Gov’t plans non-garment industrial export expansion

Jan 28th at 10:44
28-01-2021 10:44:20+07:00

Gov’t plans non-garment industrial export expansion

The government plans to boost non-garment manufacturing exports this year on the back of strong market demand as the availability of viable Covid-19 vaccines jumpstarts a global economy hungry for recovery.

Non-garment manufacturing products in 2020 accounted for 26 per cent of Cambodia’s total industrial exports by value, a rise of 8.8 percentage points from its 17.2-per-cent share in 2019, data from the Ministry of Economy and Finance show.

The ministry includes milled rice, furniture, bicycles and electronic components in its “non-garment manufacturing products” designation.

Ministry permanent secretary Vongsey Vissoth told a press conference in Phnom Penh on January 27 that the government will further push non-garment manufacturing this year in a bid to stimulate the economy.

He claimed that Cambodia exported $600 million worth of bicycles last year, up 130 per cent from 2019, and $600 million in furniture, with the US as the main buyer for the year.

“We will continue to assist businesses in the manufacturing sector, in view of all their export potential, even as the Covid-19 pandemic goes on.

“We will reform the business environment, coordinate with businesses on matters related to corruption-control and improve our economic atmosphere to reel in investment and increase competitiveness,” Vissoth said.

Cambodia has many tools in its toolbox to woo in non-garment factory operators, he noted, listing the bilateral Cambodia-China Free Trade Agreement (CCFTA), the upcoming free trade agreement with South Korea, the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership and the UK’s Generalised System of Preferences.

He said: “China is a source of investment transfer to ASEAN, including Cambodia, especially the labour-intensive manufacturing industry. China will be using more advanced technology in industry by 2030, so the tech that’s not so modern will be transferred to us, and we need to seize this opportunity.”

Cambodia Rice Federation president Song Saran told The Post that the government’s non-garment manufacturing drive was a step in the right direction, noting the significant gains chalked up in the sector during the global health crisis.

He said: “Boosting exports in the manufacturing sector will have a positive impact on Cambodia’s economic growth.

“In order to be competitive in the area, we need to maintain a competitive stance, keep our production costs low and facilitate exports.”

Chheang Vannarith, director-general of the ministry’s General Department of Policy, said the Cambodian economy would bounce back to four per cent growth this year from 2020’s 3.1 per cent contraction.

He attributed last year’s slowdown to declining investment and trade flows in garments, construction, real estate and especially tourism.

The garment sector dipped 6.4 per cent in 2020 due to a drop in external demand and disruptions to production lines, but a 4.6 per cent recovery is expected this year, he said.

Meanwhile, the construction sector fell 2.4 per cent as foreign investment inflows and demand for construction materials for tourism and trade declined.

However, the government expects the construction sector to recover, growing by 2.9 per cent in 2021, buoyed by high demand in affordable- and medium-cost housing and strong economic activity.

He said the number of international tourists fell 80 per cent last year due to restrictions and fears of contracting Covid-19 during travel.

Statistics from the Ministry of Tourism show that 1,286,074 international tourists visited Cambodia in the first 11 months of last year, down 78.2 per cent from 5,898,130 in the corresponding period in 2019.

And according to the finance ministry, Cambodia’s garment exports in 2020 dropped 9.9 per cent after having posted a 13 per cent surge in 2019.

phnompenh post



NEWS SAME CATEGORY

Regional produce given trademarks of local geography

The Ministry of Commerce is pressing on to register some of the Kingdom’s more renown products as collective trademarks and grant them domestic geographical...

Horticulture project gets Phase III

The third phase of the Cambodia Horticulture Advancing Income and Nutrition (CHAIN-III) project was officially launched on January 22 in a bid to ramp up production...

Halal office to woo Muslim tourists

The government will soon establish the Department of Halal Affairs under the purview of the Ministry of Commerce’s General Department of Consumer Protection...

Agrifirm bags MoU for S Reap produce

Agro-industrial firm LY LY Food Industry Co Ltd on January 22 signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with Siem Reap-based wholesaler Food and Agriculture Market...

Cambodia applauds PTTOR expansion plans

The local business community welcomed the news of Thai conglomerate PTT Oil and Retail Business’ (PTTOR) expansion in Cambodia and the region even as Covid-19...

M’kiri wind farm passes first test

Xinglan Maritime Energy Co Ltd’s (XME) $200 million 100MW onshore wind power project in Mondulkiri province has passed its feasibility study, promising a fresh gust...

Asia apparel groups push for better buyers

In a show of solidarity, the Garment Manufacturers Association in Cambodia (GMAC) joined forces with eight competing Asian textile and garment lobby groups to...

Garment sector looks to green energy

Implementing sustainable clean energy practices in the garment industry will make the Kingdom an attractive and competitive investment destination, according to the...

Duty-free exports to US jump

Cambodia exported goods worth $6.06 billion to the US market in the first 11 months of last year, up 22.2 per cent from the same period in 2019, while total...

Power grid upgrades expand service, improve reliability

State-run electricity utility Electricite du Cambodge (EDC) has inaugurated a new substation and 230kV high-voltage transmission line in Tbong Khmum province as...


MOST READ


Back To Top