From Assembly to Manufacturing: The Philippine EV Transition Pathway
“We Assemble Today. We Manufacture Tomorrow.”
A Strategic White Paper on Industrial Deepening Through Electric Mobility
By Karl Garcia
Executive Summary
The Philippines is entering a decisive phase in its industrial evolution, marked by the rise of electric vehicle (EV) assembly initiatives tied to transport modernization. Efforts led by figures such as Luis “Chavit” Singson and organizations like LCS Group demonstrate that the country is no longer merely consuming imported technologies but beginning to integrate and adapt them locally. This shift is subtle but foundational, representing the early layers of industrial capability formation.
At present, the Philippines remains in the assembly stage, relying on imported components and foreign technical partnerships. Yet this stage should not be misunderstood as stagnation or dependency. Rather, it reflects a strategic entry into a complex global value chain, where mastering integration, logistics, and quality control is a prerequisite for deeper manufacturing capabilities.
The broader context is the Public Utility Vehicle Modernization Program, which creates a stable demand base for modern vehicles such as e-jeepneys. This demand acts as an anchor for industrial investment, reducing uncertainty and enabling firms to scale operations. Without such demand guarantees, industrialization efforts often falter before reaching critical mass.
Globally, successful industrial economies—from East Asia to emerging Southeast Asian peers—have followed a similar trajectory. They began with assembly, gradually localized components, and eventually moved into innovation and export. The Philippine EV sector is now positioned at the earliest stage of this journey, with the potential to accelerate if strategic conditions are met.
This white paper asserts that the key issue is not whether the Philippines is manufacturing today, but whether it is building the capabilities to manufacture tomorrow. Assembly is the beginning of that process, and the current moment represents an opportunity to convert incremental progress into a sustained industrial transformation.
I. The Misconception: Assembly as Industrial Inferiority
The notion that assembly represents industrial weakness is rooted in a narrow understanding of value creation. While it is true that higher-value activities such as design and core component manufacturing capture greater margins, these activities cannot emerge in isolation. They depend on a base of operational expertise that is cultivated through assembly and integration.
Assembly requires the coordination of multiple inputs—components, labor, processes, and standards—into a functioning product. This coordination builds competencies in systems thinking, process optimization, and quality assurance. These competencies are essential for any country seeking to move up the manufacturing value chain.
In the Philippine context, EV assembly involves adapting imported technologies to local conditions. Road quality, climate, passenger behavior, and usage patterns all influence vehicle performance. The ability to localize solutions within an assembly framework is itself a form of innovation, even if it does not yet involve original component design.
Historically, countries that are now manufacturing powerhouses did not begin with fully localized industries. Japan, South Korea, and China all relied heavily on imported technologies during their early phases. Over time, they leveraged assembly experience to build domestic supply chains and eventually develop proprietary technologies.
Thus, the critique that the Philippines is “only assembling” overlooks the dynamic nature of industrial development. Assembly is not a static condition but a transitional stage that, if properly leveraged, can lead to higher levels of capability and value creation.
II. The Current State: EV Assembly as a Platform Industry
The emergence of EV assembly in the Philippines reflects the formation of a platform industry that connects multiple sectors. Partnerships with firms such as Electric Mobility ON illustrate how foreign technology can be integrated into local production systems. These collaborations enable knowledge transfer while reducing the risks associated with early-stage industrial investment.
The e-jeepney serves as a central node within this platform. It is not merely a vehicle but a convergence point for transportation policy, energy systems, and manufacturing processes. Its deployment creates demand not only for vehicles but also for charging infrastructure, maintenance services, and financing mechanisms.
Assembly operations currently involve the importation of key components, followed by local integration and customization. This includes body fabrication, interior configuration, and final testing. While the core technologies remain external, the local value-added components are gradually increasing in complexity and sophistication.
The presence of a predictable demand pipeline through modernization programs allows firms to invest in capacity expansion. Facilities capable of producing hundreds of units per month represent a significant step toward industrial scaling. This scale is necessary to justify further investments in localization and manufacturing.
Over time, the platform nature of the EV ecosystem can stimulate the growth of ancillary industries. These include parts suppliers, software developers, and service providers. As these ecosystems mature, they create the conditions necessary for a transition from assembly to manufacturing.
III. The Industrial Ladder: From Assembly to Manufacturing
Industrial development follows a structured progression, often described as a ladder of increasing capability. The Philippines is currently positioned at the first rung, focusing on assembly and integration. This stage is characterized by learning-by-doing and the accumulation of operational experience.
The next stage involves the localization of components that are less technologically complex but still essential to production. These include structural elements, interiors, and basic electrical systems. Developing domestic suppliers for these components reduces dependence on imports and increases local value capture.
As capabilities deepen, the focus shifts to subsystem manufacturing. This includes more advanced components such as battery packs and electric drivetrains. Achieving this stage typically requires joint ventures, technology transfer agreements, and targeted investments in skills development.
Beyond subsystem manufacturing lies the development of core technologies. This stage involves research and development in areas such as battery chemistry, power electronics, and vehicle software systems. It represents a significant leap in capability and requires strong institutional support.
The final stage is full-scale manufacturing with export potential. At this level, the country not only produces complete vehicles but also competes in international markets. Reaching this stage requires sustained effort across multiple domains, including policy, infrastructure, and human capital.
IV. Constraints to Industrial Deepening
Despite the clear pathway, several constraints limit the Philippines’ ability to move beyond assembly. One of the most significant challenges is the high cost of electricity, which affects both manufacturing operations and the overall economics of EV adoption. Without competitive energy pricing, local production may struggle to compete regionally.
Another constraint is the limited domestic supply chain for advanced components. Critical elements such as battery cells and semiconductor-based systems are not currently produced at scale within the country. This dependence on imports exposes the industry to external shocks and limits value capture.
Workforce development is also a critical issue. Transitioning to manufacturing requires a labor force with specialized technical skills. While the Philippines has a strong talent base, there is a need for targeted training programs that align with the requirements of EV production and related industries.
Policy fragmentation further complicates the landscape. Industrial policy, energy policy, and transport policy often operate in silos, leading to inefficiencies and missed opportunities for synergy. A more integrated approach is necessary to support long-term industrial development.
Finally, the capital-intensive nature of manufacturing poses a significant barrier. Investments in facilities, equipment, and research require substantial financial resources. Access to affordable financing and risk-sharing mechanisms is essential to enable firms to move up the value chain.
V. Strategic Enablers: How the Philippines “Gets There”
To overcome these constraints, a set of strategic enablers must be activated. The first is the establishment of a stable and scalable demand base. Programs like the PUV modernization initiative must be consistently implemented to provide the market certainty needed for long-term investment.
Alignment of industrial policy is equally important. Government agencies must coordinate to create incentives for localization, support research and development, and attract foreign direct investment. A coherent policy framework reduces uncertainty and encourages private sector participation.
Public-private partnerships play a critical role in accelerating industrial development. Collaboration between large conglomerates, emerging startups, and government institutions can pool resources and expertise. This ecosystem approach fosters innovation and resilience.
Infrastructure development is another key enabler. The expansion of charging networks, logistics systems, and industrial zones supports both EV adoption and manufacturing activities. Infrastructure investments create the physical foundation for industrial growth.
Technology transfer mechanisms must also be strengthened. Partnerships with global firms such as Dongfeng should include provisions for knowledge sharing and local capacity building. Over time, these mechanisms enable the transition from dependency to self-sufficiency.
VI. The Philippine Opportunity: Leapfrogging Through Electrification
Electric vehicles present a unique opportunity for the Philippines to leapfrog traditional industrial barriers. Unlike internal combustion engine vehicles, EVs have fewer moving parts and a more modular architecture. This reduces the complexity of manufacturing and lowers entry barriers for new players.
The country’s large domestic transport market provides a natural testing ground for EV solutions. The widespread use of jeepneys and other public utility vehicles creates a demand base that can support large-scale deployment. This demand can be leveraged to drive industrial growth.
Cultural factors also play a role. The tradition of vehicle customization in the Philippines aligns well with the modular nature of EVs. Local manufacturers can differentiate their products through design and functionality tailored to specific market needs.
The integration of EVs into broader mobility systems offers additional opportunities. Digital platforms, fleet management systems, and energy solutions can be developed alongside vehicle production. This creates a multi-layered ecosystem with diverse revenue streams.
By capitalizing on these advantages, the Philippines can position itself as a regional leader in electric public transport solutions. The transition from assembly to manufacturing is not only feasible but strategically advantageous in the context of global electrification trends.
VII. Conclusion: From Perception to Trajectory
The statement “we just assemble… we will get there” encapsulates both a current reality and a future ambition. It acknowledges the limitations of the present while affirming a commitment to progress. This dual perspective is essential for navigating the complexities of industrial development.
Assembly should be viewed not as a limitation but as a starting point. It provides the foundation upon which more advanced capabilities can be built. The key challenge is to ensure that this foundation is actively developed rather than passively maintained.
The trajectory toward manufacturing requires sustained effort across multiple dimensions. Policy alignment, infrastructure development, workforce training, and investment must all be coordinated to support the transition. Without this coordination, progress may stall.
Encouragingly, current initiatives indicate that the Philippines is moving in the right direction. The combination of private sector leadership, government programs, and international partnerships creates a favorable environment for industrial growth.
Ultimately, the success of this transition will depend on the country’s ability to maintain momentum. If the Philippines can continue to build on its initial gains, it will not only move beyond assembly but establish itself as a competitive player in the global EV industry.
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[…] The plan argues that the Philippines still has a chance to position itself to build an automotive industry if it adopts a coordinated industrial policy: Industriepolitik as we say in Germany. It lays out a legislative and institutional framework to move the country from basic assembly toward full-scale manufacturing in the electric vehicle sector. […]
thanks Karl. Just linking the documents Joey shared with us for context – and also to track interest. Our statistics show that they already been downloaded at least 5 times from the comments where I initially shared them, let’s see if this “teaser” gets more interested. Your article does give the major aspects of Joey’s plan which I shall break down into more detail in my April 26 article. Joey please feel free to correct any misconceptions or add explanations if our understanding has not been complete:
1. Utilize foreign car manufacturers as drivers (pun intended) to build local suppliers. Have a kind of import substitution rule that forces them to have more local suppliers each year to get subsidies
2. Utilize PUV modernization to subsidize the consumer side. That is genius, as even over here in Germany electric cars are still often seen as “rich man’s playthings” only slowly for the middle class, much less for the blue collar service industries that often drive around in diesel vehicles.
3. Utilize the fact that the Philippines already has ONE Tier 1 supplier, IMI from Ayala. Tier 1 means a lot as they have the zero defect standard. Anyone who has done software projects knows that is HIGH!
4. Utilize the Philippine supply of nickel to help build a battery making industry. Value added!
5. Utilize the existing corporations, channelize their profit motive. For instance mandate that Petron build charging stations. The rest I can’t quite remember as of now.
6. Create a strong regulatory body to make sure everyone takes part. I might insist on giving that body the right to override TROs but don’t know how that works over there. And a boss a la Vince Dizon.
7. Create a certification institute to make sure parts don’t have to be certified abroad. If there are trust issues, I might involve TÜV Rheinland, already working in the Philippines to help build it.
8. subsidize electric power for the industry as the Philippines has expensive electricity.
9. Joey has several EOs and 5 laws in his kumpletos rekados package linked below. The challenge would be how to get them passed quickly, without dilution and simultaneously. Karl you know that stuff..
Click to access 1.-asean6_automotive_investment_report_2021_2025.pdf
Click to access 2.-ph_automotive_industrial_policy_analysis.pdf
Click to access 3.-ph_conglomerates_automotive_sector.pdf
Click to access 4.-ph_automotive_5yr_10yr_blueprint.pdf
Click to access 5.-neda_memo_2026_auto_001.pdf
Click to access 6.-ph_auto_legislation_impact_analysis.pdf
Click to access 7.-paselp_draft_bills.pdf
Click to access 8.-ph_auto_public_communications.pdf
Thanks again, Irineo
I asked Claude to juxtapose PH industrial policy analysis versus PH auto legislation impact analysis and it came up with this:
—
Claude says this about ASEAN automotive employment in the same chat as the two documents:
Now I asked Claude to add the 5-10 year automotive blueprint to the mix and this came out:
Claude is very impressive and is on a different level than ChatGPT. Very to-the-point without the addition of empathetic tricks.
I asked Claude to summarize the 3 documents I processed yesterday and got this:
then I asked to mesh that with the ASEAN investment report and the conglomerates paper and got this:
Yes, Claude is indeed a powerful tool. Of course I will read this and then write again in my own words but this does help a lot in understanding.
OK, asked for 12 para summary of all that and it reads COMPELLING (even if I will at the end print out the exec summary I get, read it, read the 8 documents (which I will print out too on the weekend, old school as I am) then make my own write-up.. oh if write-up is a Pinoy English term so be it:
this big picture came out when I asked Claude to add document 8:
Getting there..
I speedread super fast but in future analysis I might include more graphics like you’ve made.
I’ve been thinking more about setting up these manufacturing verticals that bridge out to other verticals to sprout new industries. Sort of like how mangrove propagules grow out of and descend from the parent tree before establishing itself below. The parent and the child trees share nutrients and support each other.
Thinking in terms of “will this make money” is just too small minded for a planner in the government. It is the job of the business to think “will this make money” AFTER the business has reviewed the new environmental conditions changed by new laws. It is the job of the government to provide strategic vision and connect the various pieces together into something more like a mangrove forest. For an automotive industry is not only about “making cars,” but about steel, rubber, aluminum, glass, automotive electronics, and now, batteries and electric motors. Each child industry initially supporting but later spawning entirely new industries. The parents and children industries together are better equipped to weather economic shocks to their economic network as their roots work in unison like the mangrove.
Filipinos see BYD’s sleek BEVs and feel instantly discouraged, yet hardly few Filipinos care to know that BYD started off as a contract supplier of cheaper NiCad rechargeable batteries to Japanese companies that moved on to manufacturing more efficient NiMH and Li-ion batteries. Focusing on end results without learning the necessary steps. From BYD’s humble beginnings now BYD owns a good chunk of the global BEV market.
Those graphics are what Claude created when I asked for a big picture and summary, though I indeed like graphics when presenting stuff, trying to avoid the trap that SAP sometimes falls in to make the graphics look like the design of a BASF chemical plant.
I always saw the strength of the Catholic Church in its knowing how to use three communication lanes: the elite writings of the monks, the preachings of the priests and the Stations of the Cross for the visually inclined. Though I also know that a picture can be worth a thousand words, whether in a Gannt chart, a mindmap or a Kanban diagram – and am as one can see someone who likes both French Bandes Desinees, Japanese manga and the occasional Korean manhwa.
Companies use big picture diagrams a lot in trade fairs (Germany is trade fair country) where attention is a scarce commodity.
Generally in communications it is important to convey information in a way that the audience can understand. Executives, strategic advisors, wonks, implementers, and those who are served by policy all need to be communicated with in different ways despite the information being the same. I guess white paper authors in the Philippines often like being wonks a bit too much, while it seems to me that a lot of Philippine leaders probably have no business being a leader when they are afraid of making any major decisions.
Well I wouldn’t say that a foreign company would feel “used” if the business works out for the balance sheet. Having newer, cheaper suppliers is always a good business decision.
I think generally, import-substitution is out of vogue, as is export-oriented. Those were old theories developed in the 1950s. Modern behavior is more of a hybridization between best practices (as expected). So a local content requirement as expressed in the proposed legislation as the production offset obligation operates along the lines of carrot-and-stick: a foreign investor may invest X amount of CKD kits and sell the assembled cars at reduced/zero-tariff, but by then the investor had already built an assembly facility, which is where additional incentives come in if the investor further invests in building a local supply chain. It isn’t as important that the local supply chain be “Filipino” owned as much as the local supply chain exists in the first place to provide jobs and constant technology transfer.
Yes, the goal of the legislation is to create an industry, a set of secondary supporting industries, where skills and technology can be applied to further industries in the future.
In addition to nickel, build a local rubber processing and rubber products industry. It makes no sense that Filipinos get paid a pittance for raw cup latex which is later processed and manufactured into end products like tires which can go into the automotive industry!
Steel production is also anemic. The Philippines possesses all of the required steel inputs (iron, nickel, copper) in large amounts, yet local steel production is basically low-end products like construction rebar which is mostly made from recycled scrap as the Philippines doesn’t have what’s called a “fully integrated” steel mill after National Steel failed (1999) as a casualty of the Asian Financial Crisis. SteelAsia’s steel mills make rebar. Philippine lateritic iron has nickel as a secondary byproduct of iron ore processing, while volcanically formed Philippines has a lot of copper as well.
AFAIK only a higher court can override a lower court’s TRO. I can’t remember which case exactly but somewhere I read that the Supreme Court ruled that the Executive cannot override TROs, which makes sense since then a President and their subordinates can essentially rule by fiat. I understand that TROs are often misused in the Philippines, and am not sure how to fix that as it seems to be more of an issue with a politicized Judiciary. Possible workarounds are to ensure constitutionality of the laws to begin with, and having government lawyers aggressively work cases to prove such.
This is also a chance to create additional incentives for industrial electrical supply buildout, which unfortunately I didn’t address directly in my analysis. Perhaps pursuance of renewable battery-backed generation would be appropriate here to coincide with the charging station infrastructure proposed to be built by Aboilitz.
Marcos Jr. for whatever reason chose to use his pre-2025 Senate supermajority to pursue vanity projects (e.g. Maharlika). Whatever that reason Alyansa has a bare majority now. Here’s a real chance to work with the opposition liberal senators and unify against the Duterte threat. Which would give the BBM-Leni détente more reason to become a formal alliance going into the 2028 election. A pro-Philippines alliance with a visible plan and the beginnings of a record to run on against the anti-Philippines Dutertes and their cronies.
the meat of the article consists of two parts for me (after all the details of course)
– how the 700K jobs are to be created, where and when (because that looks huge)
– how the computation the “ROI” (I am sure it isn’t called that way in that context) adds up.
DDS will of course frame it as “helping Marcos-yellow crony-oligarchs” and if they don’t do it the PH Far Left will.
But yes let’s just put this out and see who picks it up, it feels like sending messages to aliens out there, but well.
700K-ish jobs created over 10 years is actually a conservative estimate per my original instruction. The estimate was modeled off of the other ASEAN-6 countries (7 indirect jobs for every direct factory floor job) with a handicap applied to the Philippines (5-6x indirect jobs for every direct factory floor job) to account for immature inter-island transport. Aside from the jobs themselves, the job salaries are also much higher than the typical Philippine salary (1.7x national average for completely unskilled general assembly line worker).
In public investment terms the fiscal multiplier is the macroeconomic analogy to the microeconomic ROI (which pertains more to singular entities which can be an enterprise, project, individual, and so on).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fiscal_multiplier
My analysis predicted a fiscal multiplier over 10 years of 4.2x-6.8x, which would put the Philippines on par in 10 years with where Thai and Indonesian government investment is now. Which might seem depressing but this is a 10-year catch-up plan compared to e.g. Thailand’s 40 years in the automotive sector. Well, that is if something like the result of my analysis is passed then implemented.
Far left discounted aside for their constant yelling despite small numbers…
Important to note here that DDS has spent more than 10 years building their relational debt networks (utang na loob networks) while those who oppose DDS have not. In the absence of a better offer that would show pro-democracy side can provide better benefits and thus shift the utang na loob network over, one cannot blame the voter for voting for Sara in 2028. All the more important to unveil big, bold ideas now to inspire people… then get to the hard work of showing progress is being made towards the new future.
When I see people who have (I would think) stable jobs in Europe dance budots in front of the ICC prison to support Duterte, who for sure doesn’t have THAT much money to pay their bills for being there (what their days salary is worth plus board and lodging, go figure), I have doubts about them similar to your doubts about PPop fans, and putting all that together I wonder if one can see MOST Filipinos as a whole through a rational lens AT ALL.
Let’s say I am giving this a shot, but I don’t really have to care that much as I have removed the Philippines as any form of serious option for my future. Nowhere in the world is fully safe nowadays but I see more rationality where I am now, or maybe I get how things roll here in Europe best by now. If your plan is done and helps win the race in 2028, or the race is won in any other way, I will still have a PHilippines I want to visit – otherwise I won’t, period.
If you recall I discussed the Strauss–Howe generational theory with LCPL_X a few times:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strauss–Howe_generational_theory
A short summary of the theory: Every 80 or so years, broken up into 4 generations 20 years each, there is an immense societal crisis precipitated by decadent degradation that requires new thinking. According to Strauss and Howe the “GI Generation” was one such “hero” generation that build the present world order after going through the crisis (WWII). Similarly we may see the statesmen and builders of the Third Republic as a hero generation who attempted to build the same.
In the case of the Philippines there seems to have always been a legacy of Ilustrado-thinking vs Katipunan-thinking. From my understanding the Ilustrados favored logic-based incrementalism and building sturdy foundations while the Katipunan operated on a more emotionally driven and tribalistic manner. It is a shame that the Ilustrados were co-opted in a way by the Katipunan, who survived due to being defeated by the US. I’ve read some works that the current dynasties are neo-Ilustrados in the sense that they are usually of the landed class, but their mode of thinking is performative like the Katipunan.
A few weeks ago I had a discussion with an older Fil-Am friend, an Atenista who had left the Philippines shortly before EDSA, about the original usage of OPLAN. It turns out the first oplan was Marcosian Oplan Katatagan in the 1980s against the communist insurgency. Nowadays “oplan” is used for everything to dress up the plan in to denote the plan as super serious and a big deal. Which to me seems quite militaristic and well, OA.
The Third Republic statesmen may have not used “oplan,” but they did appear (at least to me) to try to approach Philippine problems with a degree of seriousness and proper planning according to what they knew. In other words those now-gone statesmen tried to plan strategically in order to achieve goals for Filipinos. Which is what an operational plan is all about. Btw, the original US military “oplan” was usually quite broad and were the particular operational plans to achieve the military strategy (i.e. “take this hill”). Where the Third Republic failed later on was that adjustments to new conditions were not made in real-time. I haven’t been able to find good writing or studies that explores this area further, but one can presume that perhaps the leaders then did not have complete information or maybe they did not have the prerequisite knowledge to adjust on the fly.
Well the good thing is in today’s word there is the benefit of hindsight (to look back at the mistakes of prior generations) and a plethora of new examples of success not only from the US and Europe, but from nearby neighbors, in addition to what not to do (don’t go full communism). I know for sure that there are many patriotic Filipinos who are highly educated and highly experienced, some even stayed in the Philippines rather than migrating, yet don’t have positions where they can help effectuate change. So the power needs to be politically delegated to those Filipinos to create that change. More Ilustrado-thinking, and less Katipunan-thinking.
The proposed EVIS bill has not be disclosed aside from the public releases and statements, but it does look like the bill if passed would at least partially checkbox some of my proposals… not all is lost…
I would still encourage you to visit sometime. The Philippines is still a nice country to wander around in, eat some good food, meet new people, have girls chase after you which happened to me recently (haha), and catch up with old friends. The important thing to remember I suppose is that the Philippines despite feeling a bit janky and cobbled together, feels unique and genuine with a lot of character, like old-school jeepneys personalized by their owner-operators. That alone is worth it to me to visit. When starting near the bottom and from behind, there’s no where to go but up and forward.
Maybe in a way your father is right after all in his Pantayong Pananaw: now is the time for bayani.
Pantayong Pananaw seems to see Aguinaldo and his group (Katipunan 2.0) as impure while Bonifacio (Katipunan 1.0) were the real deal not given a chance.
yes, I grew up in the time when Oplan became part of the Philippine vocabulary. It still sounds like Martial Law to me.
that will happen in due time.
The thing is that without a proper map, figuring stuff out from the bottom up is very time-consuming.
I still believe that Philippine education doesn’t help people conceptually link their bottom up view with the top down of maps or vice versa.
So you have the perception that Mar Roxas’ was about “analysis paralysis” like Binay said to him and that Marcos Sr.’s “action agad” was good.
My father and Xiao differ in that the former sees Rizal (and Ninoy) only as “heroe” meaning “performative Western heroes” (well yes the ilustrado were as you mentioned often dandies, with well-combed moustaches I might add, a style only Robin Padilla and Tito Sotto now sport) who were all talk (and uselessly martyred themselves) while Bonifacio was the true bayani who cared about the bayan and “did something”. Though Bonifacio also got himself killed – by Filipinos.
There is the story I found out reading Jim Richardson’s work on the early Katipunan that Bonifacio when he fled uphill to Balara (not yet to UP Diliman, the modern refuge of rebels haha) he had panday there forge a lantaka but it wasn’t powerful enough to pierce modern Spanish walls.
Xiao BTW understood my view in my old blog of how Bavaria built its industries from the bottom up after WW2 – even if I lacked the top down view of how it was built, seeing it from the ground inspite of books on Industriepolitik in available in libraries. Now it is my (self-imposed) job to follow up on that and convince people your plan is not “analysis paralysis” and not aimless “action agad” – ABANGAN on April 26, draft is already in progress as of now.
Yes this is true, but the Philippines already tends to go the time-consuming route by insisting on reinventing everything, but Pinoy™.
There’s nothing wrong with adapting stuff to suit Philippine needs, but the constant need to be “special” and praised (commonly with masa boys, more dangerously in hero-of-the-masa type leaders) is definitely a mental block.
Examples and templates are available widely now as a sort of open-sourced collective human knowledge stretching back thousands of years, no longer constrained by the requirement of physical, hard contact (war).
It’s not a requirement for most Filipinos to know all the things. It is a requirement however, for leaders to have the ability for conceptual linkage. During PNoy’s time there were many of these leaders. Then there was a rapid regression under Duterte and a partial reconstruction under Marcos Jr.
One needs to take a look at how these narratives came into being though: negative simplistic narratives arose in the absence of positive examples that are attractive to being copied. If I recall now, Mar Roxas’ explanations were just way too long, too complicated, and without an understandable narrative for the audience. He was speaking with a cadence understandable to other elites, not in a way that the masa understood.
From many years among mostly the DE when I visit, DEs may be uneducated but they are definitely not bobo. What would be more powerful, I think, than simple biting slogans is showing an example of how one can benefit from doing XYZ. But it needs to be something concrete and correlative… such as “support X and get Y.” e.g. “Support this plan to build cars, and your local rubber tapping industry will have higher profits.” Perhaps one can see it has a difference between theoretical learning and practical teaching.
In direct communication there is no need to explain details (as us being sometimes egg-headed tend to do) like “we will proceed to build a latex processing facility, then vulcanizing facility, then rubber tires facility.” All the subsistence farmer who has a half-dozen rubber trees he taps latex from to sell in raw latex cup form for a pittance to a middleman, after waiting weeks for the smelly tubs of raw latex to ferment beside the house, knows is “will I earn more money from this change to support my family?”
Haha, Joe after he first met Mar Roxas personally described him as being similar to ME – but I had extremely long-winded comments then. Look at my articles from the pandemic period to see how I wrote then compared to how I write articles NOW.
Well, being both Service Owner with a direct contact to business role for two (among many other) applications since 2021 taught me a lot about talking to end users, the equivalent of talking to non-elites in politics – possibly helping change the way I explain things in general.
und damit bekommt die Stadt X bis zu Y Arbeitsplätze (and with the, town X gets Y jobs) – I just thought of how politicians talk over here. Makes sense.
The word latex made me think that a Durex factory just beside the rubber plant would be a good idea.
Not just higher profits but free condoms for the farmers and their sons.
I actually prefer your long-winded comments and blogs since we both have the intellectual training to follow along and ask pertinent questions. To each audience the communicator needs to craft a message that would resonate with that audience.
One of my criticisms of PNoy is that while PNoy was a very humanistic President, he was not good at explaining things to the broader Filipino, and most of his cabinent (including Mar) weren’t much better. Even Leni isn’t that great as a communicator, but she makes up for it by showing with her physical presence and hands-on leadership which Filipinos can also appreciate.
I’m not as tuned into German politics aside from what I follow from non-German media and reading DW (Deutsche Welle) which is in my daily newspaper rotation, but it appears to me that AfD’s recent strength is in part with the simple message that noxious party offers as well as the overly cautious messaging style of the Merkel to Scholz era CDU and SPD. It appears the new CDU-SPD coalition under Merz is able to combat some of AfD’s messages.
Another observance I have about Philippines politics is stuff usually goes by the maxim “My way or the highway,” with the corollary “I’ll just wait until I win again.” Surely with a political system that has weak parties and where politicians often jump parties then back again, there is room for coalition building and deal-making. Not deal-making in the sense of pork barrel, but real, concrete deals as in “support the X law and your district gets Y factory/facility/port.” Something the politician can go back home and campaign for re-election on.
I see nothing wrong with being a components manufacturer, or being a seafaring nation without submarines. It only makes sense to be a whole-car manufacturer if you can amass the capital for such an endeavor, and are absolutely certain there is a market for the product. The Oligarchs are rich enough but have other priorities they judge as better in risk and return. Not having a car manufacturer does not make the Philippines an inferior nation. It may make it a smarter nation. Demanding submarines and autos is like plastering Philippine suns on automobiles, a symbol detached from the authenticity of where the nation is, today.
Thanks for that sobering and hangover removing take.
Here is a good overview of the auto initiatives ongoing in the Philippines.
https://gulfnews.com/business/energy/ev-makers-eye-philippines-as-manila-sets-60-billion-incentives-ends-ice-subsidy-amid-global-oil-shock-1.500504974#
Thanks Jo
An example of PEZA initiatives that weave their way into the manufacturing sector.
https://business.inquirer.net/585070/chinese-firm-invests-p30m-in-ph-plant#
Update on Philippine debt to GDP ratio. Projected to decline.
https://www.bworldonline.com/economy/2026/04/13/742572/phl-debt-to-gdp-to-continue-declining-amro/
If you have time to read my analysis, the analysis addresses all of your concerns.
Namely:
Cars for export is actually last in priority. National pride in locally made stuff is just a “nice byproduct,” but the real aim is to capture local job creation, technology transfer, bring capital into Philippines, and increase value-added position within the local then global supply chain. The co-developed industries would also support future industries in other areas. The last reason of co-development and parallel tracks are the reasons why properly industrialized nations almost always create a policy for an automotive industry. Which is a lot more useful than building a handful of submarines.
As to the oligarchs having enough capital — they do have the capital. What they don’t have is a regulatory framework which makes a business case for expanding outside of rent-seeking behavior. To have a regulatory framework there needs to be first a legislative framework which creates a more predictable investment environment. A more predictable investment environment would also encourage more foreign capital to co-invest and transfer technology in order to access the labor and resource markets.
Makes excellent sense, thanks.
video below: a 4000-acre site (it seems in New Clark City) is planned as US-PH cooperation for manufacturing semiconductors under the “Pax Silica”
https://x.com/pdokprodo/status/2045725547372974082
interesting X post on logistics in the Philippines vs. Thailand (also considering the archipelagic constraints):