OPINION

Beyond the tough headlines

You can manage a dispute in one area and actively collaborate in another, especially when it puts food on the table and creates jobs.

Gigie Arcilla

It’s easy to get caught up in the tough headlines. When we talk about the Philippines and China, the story often revolves around the South China Sea — a complicated and sensitive issue. 

Those tensions are real, and we can’t and shouldn’t pretend otherwise. But if you listen closely, beneath the noise of geopolitics, another story is being written. It’s a quieter, more practical one, and it just might be the key to a more stable future. It’s the sound of business leaders rolling up their sleeves, not to argue over maps, but to open markets.

Sometimes, progress happens quietly, led not by politicians, but by people who’ve been building bridges for generations — the business community.

Take the Federation of Filipino Chinese Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FFCCCII). They’ve just laid out a practical, no-nonsense plan to tackle something we all feel — the trade gap with China. 

FFCCCII leaders earlier this week presented their new coffee table book, “Ginto,” to the new Chinese Ambassador Jing Quan to mark the 50th anniversary of Philippine-China diplomatic relations. 

Think about it — instead of just talking about problems, they’re booking slots for our local entrepreneurs at major Chinese trade fairs and dreaming up ways to bring more Chinese tourists to our shores. 

Their idea isn’t complicated — sell more of our fantastic Philippine products, from Davao cacao to Guimaras mangoes, directly to Chinese consumers. Welcome back more Chinese tourists to our shores, not just to Manila but to our hidden gems across the islands. Empower our small and medium-sized entrepreneurs to find partners and customers next door. 

Abstract diplomacy? No, this is about a farmer in Nueva Ecija, a tour operator in El Nido, and a young tech startup in Cebu finally getting a real shot at the world’s second-largest economy.

Here’s why this will give us a sense of cautious optimism. This approach shows a rare kind of maturity. It doesn’t ignore the serious disagreements we have, particularly out in the West Philippine Sea. Instead, it delivers the message, “We can hold firm on our rights there, while building something positive over here.” 

It’s the common-sense idea that you don’t have to let one difficult issue poison every single room in the house. You can manage a dispute in one area and actively collaborate in another, especially when it puts food on the table and creates jobs. 

With the world trend suddenly leaning toward building walls, choosing to carefully build bridges with your closest giant neighbor isn’t a weakness, but practical survival for a growing economy like ours.

What’s really smart is how the FFCCCII is tying this effort to our role in the region. By pledging to host a major ASEAN-China business summit here in Manila in 2026, they’re grounding this bilateral hustle within the bigger, more stable family of Southeast Asia. 

That’s a big deal. It sends the message that we’re serious partners at the table, not just neighbors with a fence issue.

After all, the Philippines is a key player in ASEAN, fostering ties that should benefit everyone. This wider frame adds ballast, making the relationship steadier.

So, while the headlines will likely keep focusing on the storms at sea, don’t miss the quiet work of building piers on shore. Real, lasting stability between nations isn’t just negotiated across tables; it’s woven through a thousand threads of mutual interest — a successful joint venture, a fully booked flight, a thriving export deal. 

This business-led push focuses on creating tangible goods and connections that make the entire relationship more valuable, and therefore more resilient. 

Let this be a reminder that sometimes, before we can settle our biggest differences, it helps to first build something together that is simply too good to lose. And that’s a foundation we can all hope for with the new Chinese Ambassador  Quan. 

For a friend who runs a family mango export business and talked about the potential of the Chinese market, but felt the door was just a crack open, this new push means finally getting a real seat at the table. It’s that simple human ambition — to grow, to provide, to connect — that this plan is tapping into.