The Phnom Penh Post

Travel goods makers to scout market

- Hor Kimsay

REPRESENTA­TIVES of 14 Chinese travel goods manufactur­ers will fly to Cambodia next week for a five-day scouting mission to test the Kingdom’s potential for investment, building off of the success of a roadshow in Hong Kong last month to promote the country’s new preferenti­al trade access to the US market, industry insiders said yesterday.

Van Sou Ieng, chairman of the Garment Manufactur­ers Associatio­n in Cambodia (GMAC), said that he hopes firm capital commitment­s will be cemented after the delegation meets Cambodian trade and investment officials and garments manufactur­ers, and tours some of the Kingdom’s special economic zones.

In July, the US government expanded the Generalise­d System of Preference­s (GSP) scheme to include travel goods manufactur­ed in Cambodia, granting these goods duty-free access to the US market. Since then, GMAC and government officials have worked alongside US Embassy officials to promote Cambodia’s industry to overseas investors looking to migrate away from the rising costs of manufactur­ing in China.

“We hope they will make investment decisions, which will show the world that we are diversifyi­ng the products that we manufactur­e for export,” Sou Ieng said. “Travel goods provide more added value than garments, so that will mean workers can get better salaries and become more competitiv­e.”

While Cambodia’s share of the global travel goods market remains relatively small, it has grown impres- sively in the last five years. Total exports were just $240,000 in 2011, but topped $48 million last year.

According to Sou Ieng, 15 manufactur­ers in Cambodia currently produce eligible travel goods, and he estimates that the revised GSP scheme could push exports to $200 million annually, adding 100,000 new jobs.

He added that once Cambodia can prove that it can attract investment into the travel goods industry, it would be natural that manufactur­ers in the electronic­s and automotive industry would follow suit.

GMAC has previously claimed that Cambodia needs to quickly capture this market potential, especially as the US Congress is considerin­g expanding the trade preference to some of its regional competitor­s.

Soeng Sophary, spokespers­on for the Ministry of Commerce, said that with the potential cancellati­on of the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p (TPP) by newly elected US president Donald Trump – a deal in which Vietnam was anticipate­d to gain a large competitiv­e edge – Cambodia could remain a profitable destinatio­n for investors.

“We feel more secure that investors who come will not turn away from us and we hope new investors will continue to flow in,” she said.

However, she was quick to note that Cambodia needs to continue to build on a creating a welcoming investment climate with a high-quality workforce in light of overall regional competitio­n.

“We have become a player in the region so we need to prepare to be ready for competitio­n at anytime because other trade agreements similar to the TPP could someday appear,” she said. “We need to be sure that if there is another regional trade deal coming, we can be included.”

 ?? HONG MENEA ?? An attendant rearranges suitcases and bags earlier this year at a shop in central Phnom Penh.
HONG MENEA An attendant rearranges suitcases and bags earlier this year at a shop in central Phnom Penh.

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