U.S. companies to announce over $1 billion of investments in the Philippines, Commerce Secretary Raimondo says
American companies are set to announce investments amounting to more than $1 billion in the Philippines, U.S. Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo said during an official visit to Manila on Monday.
Raimondo is heading a two-day trade and investment mission, the first of its kind for the Philippines. The delegation includes executives from 22 companies including United Airlines, Alphabet's Google, Visa, KKR Asia Pacific, and Microsoft.
The investments will span areas like solar energy, electric vehicles and digitization, she said.
United said last week it would launch new flights from Tokyo-Narita to Cebu, Philippines starting July 31.
U.S. efforts to deepen economic ties with the Philippines come in tandem with increased cooperation in defense. Both U.S. President Joe Biden and Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr are keen to counter what they see as aggressive actions by China in the South China Sea and near Taiwan.
Speaking at a joint briefing with Philippine officials after meeting with Marcos at the presidential palace, Raimondo said Washington's commitment to expanding trade and investment in the Philippines extends to the larger Indo-Pacific region through the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework - a 14-nation U.S.-led group.
Raimondo reiterated the United States has no intention of "decoupling" from China but it would not be allowed access to Washington's advanced technology.
"My job is to protect the American people and to make sure that our most sophisticated technology, including semiconductor technology, artificial intelligence technology that we have and China doesn't have, that they can't access it and use it to enable the Chinese military," Raimondo said.
She also reaffirmed the United States' alliance with the