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ZUBIRI TO PRIVATE SECTOR: INVEST IN TOURISM

The country’s tourism industry will greatly benefit from private sector investments in the areas of infrastructure and public services that will enable the country to capture a larger market of foreign tourists that are all flocking to our Southeast Asian neighbors.

This is according to former Senate President Migz Zubiri, also the chair of the Senate Committee on Economic Affairs, during the panel’s hearing on Senate Resolution No. 1121, or the inquiry into the economic impact of poor and inadequate infrastructure, frequent power outages, and insufficient water supply on the tourism sector.

“Talo naman natin ang mga beach at ang mga tanawin ng mga kapitbahay natin dito sa Southeast Asia,” Zubiri said.

“Pero talong-talo nila tayo sa mga airport, sa power supply, sa public transport, at sa connectivity. Kaya napag-iiwanan pa rin tayo, kahit mas maganda naman talaga dito sa Pilipinas,” the veteran legislator added.

In 2023, Thailand had the best tourism economy in Southeast Asia, receiving 28 million foreign arrivals. This was followed by Malaysia with 20 million, Singapore with 13.6 million, Vietnam with 12.6 million, Indonesia with 11.7 million, and Cambodia 5.5 million. The Philippines, meanwhile, welcomed only 5.4 million foreign visitors.

“The market is there, the natural resources are there. We just have to invest in our tourism infrastructure.”

“Tourism is the low-lying fruit that can help us increase our GDP growth once we get our acts together,” the seasoned lawmaker pointed out. “The market is there, the natural resources are there. We just have to invest in our tourism infrastructure.”

The senator stressed that the government must partner with the private sector to build the necessary infrastructure for key and rising tourism areas, particularly in terms of developing energy generation, transmission and distribution facilities.

“Walang papasok na investors sa mga tourist destinations natin kung napakataas ng presyo ng kuryente, o kung hindi kaya ng power supply ng mga electric cooperatives ang power demand nila,” he added.

“Kung makapasok man sila, sa mga turista at residente naman mismo babagsak ang napakataas na power costs, at ayaw rin natin ‘yan,” Zubiri continued.

In his conversations with regional stakeholders, the cost and the supply of power emerged as a common deterrent to tourism development, especially for off-grid island destinations.

“We were able to solve this power problem for Boracay, and we need to do it for other tourist areas as well.”

“We were able to solve this power problem for Boracay, and we need to do it for other tourist areas as well,” Zubiri said. “We can look at renewable energy as a more sustainable, more reliable, and more cost-effective solution.”

On top of inefficiencies in infrastructure and power supply, he pointed out that the lack of direct international flights to our tourist destinations inhibits potential visitors from traveling here, pushing them to go to more easily accessible destinations in our neighboring countries instead.

In response to the web of problems plaguing the tourism sector, Zubiri is pushing for the formation of a tourism cabinet cluster that will oversee inter-agency efforts to improve infrastructure and public services in the sector.

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