Cambodia expects the arrival of the ASEAN Community in 2015 to present challenges as well as opportunities for its people.
Economic
advisor to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International
Cooperation Sok Siphanna believes that the ASEAN integrity will create
more opportunity for Cambodia.
“Cheap labor in Cambodia is one factor that can attract investment,” he said.
In the manufacturing sector, the opportunities could be even wider.
“Our
manufactured products could be available to the 500 million people in
the ASEAN region,” he added at a roundtable discussion on the ASEAN
Economic Community 2015, organized by the Club of Cambodian Journalists
and the Konrad Adenauer Foundation in Phnom Penh recently.
He realized that opportunity should be pursued and urged Cambodians to take initiative.
“Cambodians should be prepared for the future. It is time for Cambodia to further develop,” he said.
Cambodia’s
Information Minister Khieu Kanharith stressed the need to reform
education as a tool to better develop its youth into the leaders of
tomorrow.
The education system in Cambodia is still not
standardized across the country, and though there are good schools, they
are far too expensive for the average Cambodian.
“Education is an important factor which could give Cambodia the ability to compete with other ASEAN members.”
Moeun
Tola, head of the labor program at the Community of Legal Education
Center, said that in order to compete with ASEAN members in 2015,
Cambodia has to strengthen the ability of its students, increase
vocational training courses for unskilled workers, and further educate
farmers on land, budget, market and technique.
The ASEAN Community 2015 would see people and products crossing freely in the region.
His
main concern is that Cambodians are not able to compete with their
immediate neighbors such as Vietnam and Thailand. “They have an abundant
amount of skilled workers,” he said.
Labor analyst Kem Ley
criticized the government for not setting up a comprehensive program to
prepare its people to work overseas. Cambodians should be trained with
certain skills so that they can compete with other ASEAN peers. “Migrant
workers need more vocational skills,” he said to The Jakarta Post over
the phone.
One major challenge that should be addressed is language. “English is commonly used in the Southeast Asia region,” he added.
Ken
Chanthan, president of the Young Entrepreneurs Association of Cambodia,
said that 2015 would also provide big opportunities for young
entrepreneurs to expand their business.
Having deep knowledge about different cultures, politics and regulations would broaden understanding throughout the region.
The writer is an intern at The Jakarta Post.
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