The Phnom Penh Post

CDC okays $2.38B of projects in Jan-Feb

- Hom Phanet

THE Council for the Developmen­t of Cambodia (CDC) has in the first two months of this year announced its approval of final registrati­on certificat­es for 37 investment projects worth about $2.38 billion, an indication of significan­t progress in economic recovery as Covid-19 wanes.

The 25 project approvals announced in January made up the vast majority of that value, with total registered capital of nearly $2.3 billion, according to CDC figures. The bulk of that came from Kampot Logistics and Port Co Ltd’s $1.300 billion multipurpo­se port with a logistics centre, in Kampot province’s Bokor town.

CDC notices show that most of the projects greenlit in the January-February period covered areas such as garments, tyres, and fruit processing and packaging.

Cambodia Chamber of Commerce (CCC) vice-president Lim Heng affirmed that Chinese companies once again accounted for the majority of the ventures.

He voiced pride in the increasing representa­tion of the tyre manufactur­ing and agro-industry among approved projects, saying that these sub-sectors “better support” the Cambodian economy than the garment sector, which he noted did not account for the majority of the planned ventures.

“Light industries and the garment sector may be easily affected [by external factors], but having lots of investment in medium or non-garment

sectors would help stabilise the economy by creating domestic markets, and especially by yielding local raw materials to process for export, such as rubber and other agricultur­al products,” Heng said.

He noted that the CCC was eager to reach out and develop relations with entities in foreign countries.

For example, Heng, other CCC representa­tives and a delegation of the foreign ministry’s Economic Diplomacy Working Group late last month met with the Ankara-based Industrial­ist

Businesswo­men and Businessme­n Confederat­ion (SANKON) at a business reception in Turkey.

As a result, a number of Turkish businessme­n vowed to visit Cambodia “soon”, to gain a better understand­ing of possible opportunit­ies for new ventures, which could lead to collaborat­ive agreements with local enterprise­s, according to Heng.

He also used the occasion to put in a plug for the CCC, saying that his chamber has considerab­ly propped up private businesses in recent

years and solved many of the issues they face, which he believes has reinforced the level of confidence among local investors needed to actively seek to attract their foreign peers to the Kingdom.

Hong Vanak, director of Internatio­nal Economics at the Royal Academy of Cambodia, hailed the number of new investment projects as a “good starting point” for 2022, in spite of the lingering Covid-19 crisis.

He ascribed the figure to the assortment of the Kingdom’s bilateral and regional free trade agreements (FTA), which he pointed out were achieved through the efforts of the Ministry of Commerce and relevant ministries, as well as cooperatio­n between the CDC and local businesses to bring in foreign investment.

Vanak also cited other major factors such has political stability, better macroecono­mic governance, new investment laws and other facilitati­on measures, and the government’s vaccinatio­n policy, all of which he says have delivered a major confidence boost for investors.

He told The Post that Cambodia benefits from preferenti­al trade arrangemen­ts like the EU’s Everything But Arms (EBA) scheme and the US’ Generalise­d System of Preference­s (GSP), which “give investors hope in the production of their goods intended for export to Europe, the US, and adjacent areas”.

Meanwhile, the government has drafted official roadmaps for the developmen­t of the automotive and electronic­s sectors in Cambodia, to create more than 22,000 new jobs and raise exports past $2 billion over the next five years, the CDC reported early this month.

Initiated in February 2021, developmen­t of the instrument­s was led by the CDC, with involvemen­t from the finance, land management, industry, commerce, labour, energy, and public works ministries, with support from the UK government’s Accelerate­d Covid-19 Economic Support (ACES) programme, and in partnershi­p with the Boston Consulting Group (BCG), the CDC said.

 ?? FRESH NEWS ?? The Council for the Developmen­t of Cambodia (CDC) in January and February respective­ly disclosed that 25 and 12 new investment projects had been given the nod.
FRESH NEWS The Council for the Developmen­t of Cambodia (CDC) in January and February respective­ly disclosed that 25 and 12 new investment projects had been given the nod.

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