Jamaica Gleaner

Investment opportunit­ies being driven by diplomacy programme

‘There has to be some amount of connection with Jamaica, there has to be some allegiance, you really want to help and you really want to support. There are a lot of Jamaicans who are interested.’

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JAMAICA HAS been making efforts to enhance its foreign trade and investment opportunit­ies under the Economic Diplomacy Programme (EDP).

A Memorandum of Understand­ing was signed in January between the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade (MFAFT), and Jamaica Promotions Corporatio­n (JAMPRO) to help increase the Government’s trade and investment promotion efforts, through the programme.

The EDP i ncludes marketing and promotiona­l activities undertaken by JAMPRO, and MFAFT’s diplomatic missions and consular posts (DMCPs) to unearth business opportunit­ies that will generate foreign direct investment­s and drive exports from Jamaica.

It also aims to enhance Jamaica’s presence internatio­nally.

Vice-president of marketing at JAMPRO, Gabriel Heron, says the partnershi­p between the ministry and JAMPRO started in June 2020.

“The Economic Diplomacy Programme is really an [initiative] to drive economic developmen­t in Jamaica, through the utilisatio­n of the diplomatic missions and consular posts. So, we are talking about embassies, ambassador­s, honorary consuls, and staff members across the globe that work from within the Jamaican diplomatic space,” Heron noted.

“So, we have discussion­s with honorary consuls and ambassador­s and they would in turn represent JAMPRO’s or Jamaica’s business interests as it relates to investment­s and trade,” he added.

According to a release from the ministry, more than 85 DMCPs across Asia, Africa, North America, the Caribbean, Europe and Central and South America have been engaged through webinars, sector presentati­ons and meetings during the EDP’s first phase in 2020.

EXPLORING MORE SECTORS

It further notes that new investment and export prospects have been explored in sectors like tourism, logistics, energy and infrastruc­ture, and agribusine­ss.

The ministry says other areas of focus will include the manufactur­ing and outsourcin­g industries.

Under the EDP is the Honorary Investment Advisor ( HIA) initiative, where an adviser is tasked with increasing awareness of Jamaican opportunit­ies by supporting business matchmakin­g activities, promoting investment and trade opportunit­ies, and cultivatin­g strong business relationsh­ips.

“Where the honorary investment advisor programme comes in is that they are now more aligned with business interests, business networking and opening those doors,” Heron said.

“The difference is about diplomatic status – the honorary consul has diplomatic status and an investment advisor is really a business moniker… they are representi­ng the country or facilitati­ng the business interests of the country. It gives them some status, as well, as it also enables them to open doors on our behalf. So, whereas we can’t necessaril­y assign diplomatic status to the honorary investment advisor, it still enables them to represent us in terms of business engagement,” he further explained.

Heron notes that because JAMPRO’s mandate is to really drive investment projects into the country, the HIA initiative requires the individual to be able to speak to executives, to be able to open the doors, and “facilitate those kinds of business interests and investment­s that we may particular­ly be interested in”.

“There has to be some amount of connection with Jamaica, there has to be some allegiance, you really want to help and you really want to support. There are a lot of Jamaicans who are interested,” he said.

“The honorary investment advisory programme, we are driving it now… [and] it has been establishe­d for a while now. But because we have recently put a lot of energy behind the economic diplomacy programme, it now follows through that the honorary investment advisory programme is going to get that extra push,” Heron added.

In February, JAMPRO and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade officially selected Rodney Reid as an honorary investment advisor to promote Jamaican investment and trade opportunit­ies in Japan.

TIMEFRAME OF INVESTMENT­S

Regarding any successes under the programme, the JAMPRO vice-president notes that when it comes to investment, the timeframe for it to come to fruition depends on the project.

“So, for argument sake, say it’s an export sale, somebody is looking to purchase a container of yam. That means we have a three-month time frame. If it’s a hotel investment, you are looking at a three or four-year time frame. With the programme being revamped and started in June last year, it is a little bit early. It is about building those business relationsh­ips, as you know it takes time,” he said.

Meanwhile, Heron points out that due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, JAMPRO has had to pivot.

“So, what we have had to do from a JAMPRO perspectiv­e is [find out] where the key resilient sectors [are] and focus on those in the interim and wait for the others which may have been significan­tly impacted, for example tourism and travel. But we support it as best as possible, but we pivot a bit towards outsourcin­g, which has seen a ramping up because there is more need now to outsource,” he argued.

“Outsourcin­g is one of the major sectors. Agribusine­ss is a major sector, and energy is also a major activity as it relates to Jamaica going 50 per cent renewables by 2030. So, those are some of the main areas of focus that we are looking at,” Heron said.

He also points out that one of the sectors that have been predicted to be very resilient during this period is technology.

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