Business registration drop on paper only: minister

Dec 27th at 08:42
27-12-2016 08:42:20+07:00

Business registration drop on paper only: minister

Commerce minister Pan Sorasak yesterday dismissed figures published by his ministry that showed a sharp drop in new business registrations as a statistical anomaly, claiming the numbers did not reflect a real surge in new business activity.

The Ministry of Commerce report showed that the number of newly registered businesses declined by 26 percent this year, while registration of sole proprietorships plummeted by 40 percent. The data indicated that 2,937 new businesses registered since the start of the year compared with nearly 4,000 in 2015. Of these, only 786 sole proprietorships completed the registration process, down from about 1,300 in 2015.

The data included both new local businesses and foreign-owned branches registering with the government, but did not break down the figures.

Speaking at his ministry’s annual meeting yesterday, Sorasak insisted that the decline in registrations was not a sign of a slowdown in business activities, but was rather the result of statistical errors resulting from the adoption of an online registration system earlier this year. He said the online registration format was still new to many businesses, resulting in slower uptake, while a backlog of paperwork from applications filed in 2015 had skewed estimates of the amount of businesses that actually registered last year.

“The number for the businesses registering last year was calculated through paper applications,” he said, adding that it was an unclear manual process and difficult to validate figures. “But now our system is clearer and the [2016] number reflects the reality.”

He said it was impossible to draw accurate conclusions from last year’s registration figures, but looking ahead it would be possible to compare next year’s figures to those of 2016 as both would be calculated entirely from online registrations.

The Ministry of Commerce’s online business registration platform, launched in December of last year, was designed to make it easier for businesses to register and improve the Kingdom’s low ranking on the World Bank’s annual Doing Business report.

However, this year’s report, released in October, showed that online registration had made the process more lengthy and cumbersome. It noted that the average time to complete all the steps necessary to start a legal business had grown to 99 days on average, 12 more than needed a year ago.

The new online registration has had obvious teething pains, with the Ministry of Commerce extending the deadline for more than 50,000 existing businesses to re-register online three times on low compliance. The latest deadline for re-registry is set for December 31.

Te Taing Por, president of the Federation of Associations of Small and Medium Enterprises of Cambodia, claimed the complexity of the online system was the main cause for a drop in registered businesses.

“Our members have informed us that the new system has a lot of errors,” he said. “Online registration is easier said than done.”

Lim Heng, vice president of Cambodia Chamber of Commerce, said that businesses still need time to adapt to the new online system, adding once the kinks are worked out it will be better than the old paper-based registration format.

“But we still need some time to make businesses familiar with things that are new,” he said.

phnompenh post



NEWS SAME CATEGORY

Quality rice bound for China

Cambodian rice millers recently secured access to China’s immense market after two separate Chinese government bodies deemed their products satisfied its sanitary...

China’s Anhua mulls investment projects

Post Staff

Thai building materials firm eyes local market

Siam Global House Plc, a Thai-based distributor of home construction materials and equipment, announced yesterday that it will expand operations into Cambodia...

Seatel wins auction for 4G spectrum licence

The Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications revealed the preliminary winner of its first public auction of 4G spectrum frequencies yesterday.

Coastal airport gets an overhaul

Renovation work on Sihanouk International Airport will commence on Friday, with the expansion of the airport’s runway and terminal building aimed at increasing its...

Jewellers told to keep it real

The Ministry of Commerce will begin actively regulating the activities of gemstone and jewellery sellers to strengthen transparency in the industry and weed out...

Plans spilt for oil refinery

A mysterious cluster of crude oil storage tanks recently constructed on the coast near Kampot are linked to a $400 million project by timber baron Try Pheap to...

Tourism sees outbound growth

Cambodians are increasingly travelling both within their own country and abroad for leisure on rising disposable incomes and a social media-fuelled desire to...

New cranes to raise Sihanoukville port’s capacity

State-owned Sihanoukville Autonomous Port (SAP) received its first shipment of four new rubber-tyred gantry (RTG) cranes from Japan this week under a $22 million...

Government urged to hasten amendment of investment laws

The government should speed up amendments to its investment laws ahead of two major business conferences set for next year when visiting foreign investors will get...


MOST READ


Back To Top