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93 Phil. L.J. 962 (2020)
Revisiting Foreign Investment Limits on Renewable Energy Contracts in Light of the Text and Context of the 1987 Constitution

handle is hein.journals/philplj93 and id is 1003 raw text is: 







        REVISITING FOREIGN INVESTMENT LIMITS ON
              RENEWABLE ENERGY CONTRACTS IN
              LIGHT OF THE TEXT AND CONTEXT
                   OF  THE   1987  CONSTITUTION*

                      Dr. Joseph Emmanuel L. Angeles*


                            I. INTRODUCTION

        When  the 1935 Constitution was drafted, the Commissioners framed
the  debate  in nationalist terms and   restricted foreign investment  and
management   in various sectors.1 These provisions were retained in the 1973
and  1987 Constitution,2 hindering foreign investment,3 promoting   import
substitution and protectionism, and penalizing the Filipino consumer  with
high prices and poor service.4 Professor Gerardo Sicat traces the Philippines'
economic  lethargy to these investment limits.5

        The economic  provisions of the 1987 Constitution are being revisited
to undo this self-inflicted economic stultification. While long overdue, other
potential reforms may  likewise be explored. One such  regulation is a 2009
Department   of Energy circular that restricts the award of renewable energy
(RE)  service/operating contracts to Filipino citizens or corporations at least
60%  of whose  capital is owned by Filipinos. This article revisits the propriety
of this circular in light of the text and context of the 1987 Constitution.







        * Cite as Joseph Emmanuel Angeles, Revisiting Foreign Investment LImits on Renewable
Energy Contracts in Light of the Text and Context of the 1987 Constitution, 93 PHIL. L.J. 962, [page
cited] (2020).
        ** Member of the Philippine Bar; President, Angeles University Foundation; Faculty,
Angeles University Foundation School of Law & University of the Philippines College of Law;
Ph.D., University of the Philippines Virata School of Business (2014); M.S. Management,
University of the Philippines Virata School of Business (2011); LL.M., New York University
School of Law (2007); LL.B., University of the Philippines College of Law (2002); B.S.
Business Administration, University of the Philippines Virata School of Business (1998).
        1 Gerardo Sicat, Philipine Economic Nationalism, 45 PHIL. REV. ECON. 1, 3 (2008).
        2 Id. at 4.
        3 Id. at 10.
        4 Id. at 10, 12 & 15.
        s Id. at 21.
                                   962

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