Taiwan Taps Filipino Talent For Global Semiconductor Workforce At 2026 Career Day

Taiwan brings semiconductor career opportunities to Manila, connecting Filipino engineers with global industry leaders as demand for skilled talent continues to rise.

When Publicity Stopped Being Proof Of Reputation Strength

Modern reputation management requires more than visibility, as stakeholders now rely on evidence from actions, culture, and engagement rather than curated public communications.

Chef Tatung Sarthou Introduces A Filipino Philosophy Of Living Through The Wisdom Of The Kitchen

Chef Tatung Sarthou introduces KitchiZen, a book that reframes the Filipino kitchen as a space for life lessons on balance, patience, and understanding enough.

From Narrative To Infrastructure: How Reputation Management Evolved In The Last 10 Years

Reputation today is no longer shaped by messaging alone but by systems, actions, and consistency that stakeholders experience and verify across platforms over time.

Aussie Firms ‘Paying Serious Attention’ To PH; Economic Reforms Cited

Discover the changing view on the Philippines as Australian businesses find new opportunities and engage in active investment, fueling economic growth.


Aussie Firms ‘Paying Serious Attention’ To PH; Economic Reforms Cited

132
132

How do you feel about this story?

Like
Love
Haha
Wow
Sad
Angry

Australian businesses are “paying serious attention” to the Philippines, said Australian Ambassador HK Yu on Wednesday citing key economic reforms in the country.

“They have actually seen opportunities in the broader Southeast Asia for a number of years now and we have seen an active engagement with Indonesia and Vietnam, but in more recent years, they are starting to pay serious attention to the Philippines as well,” she said during the 2023 Pilipinas Conference in Makati City.

Yu said the country had been sending the world the “right signals” in terms of its economic reforms, regulatory framework, and “consistency in that”.

She also cited efforts by the government to open up to foreign investments.

“The view about the Philippines is changing. There is still more work to be done, but it is changing. And together I believe we can bring more Australian investors, Australian companies here,” she said.

Under its new Southeast Asia Economic Strategy 2040, Canberra is also funding an AUD19.2 million program to boost two-way trade between Australia and Southeast Asia.

Among the initiatives in the program include business missions targeting priority sectors in the region, including the Philippines.

“The government is very keen to do those missions overseas,” Yu told the Philippines News Agency.

“We want to attract really big Australian companies even those who’ve never been to the Philippines. We’re kind of encouraging them to come and see what the Philippines has got to offer,” she added.

In the same forum, Finance Secretary Diokno said the Philippines remains as “one of the brightest spots in the region” despite external risks and domestic challenges.

Diokno highlighted that the Philippine economy posted the strongest third-quarter growth of 5.9 percent in the region, bringing the GDP expansion for the first three quarters of 2023 to 5.5 percent.

Among the key reforms being pursued by the government to accelerate economic development are the Real Property Valuation and Assessment Reform Bill, the Passive Income and Financial Intermediaries Taxation Bill, and the value-added tax (VAT) on digital services. (PNA)