The Phnom Penh Post

Island nations offer advice on developmen­t of infrastruc­ture

Airbnb threatened with court in France

- Robin Spiess

AT A regional conference held in Phnom Penh yesterday, internatio­nal officials met to discuss how Cambodia needs to adopt a more resilient infrastruc­ture strategy to ensure stable economic growth by taking lessons from regional counterpar­ts and seeking out their guidance.

Speaking at the conference, Pheng Sovicheano, a secretary of state at the Ministry of Public Works and Transport, said that despite Cambodia’s rapid economic growth, the Kingdom needs more financing to develop infrastruc­ture to ensure long-term prosperity.

“Recent growth in the Kingdom can be connected to the booming constructi­on and tourism sectors, as well as a healthy flow of foreign direct investment,” he said. “But we understand there is still more to be done.”

Specifical­ly, he cited an immediate need for an enhanced logistics sector that improves trade within the Kingdom.

The conference, which was co-hosted by the United Nations Office for Project Services (Unops) and Catholic Relief Services (CRS), brought together representa­tives from Sri Lanka, the Maldives and the Philippine­s.

Patali Champika Ranawaka, the minister of Sri Lanka’s Ministry of Megapolis and Western Developmen­t, noted that Cambodia could look to the island nation on how to address the developmen­t of its infrastruc­ture.

“Cambodia can learn from Sri Lanka’s experience­s, because Cambodia is facing a lot of the same challenges we have faced, including becoming a middle-income country and improving methods of transporta­tion for exports,” he explained. “Cambodia can work to ensure the Mekong River is a commercial waterway, and can also learn from Sri Lanka’s plans to become a high-income country by 2030.”

Despite Sri Lanka and Cambodia both currently being classified as lower-middle-income countries, Sri Lanka is on the cusp of being solidly middle-income and has been lauded by the World Bank for years for its resilient economic policies despite consistent natural disasters.

Fathimath Shaana Farooq, director general of the Ministry of Housing and Infrastruc­ture for the Maldives, explained that while her country is primarily concerned with developing harbour infrastruc­ture between the nation’s 26 atolls, both countries could still learn from each other on how to manage developmen­t spending.

“Cambodia is very different [than the Maldives], but Cambodia can learn how we are focusing our investment in areas that will lead to sustainabl­e developmen­t in the future,” she said.

“We can also learn from how Cambodia is integratin­g itself within the Southeast Asian community and becoming a viable economic partner for surroundin­g nations.”

She added that she saw great potential in bankabilit­y and options for future financing between the two nations.

Eleazar Ricote, deputy executive director at the Philippine Public-Private Partnershi­p (PPP) Center, said that Cambodia needs to do more to ensure economic prosperity by meeting the UN’s Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDG). Of paramount importance, he stressed, should be initiative­s to improve bank- ability, sustainabi­lity and risk management in the Kingdom.

“At the heart of SDG targets are infrastruc­ture facilities in key sectors, including public health and energy, that will enable and sustain investment­s, jobs, consumptio­n growth and poverty reduction,” he said, adding that Cambodia should follow the Philippine­s’ model for incorporat­ing the goals into national plans.

“There’s an annual financing gap at current levels of investment­s, and the private sector accounts for most jobs, capital flows and GDP while also bringing efficienci­es in innovation,” he said. “There is a need for private financing to better meet these goals.” THE city of Paris yesterday threatened to take Airbnb to court if it does not delist hundreds of apartments whose owners have failed to register with the French capital’s authoritie­s.

Mayor Anne Hidalgo’s deputy in charge of housing, Ian Brossat, said the city had written to five holiday rental sites – Airbnb, HomeAway, Paris Attitude, Sejourning and Windu – to demand they remove properties whose owners have defied the city’s new registrati­on requiremen­ts. If they do not comply the city will take legal action, he added.

Paris – the world’s third-most visited city, according to a Mastercard ranking – is one of Airbnb’s top markets, with some 65,000 homes listed.

Another 35,000 are available on rival platforms.

Faced with complaints that holiday rentals are increasing property speculatio­n and pricing hoteliers out of the market, the city has slapped restrictio­ns on short-term rentals of apartments and rooms.

Since December 1, anyone wanting to rent their home on an online platform must register it with the city and display a number on their ad.

The system allows French authoritie­s to ensure the property is not being rented for more than 120 days a year – the maximum duration for which a person can rent out their main residence.

Paris officials have flagged up around 1,000 Airbnb ads that are in breach of the regulation­s and about a hundred each on the other four sites.

 ?? SAHIBA CHAWDHARY ?? A cargo container is lifted for shipping earlier this year at the Sihanoukvi­lle Autonomous Port.
SAHIBA CHAWDHARY A cargo container is lifted for shipping earlier this year at the Sihanoukvi­lle Autonomous Port.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia