[PHNOM PENH POST]
Global economic growth boosted Cambodia’s exports nearly 50 percent in
the first quarter compared year on year, though the trade deficit
expanded during the period, Ministry of Commerce officials said.
Exports
increased 49.6 percent to US$1.13 billion between January and March, up
from $756.6 million the year before, according to the figures.
The
growth was driven by an increase in garments and textiles, but also
agricultural products, according to Ministry of Commerce Secretary of
State Ok Boung.
“The world economy is recovering. So our exports
increase as demand goes up,” he said. He added the Kingdom had improved
its business environment since the period of the financial downturn.
Garments
and textiles, Cambodia’s main export, rose 45.5 percent in the first
quarter to a total of $976 million from $670.9 million.
Agricultural
products, including milled and unmilled rice, corn, cassava, rubber and
processed timber, climbed to $112.8 million, a rise of more than 238
percent from the same period in 2010, ministry statistics show.
Meanwhile,
total imports for the first quarter increased 71 percent to $1.55
billion from $908.5 million in the first quarter of 2010. Imports
included raw materials for garments, food, petroleum, vehicles,
construction materials and medicine.
Huot Pum, an economics
professor at the Royal University of Law and Economics in Phnom Penh,
called the figures a sign that Cambodia is increasingly capable of
producing goods that other countries want.
That means “we can increase our share in the global market,” he said.
Growth in importing raw materials for the garment industry was one reason behind the increasing trade deficit, he said.
“That’s
why we see that when exports grow, imports follow. Because we don’t yet
have the ability to produce those materials [for the garment
industry],” he said.
An official at the Cambodia Chamber of Commerce credited the country’s business-friendly regulations for the jump in commerce.
“Right
now a lot of foreign businessmen are contacting us because our
government has proved to them they are serious about attracting outside
investors, and that makes them want to do business here,” said Nguon
Meng Tech, Director General at the CCC.
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