MENU

img1

Mabuhay!

Welcome to the website of the Philippine Consulate General, Chicago!

We have features on our consular services, trade and investment opportunities and tourism destinations to visit in the Philippines. Passport and visa forms, among others, may be downloaded, thus making the application process easier. We also have links to the websites of various Philippine Missions abroad, Philippine Government agencies, business chambers and leading newspapers.

Through this website, we hope to bring our services closer to your doorstep as well as make available to you a wide range of useful information and resources about the Philippines.

We would appreciate hearing from you, so feel free to email, call or visit us in person.

Tuloy po kayo!

CONSULAR JURISDICTION

ILLINOIS MINNESOTA OHIO
INDIANA MISSOURI MICHIGAN
IOWA NEBRASKA SOUTH DAKOTA
KANSAS NORTH DAKOTA WISCONSIN
   

As part of its mandate to promote trade, investment and other economic interactions between the Philippines and the Midwest, the Philippine Consulate General also provides the following services, among others: buyer-supplier matching, import facilitation; coordination of buying missions to the Philippines; identification of potential American buyers of Philippine products, and market consultancy.

   For particulars, please contact
   

 

Philippine Trade & Investment Center
Philippine Consulate General
556 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York 10036
Phone : +1.212.5757925
Fax : +1.212.5757759
E-mail :
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.


Jurisdiction: Connecticut, Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, Arkansas, Mississippi, Illinois, Missouri, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Wisconsin and  Eastern Canada


  • Subic Bay Freeport Zone

  • Clark Special Economic Zone

  • Baguio City Export Processing Zone

  • Mactan Export Processing Zone

  • Bataan Export Processing Zone

  • Cavite Export Processing Zone

  • Davao City Export Processing Zone

  • Zamboanga City Export Processing Zone

  • Cagayan Export Processing Zone

  • CALABARZON (provinces of Cavite, Laguna, Batangas, Rizal and Quezon)

  • SOCSARGEN (South Cotabato, Sarangani and General Santos)

For more information, please contact:   

Board of Investments
Industry and Investments Bldg.
385 Sen. Gil Puyat Ave., Makati City 1200
Phone: 897-6682/895-3640 to 41
Fax: (632) 895-3521
Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
URL:  http://www.boi.gov.ph

Clark Development Corporation
Bldg. 2122 C.P. Garcia St corner E. Quirino St.
Clark Special Economic Zone, Pampanga
Phones: (63) (109) 6788-89/6799(63) (45) 599-2042/43/91
Fax: (63) (45) 599-2088/2507

Philippines Economic Zone Authority
Roxas Blvd. Corner San Luis St., Pasay City
Phones: 551-3454/551-3455551-3432/551-3449
Fax: (632) 891-6380
Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
URL:  www.peza.gov.ph

Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority
Bldg. 229, Waterfront Road
Subic Bay Freeport Zone, Philippines 2222
Phones: (63-47) 252-4716/4516/4948, 252-7262
Fax: (63-47)252-5278, 252-3563
Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
URL:  http://www.boi.gov.ph

Investment Opportunities

The Philippines offers a wide choice of opportunities into which prospective investors can channel funds and technology.

   

1999 Investment Priorities Plan (IPP)

The IPP identifies priority economic areas entitled to incentives under the Omnibus Investments Code of 1987. The 1999 IPP includes preferred sectors being promoted to direct capital flows to the best locations in the countryside.

Among these:

  • export-oriented industries
  • support industries (e.g. autoparts, electronic components, R&D, education and training and health/medical services)
  • computer software
  • infrastructure
  • tourism
  • mining

Investors may also buy into established Filipino firms to access an expanding market.

 

Agriculture Modernization Program

The Medium-Term Philippine Development Plan for 1999-2004 stresses agricultural modernization as the 'linchpin' in the country's overall development initiatives. Consistent with this thrust, the 1999 IPP lists major agriculture and fishery projects and services which offer opportunities to enterprising investors.

Among these areas: large-scale plantations or nucleus estates with warehousing and processing facilities, swine or cattle-breeding, feeds and feedmill projects and post-harvest facilities.

Market-driven, competitive agri-industries are seen as a way to broaden the country's export base.

    

Gateway to 500 million ASEAN Market

The Philippines lies at the heart of two great commercial sea lanes- the Pacific Ocean and South China Sea- the crossroads of eastern and western business, trade and culture.

A strategic entry point and manufacturing platform to the 500-million strong ASEAN consumer market that is expected to post double digit growth in the coming years.

A market where average incomes are predicted to rise to $5,000 in a decade, from today's $1,000.

'Bold' measures initiated at the Hanoi summit within the Framework Agreement on the ASEAN Investment Area (AIA) make it easy for non-ASEAN investors to access this huge market. Under the "two-year window" (01 January 1999 to 31 December 2000), non-ASEAN nationals applying to invest in manufacturing and service ventures will get the same treatment as ASEAN citizens.

 

  Incentives to Manufacturing Investors
 
  • Minimum 3-year corporate tax exemption or minimum 30% corporate investment tax allowance
  • 100% foreign equity ownership
  • Duty-free imports of capital goods
  • Domestic market access
  • Minimum 30-year industrial land leasehold
  • Employment of foreign personnel
  • Speedy customs clearance

 

BOI-approved projects 1998

   

Economic Zones and Industrial Estates

Numerous Special Economic Zones equipped with excellent infrastructure and communication facilities are ready for use by new industrial locators.

The Philippine Export Zone Authority (PEZA) manages 56 such zones while 50 others are in various stages of development.

Leading these zones are Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority (SBMA) and the Clark Development Corporation. Two more free ports are being developed- Cagayan Economic Zone and Free Port in northern Luzon and the Zamboanga Economic Zone in southern Mindanao.

    

Foreign Investments Act of 1991

The Foreign Investments Act of 1991 (R.A. #7042 as amended by R.A. 8179) liberalized the entry of foreign investments into the Philippines.

Its passage by Congress marked the end of decades of protectionism for local businesses.

Restrictions were relaxed on the participation of foreigners as equity shareholders in local firms, using the Foreign Investment Negative List (FINL) as a guide to levels of foreign equity allowed in specific activity areas. This has made the rules for entry of foreign investments into the Philippines clear and less cumbersome.

  

  FIA -Selected Features
 
  • No restrictions on 100% ownership of export enterprises
  • No restrictions on ownership of domestic enterprises except those in the Foreign Investments Negative List (FINL)
  • Waiver of FINL restriction if 60% of total capacity is exported
  • Selected investment rights to former natural-born (former Filipino) citizens

  

Competitive Investment Package

The Philippines has one of the most liberal policy and regulatory frameworks for investments in Southeast Asia.

The Philippines Constitution guarantees basic rights to all investors and enterprises.

There are six major investment-related laws:

    • The Omnibus Investments Code of 1987 (Executive Order #226)
  • The Foreign Investments Act of 1991 (R.A. #7042)
  • The Special Economic Zone Act of 1995 (R.A. #7042)
  • The Bases Conversion and Development Act of 1992 (R.A. #7117)
  • The Export Development Act of 1994 (R.A. #7844)
  • The Built-Operate-Transfer (BOT) Law (R.A. #6957)

The Built-Operate-Transfer (BOT) Law (R.A. #6957 as amended by R.A. #7718) spells out the policy and regulatory framework for private sector participation in infrastructure projects and other public services. A model of public-private sector partnership in Asia, it has brought in private capital of $21 billion in power plants, mass transit systems, and expressways, among others.

Social laws also provide incentives to certain industries such as mining, iron and steel, and book publishing.

Attractive investment incentive packages are offered under those different laws for qualified foreign and local investors.

Measures continue to be taken to ease investor entry and further enhance the business operating environment.

 

 

Following are the Philippine "Export Winners" which Filipino & American businessmen and women can promote for sale in the U.S. market:

  • Processed fruits
  • Marine products (fresh/frozen fish, shrimps)
  • Carrageenan and Seaweeds
  • Electronics (components and parts)
  • Metals (automotive parts)
  • Garments
  • Furniture
  • Jewelry (fine and custom)
  • Holiday Decors (Christmas, Easter, etc.)
  • Ceramics (decorative and tableware)
  • Basketwares
  • Marble
  • Construction Services
  • Information Technology Services
  • Professional Consulting Services

Press Releases

  PRESS RELEASE NO. 06-2023   Consul General J. Susana V. Paez (front row, 9th from left) pose for a group photo with the PIWC officers after the induction ceremony.   Chicago, 30 January 2023 – Consul...