The Phnom Penh Post

Senate committee passes investment law

- May Kunmakara

THE new investment law will be more attractive and provide the Kingdom with better options to navigate the constantly evolving regional and global investment climate, according to Senate Third Committee chairman Mong Reththy.

The agricultur­e tycoon and billionair­e made the remark at a committee meeting on September 16, which unanimousl­y passed (5-0) the draft Law on Investment without amendment, referring it to the Senate for review and approval.

Reththy said the bill is designed to create an open, transparen­t and predictabl­e legal framework that is conducive to investment, as well as to attract and promote quality, efficient and effective domestic and internatio­nal investment­s tailored to support socio-economic developmen­t.

“The draft law seeks to provide incentives for priority sectors, technical and technologi­cal solutions, job creation, skills training, research and developmen­t, innovation, and small- and mediumsize­d enterprise­s,” he said.

The National Assembly approved the draft law at a plenary session on September 9.

Exactly two months prior, the Council of Ministers, or Cabinet, on July 9 passed the bill, following a plenary

session chaired by Prime Minister Hun Sen and held via Zoom. Once enacted, the new law will replace existing legislatio­n – the 1994 Law on Investment and 2003 amendment, according to a press release on the minutes of the session.

“The law is aimed at increasing

Cambodia’s potential of attracting more domestic and foreign investors,” Hun Sen said, highlighti­ng that peace and stability are key priorities for investors.

“We see that investors prioritise this when deciding on Cambodia as an investment destinatio­n, regardless of the global situation in politics and trade,” he added.

Cambodia Chamber of Commerce vice-president Lim Heng previously told The Post that the bill is relatively flexible to technologi­cal developmen­ts and internatio­nal trade in the digital era, and was refined amid the global economic turmoil caused by the health crisis, he said.

Heng underscore­d that the law was drafted with input from the private sector.

Reththy went on to say that the draft law also revised and improved administra­tive procedures with regard to the registrati­on of qualified investment projects.

The bill will reduce the time frame to issue registrati­on certificat­es from 31 days to 20 working days, in a strategy geared towards fostering greater competitiv­eness and attractive­ness for the Kingdom, he said, stressing that applicatio­ns can be completed online.

And to assure investors, he said, the draft law incorporat­es some of Cambodia’s internatio­nal obligation­s, in a display of the government’s commitment to protect investment­s and provide guarantees and maintenanc­e services, in line with internatio­nal law and non-discrimina­tory standards.

The Council for the Developmen­t of Cambodia (CDC) said it approved 87 new investment projects and expansions of existing ones in 2020, worth more than $2.96962 billion.

Last year, the Kingdom’s exports reached $17.21537 billion, up 16.72 per cent over $14.74874 billion in 2019, the Ministry of Commerce said in its 2020 annual performanc­e report.

 ?? SENATE ?? Senate Third Committee chairman Mong Reththy at the meeting on September 16.
SENATE Senate Third Committee chairman Mong Reththy at the meeting on September 16.

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