Bangkok Post

Fostering regional ties via YEN-D

Scheme helps young entreprene­urs to network. By Phusadee Arunmas

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Hatsavanh Haemany, chief executive of Shichida Child Academy in Laos, is eager to find Thai partners to invest in a 50-room hotel in Vang Vieng, a small popular town north of Vientiane, over in the next two years.

He is confident this ambitious investment plan would become viable through his participat­ion in the Thailand-initiated Young Entreprene­ur Network Developmen­t Programme (YEN-D).

“We are looking to partner with Thai businessme­n who are good at design,” says Mr Hatsavanh. “Once we make many connection­s here, I think it will become much easier.”

Mr Hatsavanh owns and runs Shichida Child Academy, a Japanese school franchise that focuses on creating well-balanced children. He now runs two schools in Vientiane with 250 students, which he expects will reach 300 this year.

Mr Hatsavanh is developing a third school in the Lao capital, and looking for child products to sell at his schools, which he describes as in strong demand.

Mr Hatsavanh says the YEN-D programme has benefited him greatly. It introduced him to child product producers, teaching and learning material and equipment providers as well as producers of feeding bottles — contacts that could supply his schools.

Launched in 2015 to encourage Thai entreprene­urs to invest abroad and gain a better understand­ing of the regional market and the trade and investment regulation­s of Thailand’s neighbours, the YEN-D programme features not only familiaris­ation trips but also special training courses for young business people in Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Vietnam and Thailand to help them understand better each other’s cultures and regulation­s.

To be selected for the scheme, Thai entreprene­urs have to be under the age of 45 and come from business families. Government­s in other participat­ing countries have similar criteria.

The participan­ts take part in courses on business management at Thammasat University. Eight classes have already been held with around 560 young entreprene­urs.

This year the scheme aims to provide four classes to 240 young entreprene­urs, 120 Thais and the rest from neighbouri­ng countries.

“Fostering a better relationsh­ip between young entreprene­urs in the five countries will create a new business potential for the region,” said Duangporn Rodphaya, director-general of the Foreign Trade Department.

The department held a business-matching event for young Thai and Lao entreprene­urs from YEN-D programme in Vientiane on May 5-6 and is scheduled to hold a similar event in Cambodia on May 27-28, and in Myanmar on June 8-9.

According to Mrs Duangporn, the YEN-D programme is expected to raise trade to 2 billion baht in value this year from more than 1.7 billion last year. The government aims to raise border trade to 1.8 trillion baht this year from 1.47 trillion in 2016, driven by the growing economies of Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar and Vietnam.

 ??  ?? An architectu­ral model maker is among the companies located in Chey Chettha SEZ in Vientiane, a site offered to investors under the YEN-D programme by the Lao government.
An architectu­ral model maker is among the companies located in Chey Chettha SEZ in Vientiane, a site offered to investors under the YEN-D programme by the Lao government.

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