Phnom Penh Post
By Anne Renzenbrink
As Cambodia’s economy, driven by the garment industry, develops, more
diversified investment opportunities in infrastructure and sectors such
as financial services will emerge, Britain’s minister for trade and
Investment said in Phnom Penh yesterday.
Visiting Cambodia for
the first time on his two-week trip through Southeast Asia, where he is
drumming up support for British companies, Minister Stephen Green said
the garment industry is an important source of supply for markets in
England, but that “as time goes by, I would assume that the Cambodian
economy will get more diversified, will move up the value chain, and as
that happens, that will open up other opportunities”.
Speaking at
the InterContinental Hotel. he said that as Cambodia’s economy
continues to grow, smaller sectors like insurance and banking will grow
rapidly.
“And that’s just one example. [There are] big needs for
infrastructure investment in the energy sector, in transportation,
airports, roads and so forth, but again, that will create opportunities
for British businesses to participate.”
Trade between the United
Kingdom and Cambodia reached about $750 million last year, a 27 per cent
increase compared with 2011, data from the British embassy in Phnom
Penh show.
Last year, Cambodia mainly exported garment,
footwear, sugar and cereal grains to UK, while the UK sent over
vehicles, textile yarn, fabric, machinery, medical and pharmaceutical
products, the data show.
In January, the UK opened a Trade & Investment Office at the British embassy in Phnom Penh.
Figures
from the Council for the Development of Cambodia show that British
companies invested $2.4 billion in Cambodia between 1995 and 2011.
Earlier
this year, the Post reported that South Korea nudged out England as the
largest investor in Cambodia during 2012, with a total injection of
about $287 million Cambodia’s garment industry has traditionally
attracted the biggest share of the country’s investment, with Quantum
Clothing as the largest British garment manufacturer in the country.
In January, British-basedPrudential launched operations in Cambodia’s nascent life insurance market.
A
month later, the largest coffee brand in the UK, Costa Coffee, opened
in Phnom Penh. Other UK firms are involved in engineering and design
consultancy.
Green brushed off concerns yesterday when asked
whether British companies would hesitate to invest in Cambodia in light
of garment factory strikes and a lawsuit by Cambodian villagers against
British company Tate&Lyle, which bought sugar from companies in Koh
Kong province accused of rights abuses.
“I don’t think it’s so
much that they are not investing because they are worrying about things,
they are not investing because they haven’t thought enough about what
the opportunities are,” he said.
Green was also expected to meet with Prime Minister Hun Sen yesterday.
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