A Change of Guard

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Monday 11 February 2013

Japanese interest growing [Japanese investments are the sorts of investments Cambodia needs because they create real benefits for Cambodia in the forms of jobs]

Hs-2
Cambodia’s Prime Minister Samdech Akka Moha Sena Padei Techo Hun Sen receives a delegation
of Japanese investors led by Mr. Hiromasa Yonekura, Chairman of the Japan Business Federation
at the Peace Palace in Phnom Penh this afternoon.
Photo: Peou Kim Chanrath

Last Updated on 11 February 2013 
Phnom Penh Post
By Hor Kimsay
 

A delegation led by the Japan Business Federation, the biggest economic association in that country, visited Cambodia last weekend to explore business opportunities in the Kingdom.
Masafumi Kuroki, Japan’s ambassador to Cambodia, said the delegation, the largest such group from Japan to visit the Kingdom, was solid evidence of increasing Japanese interest here.
“They are all decision-makers from various big companies in Japan,” Kuroki told the Post. “So it’s great that Cambodia can attract their attention.”
The 140 companies represented in the delegation included global businesses such as Toyota Motor Corporation, Panasonic Corporation, Sumitomo Chemical, Hitachi, energy giant JX Holdings, Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ bank, financial group Sumitomo Mitsui and All Nippon Airways.
“We would like to strengthen co-operation with Cambodia in the areas of infrastructure development as well as the improvement of the business environment,” Japan Business Federation chairman Yonekura Hiromasa said.
“By doing so, Japan will be growing together with Cambodia.”
During their two days in Cambodia, the delegates met Prime Minister Hun Sen, Commerce Minister Cham Prasidh, Japanese business leaders who are already investing in Cambodia and many other significant Cambodian government bodies.
Warmly welcoming the potential investors, Prasidh highlighted Cambodia’s comparative advantages, including political and macro-economic stability, a large, low-cost labour force and free access to major markets.
“Cambodia is one of the less developed countries in the world, which is a great advantage for export-based companies to come here and export their products to many destinations, duty- and quota-free,” he told delegates.
Yoshiko Yamanaka, project adviser for economic infrastructure development at the Japanese development agency JICA, told the Post Japanese investors were shifting their operations from traditional sites such as China to other Asian countries.

To attract more Japanese companies, it might be necessary for Cambodia to define its comparative advantages and use incentives such as policy tools to  improve the investment climate, she said.
“In this regard, Japanese companies may decide to locate their operations in Cambodia.”
In Channy,  president of Cambodia’s largest bank, ACLEDA, attended a lunch meeting with the business delegation.
Learning directly about investment advantages was an effective way for investors to observe the reality of Cambodia’s business potential, Channy said.
“We’ve already shown a success story to many companies who decided to grow here. I hope they [the business delegation] will learn from that and follow the early comers.”

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

US has asked Japanese to try to compete with the Chinese in
Cambodia. Benzai!!! good thing for Cambodia to have this type of Cold War with economic competition rather than bombs but will be one day, wait and see! when cold become turning Hot

Anonymous said...

China, South Korea, and Japan are the real true trade partners of Cambodia. America rank last amongst those developing countries as far as conducting trade with Cambodia is concern. This is pathetic. This shouldn't be the attitude of America. In case you didn't know, America has been helping Vietnam's economy develop for the last several decades now. America would rather help communist Vietnam (where there is no such thing as democracy and has one of the worst cases of human rights violation) than do the same for Cambodia. Why is this the case? It's all has to do with who is hating and who is loving China. Obviously, China and Cambodia aren't hating each other. So far, the whole Southeast Asian countries, with the exception of Cambodia, are hating China, which very much please America. If only Cambodia join the bandwagon. America is being double-standard with Cambodia. If Cambodia were to recieved any economic help from America, tough standards must be met. Those standards are usually very political. America was willing to ignore its democratic principle and be-friended with a former enemy Vietnam just to get to China and punishing Cambodia for being friend with China.