruling of the Supreme Court regarding limits
to foreign ownership in shipyards has created
a doubt in the minds of foreign investors as
to the stability of economic policy that will
allow long-term investments in the sector. This
ruling is now under reconsideration.
The growth of
the sector has been encouraging. The sector
has built tankers, fast ferries, cargo vessels,
passenger ships and other specialized carriers
in the last decade. In 2001, the Philippines
exported five classed vessels to foreign markets
and built a number of fast ferries both for
domestic and export markets. The bulk of the
business of this sector is, however, still in
ship repair.
Our smaller
shipyards are encouraged by the growth they
are witnessing and strongly believe that they
have the capacity to catch up and meet the demands
of our local shipowners.
What needs to be done?
We must encourage our shipyards to meet the
demands of Filipino ship owners for new tonnage.
We must strengthen our shipbuilding and ship
repair capabilities and ensure our strict adherence
to safety standards. For this purpose, it is
necessary to pursue a legislative and regulatory
program which includes the following:
- Enactment of a Ship Building
and Ship Repair Development Act to allow ship
builders and repairers to gain direct access
to incentives.
- Availability of the maritime
credit facility to ship builders and repairers.
- Exemption from tariff importations
of the industry
- Retention of ownership requirements
of shipyards by foreigners of up to 100%.
- Revision of Immigration
and Customs regulations for under guarding
of foreign vessels that are taken here for
repair.
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Philippine
Overseas Shipping II (August 18,2003)
(Continued from August 4 )
The Ship
Mortgage Degree
In the 1970s, the government realized that the
Philippine Overseas Shipping Act was inadequate
to meet the needs of the overseas sector, and
that the life span of the incentives granted
by the law was about to expire. It needed to
act quickly in order to save the Philippine
overseas fleet.
To address the
uncertainty in the Overseas Shipping Act affecting
the treatment of preferred mortgage on vessels,
the government enacted PD 214 and amended the
Overseas Shipping act of 1955 by removing the
preference given to other liens recognized by
the law. It allowed the creditor holding the
mortgage over the vessel to have sole preference
over the proceeds of the foreclosure. Despite
this amendment, ship owners were still unable
to gain access to more affordable financing
for the purchase of vessels.
The passage
of the Ship Mortgage Decree of 1978 (PD 1521)
created a conflict between the provisions of
PD 214 and PD 1521 with respect to the enforcement
of liens thus causing confusion in the implementation
of the two laws by the courts.
Foreign banks
have continued to shy away from Philippine mortgages
because the ambiguity in the law has resulted
in a difficulty in enforcing the mortgage and
the foreclosure of the vessel.
The Bare
Boat Charter Decree
In order to circumvent the problem of our defective
ship mortgage law, the application of the Bare
Boat Charter Decree, which was enacted for domestic
ship operators, was extended to the overseas
sector. This law has allowed Filipino overseas
operators to lease foreign owned vessels and
to register them under the Philippine registry.
The Overseas
Shipping Incentives Act (RA 7471)
The tax exemptions granted by the Overseas Shipping
Act of 1955 expired in 1975. New incentives
were given to the sector in 1992. These incentives
include exemptions from import duties and taxes
for fuel, vessel spare parts and equipment,
and from income taxes provided the vessel operator
meets all the requirements of the law to qualify
for the exemptions. If it fails to meet the
conditions of the law, the vessel operator is
required to pay income tax at 32% of net profits.
The law, however,
has been unable to give the intended benefit
to our overseas operators because of the restrictive
interpretation given by the Bureau of Internal
Revenue with respect to the enjoyment of the
incentives.
What our
competition does?
Maritime nations have traditionally given the
maximum incentives to ship owners to register
vessels under their flag registry.
The flag registry
gives a nation the right of requisition in times
of war or national crisis. It also allows it
access to fees, jobs, and foreign exchange.
The flag registry is also a source of national
pride.
The table below
will show the various incentives provided by
the national registries of Singapore, Hong Kong,
and Malaysia that are aimed at ensuring the
growth of their overseas shipping fleet.
What needs
to be done?
We need a framework that is committed to long-term
development with legislation that is as clear
and competitive as Singapore and Hong Kong.
The incentives granted by the Overseas Shipping
Incentives Act expired in 2002 and the development
of the sector still leaves much room for improvement.
The sector must compete with regional operators
enjoying incentives granted by their respective
registries.
A new Overseas
Shipping Act revising the ownership requirements
for vessels engaged in overseas trade, an acceptable
Ship Mortgage Law and an active campaign to
attract investments, will allow the Philippines
to create a dynamic service export industry
that can stand side by side with successful
registries like Hong Kong and Singapore.
Creating
the Environment for Investment and Developing
a Competitive Flag Registry
For the Overseas Shipping Sector to meet the
challenge posed by regional and global competition,
it must pursue a program covering legislative
and executive reforms including the following:
- Renewal and amendment of
certain provisions of Republic Act No. 7471
which expired in May 2002.
- Enactment of an Overseas
Shipping Act encompassing an overall strategy
for the overseas shipping industry and allowing
our overseas shipping operators to be at par
with the best competitor.
- Amendment of the Philippine
Ship Mortgage Law to make it acceptable to
foreign bankers and allow our overseas shipping
operators to gain access to foreign currency
financing from foreign banks.
- Ratification of the UNCTAD
convention on maritime liens and mortgages.
- Enactment of a Ship Management
Incentives Act that will provide incentives
to encourage ship management companies to
locate here.
- Review of the present requirements
of government agencies and cut down on duplicative
requirements.
- Appointment of maritime
attach?s in strategic foreign ports who will
be instrumental in protecting the integrity
and sovereignty of the Philippine flag.
- Strict implementation of
the policy that government owned cargo shall
be bought FOB and sold C&F
- Exemptions from tariff
importations of the industry.
- Carry a greater percentage
of our intra-Asia import and export cargoes.
Philippine
Overseas Shipping (August 4, 2003)
History
Filipinos ventured into overseas shipping operations
only after we had gained our independence in
1946. Govern-ment saw the need to create a merchant
marine fleet that could carry the country's
expanding international trade, and at the same
time serve as a naval and military auxiliary
in times of war or national emergency. It realized
that this objective could not be attained unless
the government helped the private sector by
providing much needed long-term financial aid
and other fiscal incentives similar to other
maritime nations.
The Opportunity
The Philippines has the opportunity to become
a key player carrying our import and export
cargo and working oncross trades because of
our abundance of seafarers and our expertise
in ship management developed over the years.
Countries with
strong maritime traditions like Norway, Greece,
Japan, Hong Kong and China have a major part
of their overseas fleets serving cross trades
and offering transport services globally to
those requiring international shipping services.
With the expansion
of world trade, competition has become more
intense, making the need to lower operating
costs imperative.
International
shipping competes in a truly global market.
It exposes a ship owner to competition on service
costs. To meet competition, it has become a
practice for governments to provide incentives
to ship owners who choose to serve international
trade. A ship owner has several choices of where
to register his vessel.
Flag of
Convenience
(FOC) Registries Countries like Liberia, Panama,
Vanuatu, Cyprus, and the Isle of Man, are called
"Flag of Convenience" (or "FOC")
registries. FOCs offer a tax free environment,
confidentiality of beneficial ownership, no
nationality requirement for ownership and the
freedom to use any nationality of seafarers
and ship managers in order to induce ship owners
to register their vessels under that country's
flag registry.
FOC vessels
are, however, vulnerable to interference by
international labor unions affiliated with the
International Transport Workers Federation or
"ITF" that have formed themselves
into militant watchdogs tasked to ensure the
enforcement of international labor standards
on ocean-going vessels especially FOCs. The
ITF's mission is to equalize wage scales globally.
National
Flag Registries
Traditional maritime countries, like Norway,
Greece and Japan are national flag registries
which customarily require national crew. Their
cost base, however, have become very expensive
when they engage national crew who have other
employment options at home. These countries
have crafted their national laws to allow the
employment of seafarers from other labor-supplying
countries like India and the Philippines through
collective bargaining agreements of their country's
unions under a special program called "Second
Registry." Many second registries also
offer incentives on income tax to make their
registry competitive. Other developed countries,
like the United States, offer subsidies to retain
investments in this industry.
Vessels under National
Flag registries, like the Philippines, China,
India and Hong Kong are not interdicted by international
labor unions because they fall under the jurisdiction
of the sovereignty of their government.
It is rare for
a country to have the combination of a (1) national
flag registry, (2) national seafarer, and (3)
management of nationals. These elements are
essential to be deemed a pure national flag
registry.
The Philippines has the
potential to be a very successful national flag
registry because it possesses all the elements
needed for it to be considered a pure national
flag registry. What has held the registry back
from realizing its full potential is the ambiguity
of laws, the lack of capital and the inability
to source affordable financing brought about
by an unacceptable ship mortgage law.
The Philippine
Overseas Shipping Act of 1955
The Philippine Overseas
Shipping Act was passed in 1955 granting incentives
to the sector. It provided loans to citizens
of the Philippines through the National Development
Company for the acquisition of vessels at preferred
interest rates and extended repayment terms.
It granted income tax exemptions for a period
of 20 years to overseas shipping operators provided
that they invested the entire income realized
during the period of exemption in the acquisition
of additional tonnage or the improvement of
existing vessels. The law also provided shipbuilders
with incentives if they constructed vessels
for the overseas trade.
Terms of the Act were
a disincentive to the acquisition and disposition
of vessels because it lacked the flexibility
to allow ship owners to quickly purchase and
dispose of vessels.
The law suffered
from an ambiguity in its provisions with respect
to the need for a guarantee commitment from
the President of the Philippines to secure foreign
loans obtained for the purchase of the vessels.
The law also created an uncertainty with respect
to the treatment of the preferred mortgage on
the vessel that apparently subsists today as
seen from the reluctance of foreign banks to
accept a mortgage of a vessel registered under
Philippine Law. The law required Philippine
nationals to own at least 60% of the capital
invested, a heavy imposition on ship
owners working in an environment lacking in
resources.
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Philippine
Domestic Shipping (July 21, 2003)
History
The Filipinos have always had a maritime tradition.
During pre-Hispanic times, we were part of the
Chinese junk rade. During the Spanish colonial
period, Manila was a major trading port in the
Manila-Acapulco Galleon Trade. Up to the mid-19th
century, Manila was the major hub and transshipment
port in the Asian region.
The Public
Service Act
When the Americans came, we had a well-developed
maritime industry - ship owning, shipbuilding
and seafaring. The Americans sought to put some
order into our maritime industry and secure
the development of all islands by introducing
the Public Service Act (Commonwealth Act No.
146) in 1936. This law encouraged investments
in
shipping through the award of exclusive franchises
that gave operators security of investments.
The Public Service
Act gave incentives to ensure the viability
of shipping routes with a fixed return on investments.
It also encouraged liner vessels to service
fixed routes and offer fixed sailing schedules.
In exchange, the Public Service Commission required
the vessel operator to also serve unprofitable
routes. Passenger fare and cargo rates were
uniformly determined per nautical mile and resulted
in a cross subsidy between profitable and non-profitable
routes.
The non-liner
trade, or tramps, which served in bulk and break
bulk cargo (both dry and oil) were not subject
to the same regulations as the liner operators.
They went where cargo was available and were
allowed to freely negotiate their rates and
contracted directly with shippers. Having freely
negotiated rates, the guarantee of having a
fixed return was not extended to them.
In the 1970s, containerization
was introduced. This necessitated major changes
in vessel technology, infrastructure and logistics.
These changes required massive capital investments
and came at a time when the country experienced
a steep devaluation of the peso.
The crisis of
the early 1980s after the Aquino assassination
brought forth the continued devaluation of the
peso and the imposition of high interest rates.
This prevented ship owners from re-fleeting.
When investor
confidence returned in the late 1980s, liner
owners shifted from conventional vessels to
roll-on-roll-off, or RO-RO, vessels that could
carry both passenger and cargo. Opportunities
opened up for non-liner trades when companies
linked to the previous administration were privatized.
There emerged
from this economic upturn, new vessel owners
operating tankers, specialized carriers and
bulk carriers. More luxurious and modern vessels
were introduced in the liner trade and by, the
mid-1990s, the
operation of fast ferries on short routes started.
Traditional wooden hulled vessels experienced
a sharp decline in patronage owing to the entry
of the fast ferries and the luxury liners.
Deregulation
of the domestic liner sector
In 1994, the government moved away from monopolized
routes and mandated the deregulation of the
liner trade. It required that each route should
have at least two operators. New operators with
faster and more efficient vessels entered liner
routes and provided competition to the monopolies
institutionalized by the franchises of the Public
Service Act. International standards were imposed
on new importation and classed vessels replaced
our aging fleet. Three shipping firms opened
up to public ownership.
Total new vessel
deployments in domestic trade for the period
from 1990 to 2001 (owned and chartered) is shown
in the chart below.
The Asian Financial Crisis of 1997
The industry suffered greatly from the Asian
financial crisis of 1997. Operators, who invested
heavily in expansion programs and brought in
new tonnage were suddenly burdened by an unstable
exchange rate, dollar denominated loans, excessive
interest rates, high taxes, rising fuel prices,
and over-regulation in a "deregulated"
environment.
These financial
problems were further aggravated by inefficient
port and cargo handling facilities that failed
to catch up with the modernization of the fleet.
What needs
to be done?
Changes in the legal framework of the industry
are urgently required to allow domestic ship
operators to improve their costs to the level
of their best ASEAN competitor.
Efforts to (1)
rationalize incentives so that the domestic
shipping sector can gain access to the same
incentives being enjoyed by overseas operators
and domestic airline operators, (2) properly
deregulate the industry by repealing the Public
Service Act insofar as it applies to the domestic
shipping industry, (3) streamline government
regulatory requirements, (4) provide access
to affordable financing and (5) improve trading
practices, have to be pursued to make the domestic
shipping industry globally competitive.
2004
Q2 |2004
Q1
2003
Q4 l 2003 Q3
l 2003 Q2 l 2003 Q1
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