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The Philippines
This Week in AsiaEconomics

Can a US-governed ‘Pax Silica’ hub turn Philippines into a chip powerhouse?

The chip-focused ‘economic security zone’ will reportedly operate under US law despite being on Philippine soil

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An employee of a semiconductor company in Manila displays computer chips manufactured in the Philippines in 2008. The country has long been confined to the lower-value work of chip assembly, testing and packaging. Photo: AFP
Sam Beltran
The United States is planning to build an “economic security zone” in the Philippines to counter China’s dominance in critical technologies.

The 4,000-acre (1,619-hectare) hi-tech industrial hub will reportedly be the first of its kind in the world, operating under US common law despite being on Philippine soil.

Washington says it will be the first “AI-native investment acceleration hub” developed under the US-led Pax Silica initiative, a framework aimed at mobilising allied economies around shared industrial and security priorities.
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In a statement on Thursday, the US State Department described the zone as “a purpose-built platform for allied manufacturing”, adding that it would support the “evolving needs of the allied network”.

Officials hold documents at an event in Washington launching the US-led Pax Silica in December. Photo: Getty Images/AFP
Officials hold documents at an event in Washington launching the US-led Pax Silica in December. Photo: Getty Images/AFP

It added that the zone would combine US expertise on contract law, regulation and dispute resolution with the Philippines’ “outstanding workforce and talent”, mineral endowments, energy resources “and strategic position at the crossroads of Indo-Pacific trade”.

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