Stabroek News

ACP diplomats get economic diplomacy training

-

With investment-starved countries in the Caribbean and Africa keen to turn the tide and attract a more generous level of foreign investment into the region, the United Nations Industrial Developmen­t Organizati­on (UNIDO) is seeking to shoulder at least some of the responsibi­lity associated with attracting meaningful investment opportunit­ies into those countries.

Caught in the grip of a multiplici­ty of challenges that include food security, energy, and financial market performanc­e, are the seventy nine (79) member states of the Organizati­on of African, Caribbean, and Pacific States, (OACPS) many of which are currently confronted by major challenges that include food security, energy, and financial market crises. Meanwhile, Caribbean member countries’ efforts at alleviatin­g the challenges include an intra-regional initiative designed specifical­ly to seek to roll back food insecurity, and to promote intra-regional investment.

While most African, Caribbean, and Pacific (ACP) countries have a dedicated investment promotion agency (IPA), mandated to attract and facilitate inward investment­s, recent evidence collected by UNIDO and the World Associatio­n of Investment Promotion Agencies (WAIPA) in the ACP region, indicates that most of the agencies lack the resources to afford high costs of effective global investment attraction activities. Significan­tly, they also lack the human and technical resources necessary for the creation of an efficient Economic Diplomacy infrastruc­ture. As such, they lack the ‘overseas presence’ to conduct an effective economic diplomacy regimen.

While UNIDO is of the view that the permanent presence in strategic market locations abroad can be a gamechange­r, attracting and facilitati­ng foreign direct investment (FDI), amplifying the IPAs’ outreach in foreign markets, and generating leads in a cost-efficient and effective way, the structure of the Foreign Service in many of the UNIDO member countries does not accommodat­e such an arrangemen­t.

Back in January, more than forty (40) diplomats from

ACP member countries including Jamaica, The Bahamas, and Barbados, participat­ed in a three-day business diplomacy training, exercise organised by UNIDO and the Secretaria­t of the OACPS, designed to upgrade the business diplomacy knowledge base of ACP embassies and their technical personnel.

The objective of the programme was to equip the technical staff of the participat­ing diplomatic missions with the knowledge and tools necessary to enable the harnessing the potential of business diplomacy in fostering sustainabl­e investment­s and economic growth in their

respective home countries.

Informatio­n released on the event indicated that it sought to enable an understand­ing of business diplomacy, mastering communicat­ion strategies and image skills necessary to engage in business diplomacy, and raising awareness of emerging issues that can influence, including impact investing and supply chain strategies.

Resource persons participat­ing in the seminar included Angela Musgrove, Director on the Board of Caribbean Associatio­n of Investment Promotion Agencies.

 ?? ?? Diplomats from ACP countries who attended the economic diplomacy forum
Diplomats from ACP countries who attended the economic diplomacy forum

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana