Wednesday 31st August, 2011 (Source: West Australian)
BEIJING (AFP) - Philippine President Benigno Aquino said Wednesday his country was "open for business" during a visit to Beijing as he set about wooing Chinese investors in tourism, agriculture and infrastructure.
Aquino, on a mission to secure billions of dollars in business deals, vowed to rid the Philippines of corruption and ensure foreign companies "are met with a level playing field" during a five-day visit.
"Investors will not any more have to rely on connections in order to set up shop; the rules will not be circumvented and the law will be followed, creating an environment that is stable and predictable," Aquino told a trade forum in the Chinese capital.
Aquino's visit, which ends Saturday, comes against the backdrop of increasingly strident Philippine accusations of Chinese aggression and bullying in their dispute over competing claims to parts of the South China Sea.
Aquino raised the sensitive issue in his meeting with President Hu Jintao on Wednesday, but his main focus was on improving economic ties, Philippine spokesman Edwin Lacierda told reporters.
"He mentioned that we have differences but these differences should not deter us from moving forward," Lacierda said.
The two leaders signed nine agreements, including a five-year economic plan that targets $60 billion in two-way trade in 2016, a six-fold rise from 2010, and at least $1.5 billion in two-way direct investment by 2016.
Other agreements involved a 20 million yuan ($3.14 million) technical grant to the Philippines as well as cooperation in sport, tourism and culture.
"In the past our commercial relations have been more beneficial to you than to us. Now, we have come here to balance the equation," Aquino said, according to a copy of his speech to the trade forum.
"I now invite the Chinese business community to take part in this opportunity to invest in an emerging economic force... the Philippines is indeed open for business."
China, with an eye on the Philippines' vast and mostly untapped natural resources, has also signalled it does not want the maritime tensions to derail a flourishing economic partnership.
Hu said Wednesday Aquino's visit would "elevate the strategic and cooperative relationship" between China and the Philippines, ahead of talks between the two leaders.
A commentary published by the official Xinhua news agency said relations between the two countries should be underpinned by strong trade ties and "proper settlement of the maritime disputes in the South China Sea."
China has scoured the world in recent years for all kinds of natural resources to fuel its fast-developing economy and provide the raw materials for its phenomenal manufacturing sector.
Despite an untapped mineral wealth estimated at more than $840 billion however, the Philippines has so far not clinched the kinds of huge resource contracts that China has forged with other resource-rich nations.