Net foreign direct investments in the Philippines fell 40 percent year-on-year in August to just 494 million US dollars, bringing the year-to-date total to 5.18 billion. The decline coincides with escalating corruption allegations linked to public infrastructure contracts, which have soured investor sentiment.
Approved foreign investment pledges also plunged nearly 49 percent to 73.68 billion pesos in the third quarter. Economists said the drop reflects both global uncertainty and domestic credibility issues.
Investors have grown cautious as government agencies remain entangled in investigations over alleged procurement irregularities. The controversy has delayed key public-private partnership projects, dampening prospects for construction, logistics, and manufacturing.
Analysts said the immediate challenge for the administration is to demonstrate accountability and policy consistency. “Capital is allergic to confusion,” a former trade official noted. “Even strong macro fundamentals cannot compensate for weak governance.”
To restore confidence, economic managers are expected to accelerate reforms in transparency, digital reporting, and anti-graft monitoring. Business groups are calling for clearer timelines on pending projects to show the government’s ability to deliver.
Unless corrective measures are made soon, the FDI decline could spill over into employment and consumer confidence, potentially slowing growth into 2026.
