Key Sectors Challenged by Downturn: UNDP 

THIS REPORT MADE BY UNDP:   

“It is a unique opportunity right now,” Douglas Broaderick, the UNDP’s chief 
representative, told VOA Khmer. “Cambodia needs to get some of the things done 
that could set-up Cambodia to be stronger economically and to be able to help 
people in a much better way, in terms of competitiveness linked to economic 
growth.”
 
IT'S FLAWED IN TWO POINTS:
 
1. CAMBODIA REMAINS OCCUPIED BY VIETNAM WITH THE COLLABORATION OF KING SIHAMONI 
.THEREFORE THERE IS ABSENCE OF INDEPENDENCE , LIBERTY ,FREEDOM OF THE CAMBODIAN 
PEOPLE IN THIS UNDERTAKING.
 
2. UNDP IS OPERATING UNDER THE VIETNAMESE INVADERS ,OCCUPIERS CONTROLE AND 
SUPERVISION WHICH IS IN VIOLATION OF 10 UN RESOLUTIONS CALLING VIETNAM TO CEASE 
HER OCCUPATION OF CAMBODIA FROM 1979-1989.
 
AS OF TODAY THE CPP REGIME IS NO OTHER THAN THE VIETNAMESE TROOPS OF GENERAL 
VAN TIEN DUNG OF 1978. 
UN Passes Strong Resolution on Cambodia Human Rights Abuses 
Feb. 27, 1982 : UN Commission on Human Rights meeting in Geneva adopted a 
resolution condemning Vietnam’s occupation of Cambodia as a violation of 
Cambodian human rights. The vote was 28 in favor, 8 against, and 5 abstentions.
Oct. 21, 1986 The UN General Assembly adopted a resolution A/RES/41/6, by vote 
of 116-21 with 13 abstentions, calling for a withdrawal of Vietnamese forces 
from Cambodia. 
IT'S IMPERATIVE FOR VIETNAM TO COMPLY WITH THIS UN RESOLUTION.

 

UNDP OFFICIAL PLEASE STOP MAKING THIS STUPIDITY.

 

BURY

 

 

 

Key Sectors Challenged by Downturn: UNDP 


By Ros Sothea, VOA Khmer 
Original report from Phnom Penh
10 July 2009


The world economic crisis is having a direct impact on four of Cambodia’s key 
economic drivers, which will need to become more competitive, according to a 
report released by UNDP this month.
Agriculture, construction, garments and tourism each face challenges from the 
economic downturn, and “Cambodia now needs to consolidate its progress, nurture 
its potential and sustain its growth,” the UNDP said in its report, “Cambodia 
Country Competitiveness: Driving Economic Growth and Poverty Reduction.”
“It is a unique opportunity right now,” Douglas Broaderick, the UNDP’s chief 
representative, told VOA Khmer. “Cambodia needs to get some of the things done 
that could set-up Cambodia to be stronger economically and to be able to help 
people in a much better way, in terms of competitiveness linked to economic 
growth.”
The agricultural sector, which generates a third of Cambodia’s GDP and employs 
more than half its workforce of 8 million people, suffers from low education in 
the rural work force, limited access to financing, poor roads and irrigation 
and limited market access, the report said.
The UNDP recommended the development of rural non-farm economies, such as 
roads, rural electrification, education and financial training, as well as 
better coordination between suppliers and manufacturers. 
And while the cost of labor is a main motive for garment manufacturers to come 
into Cambodia, productivity remains lower than neighboring countries, the 
report said, citing as an example productivity that is three times lower than 
in Thailand. 
The UNDP also recommended that the government re-examine its investment laws, 
to improve the manufacturing of textiles and garments, which comprised 12 
percent of the GDP in 2007 and employed more than 360,000 people. 
The sector lost 51,000 jobs between September 2008 and March 2009, as a global 
economic crisis, kindled by a US financial meltdown, spread. Around 70 
factories have closed in that time.
The UNDP recommended training workers to begin producing goods higher in value, 
and to improve industrial relations. 
Meanwhile, competitiveness in the tourism sector remains poor, ranking 112th of 
130 countries at a recent World Economic Forum, due in part to high energy 
costs and expensive flights, as well as limited infrastructure and costs 
associated with corruption, the UNDP said. 
Human resources in the sector remain low, and an uneven application of policies 
and rules plagues the sector.
“Rich cultural assets, such as Angkor Wat, give Cambodia a competitive 
advantage, but reliance on Angkor Wat as the primary tourist attraction cannot 
be sustained,” the report said.
The UNDP recommened relaxing tourist visa restrictions, exploring open sky 
policies and reducing the costs and improving the quality of tourism products.
In the construction sector, Cambodia has enjoyed an increase in both scale and 
value of projects, including high-rise apartment and office buildings currently 
under construction.
The country has the lowest wages for construction workers in Southeast Asia, 
but productivity is relatively low and there are shortages of labor to meet 
demands and of skilled workers, the report said.
Engineers and architects are overwhelmingly foreign, while electricians, 
welders, carpenters and other skilled workers are in short supply.
Added to these difficulties is the complicated constrution law, which means it 
takes an average 710 days for approval of construction permits—compared to 200 
days in Vietnam and 150 days in Thailand. 
Companies say they resort to paying bribes in order to shorten the time frame.
“The highly bureaucratic regulation of licensing in the construction sector may 
reduce its competitiveness,” the report said.
Cambodia is at the bottom 10 percent of countries in the World Bank’s 
corruption index, leading to a dearth of investment from the world’s largest 
industrialized countries, whose own national laws forbid participation in 
corrupt practices.
The UNDP recommended investments in vocational training, improvements to permit 
procedures and the strengthening and enforcement of building standards.
With the four key sectors flagging, costs remain high in information and 
communication technology, discouraging further investment. 
Overall, the UNDP recommended putting more resources into education, as 
Cambodia lags behind its Southeast Asian neighbors, ranking lowest in the 
region.
Cheam Yiep, a Cambodian People’s Party lawmaker and head of the National 
Assembly’s finance commitee, said the UNDP’s analysis was “just partly true,” 
but he did not elaborate.
Still, the goverment will take the report’s findings under consideration, he 
said. 
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