NAYPYIDAW, Myanmar (AFP) - Myanmar
touted its dramatic post-junta reforms Wednesday in a bid to entice
foreign investors as hundreds of world leaders and industry chiefs
visited the long-isolated nation for Asia's edition of the World
Economic Forum.
Some 900 delegates from more than 50 countries
gathered in the capital Naypyidaw for the three-day WEF on East Asia -- a
regional version of the annual gathering of business and political
luminaries in the Swiss resort of Davos.
Foreign firms are queuing
up to enter the country formerly known as Burma, tantalised by the
prospect of a largely untapped market with a potential 60 million new
consumers in addition to Myanmar's pool of cheap labour.
They
include Coca-Cola, which has returned to Myanmar after an absence of
more than 60 years with a new bottling plant, as well as consumer
products giant Unilever which will soon start production in the country.
"This
event is really going to raise the visibility of Myanmar to the
economic community outside of the country," Heang Chhor, senior partner
at global consultancy McKinsey & Co, told AFP.
"Beyond the
usual suspects such as agriculture, energy and mining and infrastructure
most (foreign) companies are still looking at the potential of Myanmar.
What are the opportunities lying out there in the next 20 years?" he
said.
The interest works both ways, with Myanmar desperately short
of jobs, skills and infrastructure to drive an economic revival and
lift its people out of poverty.
"Our country very much lags
behind... we lack contact with the other markets," said Wah Wah Maung of
the national planning and economic development ministry, adding the
forum is a chance to "market our nation".
President Thein Sein's
quasi-civilian government has surprised the world since coming to power
two years ago with dramatic political and economic changes that have led
to the lifting of most Western sanctions.
Hundreds of political
prisoners have been freed, democracy champion Aung San Suu Kyi has been
welcomed into a new parliament and tentative ceasefires have been
reached in the country's multiple ethnic civil wars.
On the eve of
the conference, former general Thein Sein said in a radio address to
the nation that all remaining prisoners of conscience would soon be
freed.
Activists say some 200 political prisoners remain in jail
and accuse Myanmar of using a series of headline-grabbing amnesties for
political gain.
Both Thein Sein and Suu Kyi are scheduled to
address the forum on Thursday, but many participants are eager for a
chance to meet face-to-face.
"Many important people are trying to
see the president," a government official told AFP as the WEF got
underway. "But of course he cannot meet everyone."
After years lagging behind its more developed neighbours, Myanmar is now taking steps to revive its impoverished economy.
The
currency was floated last year, there are moves to give the central
bank more independence and a new foreign investment law has been passed,
catching the eye of foreign executives.
At the same time some
delegates struck a note of caution for Myanmar as it opens up to the
outside world, urging authorities to harvest new knowledge but resist
investment that exploits the country.
"Investors need to abide by
the standards within the country or world," Han Thar Myint, a spokesman
for Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy party, told AFP at the
forum.
"We have to welcome countries that abide by high ethical standards."
The former junta was accused by rights groups of plundering the country's natural resources for personal gain.
The new government has pledged openness in an effort to reassure investors over corruption concerns.
Experts
say businesses entering Myanmar also face major hurdles, including an
opaque legal framework as well as a lack of basic infrastructure and of
government and private-sector expertise.
Several outbreaks of deadly religious violence have also cast a shadow over the reform process.
The
country's "major challenge" is to persuade companies of the strength of
its basic infrastructure and labour force as well as to build faith in
its political stability, said Heang Chhor of McKinsey.
source: TheWest
http://au.news.yahoo.com/thewest/business/a/-/world/17482896/reforming-myanmar-courts-investors-at-asias-davos/
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