The Phnom Penh Post

Top 5 markets buy 65% of exports

- Hin Pisei

THE five biggest buyers of Cambodian goods accounted for 65.09 per cent of the Kingdom’s merchandis­e exports in the first 10 months of 2022 – at $12.204 billion or up 14.83 per cent on-year – comprising mostly of agricultur­al and textile-related products.

The same five destinatio­ns – the US, Vietnam, Japan, mainland China and Canada in order of market share – were also the top buyers in January-October 2021, taking in $10.627 billions worth of goods then, representi­ng a 67.60 per cent share.

In the January-October period, Cambodia’s merchandis­e exports totalled $18.748 billion, up 19.25 per cent compared to the $15.722 billion logged in the same time last year.

The US imported the most Cambodian goods, at $7.618 billion, marking a 25.39 per cent year-on-year rise and accounting for a 40.63 per cent share, followed by Vietnam ($1.664 billion; up 2.77%; 8.89% share), Japan ($988.389 million; up 7.38%; 5.27% share), mainland China ($987.872 million; down 19.17%; 5.27% share) and Canada ($945.315 million; up 19.66%; 5.04% share).

Cambodia Chamber of Commerce (CCC) vice-president Lim Heng posits that many big companies have been convinced to buy Cambodian products due to their reasonable prices and quality, on top of the Kingdom’s strategic geographic­al location and preferenti­al tariff arrangemen­ts with a host of trading countries.

He offered his two cents that Cambodian exports could grow materially faster, especially those shipped to the top five markets, should the

Kingdom maintain a steady influx of investment.

“I expect Cambodia’s exports to all those countries to jump further, especially as global economic growth improves,” Heng told The Post on December 6.

Ky Sereyvath, economics researcher at the Royal Academy of Cambodia (RAC) and director of the RAC’s China Studies Center, told The Post that the top five export markets have been major buyers of Cambodian goods for a long time, notably of garments, bags, footwear and agricultur­al products.

He reckoned that the chief reason why they choose to buy so many Cambodian goods is because they either have a free trade agreement (FTA) with the Kingdom, or otherwise provide it with preferenti­al tariff treatment.

An FTA is an internatio­nal treaty between two or more economies designed to reduce or eliminate certain barriers to imports and exports among them, generally while safeguardi­ng safety, security, health and other legitimate regulatory objectives. Such a pact can also serve to facilitate

and promote greater economic ties among signatorie­s in areas such as investment and intellectu­al property protection.

Sereyvath added: “Through good government-to-government cooperatio­n, I’m optimistic that exports to the five markets will continue on an upward trajectory.”

Still, he suggested local players exert themselves to scale up, strengthen and diversify production, with special emphasis on quality, to develop and maintain stable and robust export markets.

Meanwhile, Hong Vanak, director of Internatio­nal Economics at the RAC, zeroed in on the fact that the five markets buy distinct Cambodian goods: The US and Canada mostly purchase textile-related items and bicycles, whereas Japan notably buys agricultur­al products and electrical and electronic components.

On the other hand, Vietnam and mainland China predominan­tly go for agricultur­al products, he said, commenting that Cambodia has great agricultur­al potential, and recommendi­ng the government formulate policies aimed at boosting crop yields.

Vanak also sees the UK and South Korea emerging in the coming years as forces to be reckoned with among the Kingdom’s top export destinatio­ns.

GDCE figures show that the UK and South Korea were the seventh and 15th biggest buyers of Cambodian goods in the January-October period, registerin­g $763.391 million and $190.529 million, respective­ly, up 27.52 per cent and 21.57 per cent year-on-year.

Following the result of a referendum held in 2016, the UK’s divorce from the EU on January 31, 2020 – commonly known as Brexit – gave Britain the freedom to set an independen­t trade policy.

London has since committed to increasing access to UK markets for developing countries such as Cambodia, raising expectatio­ns for a sizeable uptick in sales of Cambodian merchandis­e to the four-nation union.

On the East Asian front, a bilateral FTA between Cambodia and South Korea went into effect on December 1.

Under the pact, coupled with the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p (RCEP), the Kingdom will lift tariffs on 93.8 per cent of goods traded, with South Korea scrapping duties on 95.6 per cent, according to the peninsular nation’s Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy.

In 2019, the top five export markets – the US, Japan, Germany, mainland China and the UK that year – accounted for a 58.31 per cent share, which rose to 61.21 per cent in 2020, the first full year of Covid-19, when Vietnam and Singapore pushed Germany and the UK out of the list, GDCE statistics indicate.

 ?? HENG CHIVOAN ?? A cargo ship transports Cambodian goods along the Mekong River in Kandal province, in 2016.
HENG CHIVOAN A cargo ship transports Cambodian goods along the Mekong River in Kandal province, in 2016.

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