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2014 Cambodia Trade Integration Strategy 2014-2018 (ENG) PDF

KINGDOM OF CAMBODIA Cambodia Trade Integration Strategy 2014-2018 Full Report special thanks to H.E. SUN Chanthol, Senior Minister, Minister of Commerce, for his strong commitment to the completion of this work. A special thanks to h.e. TEKRETH Kamrang, Secretary of state, Ministry of Commerce, and former EIF Focal Point for Cambodia.

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100% found this document useful (3 votes)
673 views512 pages

2014 Cambodia Trade Integration Strategy 2014-2018 (ENG) PDF

KINGDOM OF CAMBODIA Cambodia Trade Integration Strategy 2014-2018 Full Report special thanks to H.E. SUN Chanthol, Senior Minister, Minister of Commerce, for his strong commitment to the completion of this work. A special thanks to h.e. TEKRETH Kamrang, Secretary of state, Ministry of Commerce, and former EIF Focal Point for Cambodia.

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Heng Narith
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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KINGDOM OF CAMBODIA

Cambodia Trade Integration Strategy 2014-2018

Full Report

Phnom Penh, January 2014

2 Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

Special Thanks
Special thanks to H.E. SUN Chanthol, Senior Minister, Minister of Commerce, for his strong
commitment to the completion of this work and to H.E. CHAM Prasidh, Senior Minister, Minister of
Industry and Handicrafts, who oversaw the early stages of the preparation of the study. Special thanks
also to H.E. PAN Sorasak, Secretary of State, Ministry of Commerce, Chair of the Inter-Ministerial
Committee for Updating the Cambodia Trade Integration Strategy 2014-2018 and former EIF Focal Point
for Cambodia,H.E. TEKRETH Kamrang, Secretary of State, Ministry of Commerce and EIF Focal Point
for Cambodia,H.E. SOK Sopheak, Director General for International Trade, Ministry of Commerce, Mr.
SIM Sokheng, Acting Director, Department of International Cooperation, Ministry of Commerce as well
as to the Members of the Inter-Ministerial Committee for Updating the Cambodia Trade Integration
Strategy 2013-2018 for support to the team throughout the preparation of the strategy.Finally, a special
thanks to Mr. SUON Prasith, Ms. NORNG Ratana, and Mr. LY Proyuth for their unwavering logistical
support during the entire process.

CTIS 2013-2018 Inter-Ministerial Committee (Task Force)


H.E. PAN Sorasak, Secretary of State, MoC, Chairman of the Inter-Ministerial Committee
H.E. HANG Chuon Naron, Minister of Education, Youth and Sports (formerly, Secretary of State, MEF,
and Vice Chair of the Inter-Ministerial Committee)
H.E. TEKRETH Samrach, Secretary of State, CoM, Vice Chairof the Inter-Ministerial Committee
H.E. CHOU Yin Sim, Secretary of State, MoH
H.E. KOUSOUM Saroeuth, Secretary of State, MoT
H.E. OUK Prachea, Under Secretary of State, MoP
H.E. TEKRETH Kamrang, Secretary of State, MoC
H.E. SOK Sopheak, Director General for International Trade, MoC
H.E. MENG Saktheara, Director General, MIH
H.E. CHEA Vuthy, Deputy Secretary General, CDC
H.E. CHHIV Yiseang, Academic and Practical Training Director, RSA
Mr. SEN Sovann, Deputy Secretary General, MAFF
Mr. LY Savuth, Deputy Director of Administration, MRD
Mr. THE Chhunhak, Deputy Director, MoWA
Mr. TY Sereirith, Deputy Director General, MoLVT
Mr. SIM Sokheng, Acting Director, Department of International Cooperation, MoC
Mr. RATH Saravuth, Deputy Director, Department of International Cooperation, MoC, Secretary

3|Page

Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

CTIS Team
Fabio Artuso, World Bank Consultant
Denis Audet, Asian Development Bank Consultant
Nick Blong, DEVadvisory and UNDP Consultant
Peter Brimble, Asian Development Bank Cambodia, Senior Economist and Deputy Director
Sven Callebaut, Ministry of Commerce, Senior Aid for Trade Advisor
Julian Clarke, World Bank Cambodia, Senior Economist
Sandra DAmico, HR Inc. Cambodia, Managing Director and UNDP Consultant
Fabrice Gregoire, UNDP Consultant
Stefano Inamo, UNCTAD Secretariat
Pisey Khin, Asian Development Bank Consultant
Roger Lawrence, Ministry of Commerce, Senior Trade Advisor
Sara Nez vora, Consultant
Gordon Peters, Managing Partner, Emerging Market Consulting and ADB Consultant
Sam Vichet, RULE Researcher and UNDP Consultant
Srun Sopheak, RULE Researcher and UNDP Consultant
Sok Cheyrotha, RULE Researcher and UNDP Consultant
Kees Van Der Meer, Asian Development Bank Consultant
Matt Van Roosmalen, Senior Consultant, Emerging Market Consulting
Victor Van Spengler, UNDP Consultant
Mr. Va Sothy, BDLINK (Cambodia) Co., Ltd
and
Thierry Noyelle, UNDP Consultant and Team Leader

4|Page

4 Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

Table of Contents

Acronyms

.................................................................................................. 7

Background

................................................................................................. 11

Introduction

Export Competitiveness and Human Development ............................. 13

Chapter 1

Market Access and Changes in the Composition and Destination


25
of Cambodian Exports ................................................................. 25

Chapter 2

Trade Facilitation ........................................................................ 53

Chapter 3

Trade Logistics ........................................................................... 71

Chapter 4

Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures and Technical Standards ............. 95

Chapter 5

Investment and Investment Environment in Cambodia ...................... 131

Chapter 6

Intellectual Property Rights ......................................................... 161

Chapter 7

Garments ................................................................................. 183


185

Chapter 8

Footwear .................................................................................. 205


207

Chapter 9

Light Manufacturing Assembly and SEZs ...................................... 225


227

Chapter 10

Processed Food ......................................................................... 263


267

Chapter 11

Fisheries .................................................................................. 279


283

Chapter 12

Milled Rice .............................................................................. 297


301

Chapter 13

Cassava ................................................................................... 317


321

Chapter 14

Rubber .................................................................................... 335


339

Chapter 15

Tourism .................................................................................. 353


357

Chapter 16

High Value Silk Products ............................................................ 369


373

Chapter 17

Skills for Exports ...................................................................... 383


387

Chapter 18

Trade Mainstreaming, Aid-for-Trade, and Trade SWAp .................... 425


429

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Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

6 Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

Acronyms
ACCSQ
ADB
AEC
AFAFGIT
AFAIT
AFAMT
AFD
AfT
AFF
ATIGA
AFTA
AFSIS
AFTEX
AIDSP
AMS
AQSIQ
ARASFF
ARDC
ASEAN
AUSAID
BFC
CAMFEBA
CAMFFA
CAMTA
CARDI
CBD
CCIC
CDC
CDRI
CEDEP
CIB
CIS
CLV
CMT
CO
CoM
CSF
CTIS
DAC
DAHP
DFQF
DICO
DP
DTIS
EBA
EDC
EIC

ASEAN Consultative Committee on Standards and Quality


Asian Development Bank
ASEAN Economic Community
ASEAN Framework Agreement on Goods in Transit
ASEAN Framework Agreement on Inter-state Transport
ASEAN Framework Agreement on Multimodal Transport
Agence Franaise de Developpement
Aid for Trade
Agriculture, Food, and Forestry
ASEAN Trade in Goods Agreement
ASEAN Free Trade Agreement
ASEAN Food Security Information System
ASEAN Federation of Textile Industries
Agro-Industry Development Strategic Plan
ASEAN Member State
Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection, and Quarantine (China)
ASEAN Rapid Alert System for Food and Feed
Association for Rubber Development of Cambodia
Association of South East Asian Nations
Australian Agency for International Development
Better Factories Cambodia
Cambodian Federation of Employers and Business Associations
Cambodia Freight Forwarder Association
Cambodian Trucking Association
Cambodia Agriculture Research & Development Institute
UN Convention on Bio-Diversity
China Certificate and Inspection Group, Cambodia
Council for the Development of Cambodia
Cambodia Development Research Institute
Cambodia Export Development and Expansion Program
Cambodia Investment Board
Confederation of Independent States
Cambodia Laos Vietnam
Cut-Make-Trim
Certificate of Origin
Council of Ministers
Classical swine fever
Cambodia Trade Integration Strategy
Development Assistance Committee
Department of Animal Health and Protection (MAFF)
Duty-Free Quota-Free
Department of International Cooperation
Development Partner
Diagnostic Trade Integration Study
Everything-but-Arms
Electricit du Cambodge
Economic Institute of Cambodia

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Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

EIF
ELC
EPO
ERIA
EU
FAO
FCRE
FDI
FEU
FiA
FIATA
FMD
FOCC
FSCC
FTA
GAP
GCC
GDA
GDCE
GDI
GDP
GDR
GHP
GI
GLP
GMAC
GMO
GMP
GMS
G-PSF
Ha or ha
HACCP
IA
IC
IC (Trade SWAp)
ICA
ID
IFC
IFReDI
ILO
INFOSAN
IP
IPIC
IPPC
IPM
IPR
IRRI
ISC
ISERCO

8|Page

Enhanced Integrated Framework


Economic Land Concession
European Patent Office
Economic Research Institute for ASEAN and East Asia
European Union
Food and Agriculture Organization
Federation of Cambodian Rice Exporters
Foreign Direct Investment
Forty-foot Equivalent Unit
Fisheries Administration
Fdration Internationale des Associations de Transitaires et Assimils
Foot and mouth disease
Footwear & Garment Order Center of Cambodia
Food Safety System Certification
Free Trade Agreement
Good Agricultural Practice
Gulf Countries Council
General Directorate of Agriculture (MAFF)
General Department of Customs and Excise (MEF)
General Department of Industry (MIH)
Gross Domestic Product
General Directorate of Rubber (MAFF)
Good Health Practice
Geographical Indication
Good Laboratory Practice
Garment Manufacturers Association of Cambodia
Genetically Modified Organism
Good Manufacturing Practice
Greater Mekong Sub-Region
Government-Private Sector Forum
hectare
Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points
Implementation Agency
Integrated Circuit
Trade SWAp Implementation Committee
Investment Climate Assessment
Industrial Design
International Finance Corporation
Inland Fisheries Research Development Institute
International Labor Organization
International Food Safety Authorities Network
Intellectual Property
Intellectual Property in respect of Integrated Circuits
International Plant Protection Convention
Integrated Pest Management
Intellectual Property Right
International Rice Research Institute
Institute of Standards Cambodia
International Sericulture Commission

8 Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

ISO
ITC UNCTAD/WTO
ITU
JICA
Km
KWH or Kwh
LDC
MAFF
MDG
MDTF
M&E
MEF
MFN
MICE
MIH
MoC
MoCFA
MoE
MoEYS
MoFA
MoH
MoI
MoPWT
MoT
MoU
MoWA
MRA
MRD
MRL
MT
NCIPR
NEA
NGO
NIS
NMC
NORAD
NSDP
NSW
NTM
NZAID
ODI
OECD
OIE
PAS
PIP
PPAP
PPP
PPSEZ
PRC

International Standards Organization


International Trade Center
International Telecommunication Union
Japan International Cooperation Agency
Kilometer
Kilowatt hour
Least Developed Country
Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries
Millennium Development Goals
Multi Donor Trust Fund
Monitoring and Evaluation
Ministry of Economy and Finance
Most Favored Nation
Meetings, Incentives, Conventions & Exhibitions
Ministry of Industry and Handicrafts
Ministry of Commerce
Ministry of Culture & Fine Arts
Ministry of the Environment
Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports
Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Ministry of Health
Ministry of the Interior
Ministry of Public Works and Transport
Ministry of Tourism
Memorandum of Understanding
Ministry of Women Affairs
Mutual Recognition Agreement
Ministry of Rural Development
Maximum Residue Level
Metric Ton
National Committee on Intellectual Property Rights
National Employment Agency
Non-Governmental Organization
National Institute of Statistics
National Metrology Center
Norwegian Agency for Development
National Strategic Development Program
National Single Window
Non-Tariff Measure
New Zealand Agency for International Development
Overseas Development Institute
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
Office International de lEpizootie
Port Authority of Sihanoukville
Public Investment Program
Port Authority of Phnom Penh
Public-Private Partnership
Phnom Penh Special Economic Zone
Peoples Republic of China

9|Page

Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

PRRS
PSD
QIP
RACA
RCEP
RDB
RGC
RO
RoI
RRIC
RSA
RUA
SEZ
SMEs
SNEC
SPS
STDF
STIC
S-SC
TA
TBT
TCA
TDSP
Trade SWAp
TEU
TPR
TRIPS
TRTA
TTFA
TTRI
TVET
TWG
UNCTAD
UNDP
UNESCO
UNIDO
UNWTO
UPOV
USAID
VAT
WB
WCO
WG
WIPO
WTO
WTTC

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Porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome


Private Sector Development
Qualified Investment Project
Royal Academy of Culinary Arts
Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership
Rural Development Bank
Royal Government of Cambodia
Rules of Origin
Return on Investment
Rubber Research Institute of Cambodia
Royal School of Administration
Royal University of Agriculture
Special Economic Zone
Small and Medium Size Enterprises
Supreme National Economic Council
Sanitary and Phytosanitary
Standards and Trade Development Facility
Standard International Trade Classification
Sub-Steering Committee
Technical Assistance
Technical Barrier to Trade
Transport Corridor Assessment
Trade Development Support Program
Trade Sector-Wide Approach
Twenty-Foot Equivalent Unit
Trade Policy Review
Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights
Trade Related Technical Assistance
Transport and Trade Facilitation Assessment
Trade Training and Research Institute
Technical Vocational Education and Training
Technical Working Group
United Nations Conference on Trade and Development
United Nations Development Program
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization
United Nations Industrial Development Organization
United Nations World Tourism Organization
International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants
US Agency for International Development
Value Added Tax
World Bank
World Customs Organization
Working Group
World Intellectual Property Organization
World Trade Organization
World Travel and Tourism Center

10 Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

BACKGROUND
In November 2001, Cambodia validated its first Diagnostic Trade Integration Strategy (DTIS.) DTIS
2001 was prepared with funding support from the Integrated Framework program (IF.) Cambodia had
been selected by the IF as one of three pilot countries for this innovative program launched by six
multilateral agencies the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the International Trade Center (ITC), the
United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), the United Nations Development
Program (UNDP), the World Bank (WB), and the World Trade Organization (WTO.)
In December 2007, Cambodias Prime Minister launched the countrys second DTIS, Cambodia Trade
Integration Strategy 2007 (CTIS 2007.) CTIS 2007 benefited from combined funding support from the
original IF program and the UNDP as well as technical contributions from the EU, GIZ, IFC, the IMF,
ITC, UNCTAD, and the World Bank. Back then, Cambodia was the first country to update its initial
DTIS under the Enhanced Integrated Framework (EIF), the successor to the IF program.
Cambodia Trade Integration Strategy 2014-2018 (CTIS 2014-2018) is the countrys third generation
DTIS. Once again, Cambodias leadership among EIF countries is in display. Cambodia is the first EIF
country to update its original DTIS for a second time. CTIS 2014-2018 has benefited from funding
support from the EIF, the Asian Development Bank (ADB), the UNDP, and the WB.
Since the first DTIS in 2001, leadership of the DTIS formulation process in Cambodia has changed
significantly. This reflects Cambodias growing capacity to manage its Aid-for-Trade process. The first
DTIS was largely agency-driven, with the WB leading a team of experts under IF funding. CTIS 2007
was carried out under the joint leadership of the Ministry of Commerce and the UNDP. CTIS 2014-2018
is a fully Government-led and Government-owned process.
Under the leadership and guidance from the current and previous Senior Ministers, Ministers of
Commerce, and with strong operational support from and management by key senior officials in
theMinistry, the team assembled to prepare CTIS 2014-2018 benefited also from the technical inputs from
the Inter-Ministerial Committee for Updating the Cambodia Trade Integration Strategy 2013-2018. The
Inter-Ministerial Committee was established through a Prakas and includes senior officials from the
Ministries of Commerce, Economy and Finance, Health, Tourism, Planning, Industry and Handicraft,
Mines and Energy, Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, Rural Development, Women Affairs, Labor and
Vocational Training, Public Works and Transport, Education, Youth and Sports, as well as the Council of
Ministers, the Council for the Development of Cambodia, and the Royal School of Administration.
Members of the Inter-Ministerial Committee provided DTIS team members with access to officials in
their respective ministries, reviewed drafts, and met with the team to provide comments, feedback and
other inputs on various documents.
This Full Report and itsaccompanying Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018 benefited from extensive
comments received from Cambodian Government officials, Private Sector stakeholders, Development

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Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

11

Partners, as well as members of the EIF Board and EIF Executive Secretariat on earlier drafts. In
addition, the draft Report and Roadmap went through an intensive validation process in November 2013
spanning a period of ten days. The validation process included(1) a meeting of the Inter-Ministerial
Committee for Updating the Cambodia Trade Integration Strategy 2013-2018 on November 5, 2013
chaired by H.E. SUN Chanthol, Senior Minister, Minister of Commerce, followed by (2) ten Focus Group
meetings during which Government officials, private sector representatives, and development partners
with an in-depth knowledge of selected issues and/or sectors were invited to review, comment, and
propose clarifications or modifications in the draft Roadmap. Typically, each Focus Group meeting
discussed Actions proposed inbetween one to three Outcomes of the Roadmap, based on theiraffinity.
This final Full Report and the Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018 were endorsed by the Sub-Steering
Committee on Trade and Trade Related Investment chaired by the Senior Minister in January 2014. The
Executive Summary and the 20 Strategic Outcomes used to organize the study were endorsed by the SubSteering Committee on Trade and Trade-Related Investment earlier in May 2013. Thereafter, the
Ministry of Commerce worked closely with the Ministry of Planning and SNEC to ensure those 20
outcomes would be mainstreamed in the new NSDP-IV and Rectangular Strategy-III of the new
Government.

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12 Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

Introduction
EXPORT COMPETITIVENESS AND HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
Cambodia has been quite successful heretofore in integrating the global economy through trade and
investment. Progress since the mid-2000s is significant. But world markets are ever changing with new
competitors continuously emerging to challenge Cambodias export sectors. The challenge for the
country and its leading export sectors is to respond to change by strengthening the competitiveness of
established sectors while nurturing new ones.
Trade sector competitiveness is critical to growth, and, in turn, to the creation of new and better jobs as
well as income which are requirements for poverty-reduction. Yet, connecting trade expansion to
poverty-reduction, gender equality, and greater inclusiveness remains a challenge. With rapid growth in
export-oriented agricultural sectors in rural areas and emerging diversification in the number of tourism
destinations, Cambodia has made important progress in tackling poverty through employment and income
creation on a more geographically-widespread basis. However, working and living conditions associated
with many export-related jobs need improvement. The potential negative impact of some export
production on the physical environment needs greater attention. And, possibly, raising skills of the work
force will be the countrys greatest challenges going forward if it is to succeed in using trade expansion as
a means to create better jobs, with higher skills that generate greater income.

Export Competitiveness
Trade sector competitiveness is the result of interaction among a number of factors, which, in the context
of Cambodia can be grouped into four subsets:

Improved market access


Strengthened domestic business environment
Rising total factor and labor productivity
Increasing domestic value added

Cambodias market access has evolved significantly in recent years. Favorable changes in the rules of
origin governing the EUs EBA program, the benefits from a number of Duty-Free Quota-Free (DFQF)
programs, together with the implementation of free trade agreements with ASEAN Dialogue Partners,
have triggered sharp increases in Cambodias exportsincluding, but not exclusively, in its exports of
garments. Together with a relatively favorable business environment and low labor costs, this improved
market access is one of the primary forces driving the significant expansion of investment in
manufacturing. Market access is also beginning to evolve as regards agricultural products. Reliance on
neighboring countries as markets and as intermediaries for export of unprocessed, informal agricultural
products is starting to give way to direct, formal exports to final markets where, generally, Cambodia
enjoys duty-free access. This process is still at a very early stage and its continuation will depend, among
other things, on Cambodias being able to meet the SPS and technical standards of importing countries.

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Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

13

For both manufactured and agricultural goods, the rapidly growing economies of Asia and emerging
markets hold great promise in the years ahead.

Exports of goods and services recorded and informal are estimated to have increased 65
percent between 2007-2011, from $4.945 billion to $8.155 billion
US share of Cambodian exports declined from 55 to 35 percent during the period, as EU, ASEAN
Dialogue Partners, Thailand, Vietnam, and other destinations became more important
Eighty percent of Cambodias growth in recorded goods exports since 2007 has been targeted to
markets offering preferential access
The share of exports other than garments and tourism during the period grew from 18 to 29
percent. Chief among those are bicycles, electronic and electrical components, footwear, natural
rubber, milled and paddy rice, cassava, corn, and soybeans.

A strong business environment for trade has a number of attributes. A legal and regulatory framework
that is predictable and based on international norms is a central element. A favorable investment
environment as well as trade facilitation and logistics are other key determinants of competitiveness.
Trade facilitation and trade logistics will be particularly important for the development of exports such as
high-end garments or intermediate inputs into a production chain, where turn-around or delivery
deadlines are critical. Much work has been done in Cambodia in many of these areas over the past ten
years, but more remains to be done.

Trade facilitation costs for exports and imports are 136 percent the ASEAN-6 average. Average
release time of cargo is 24 days compared to 16 days for ASEAN-6 average.
Cambodia plans completion of the establishment of a National Single Window by 2018 which
should help lower those two key metrics
Notwithstanding significant improvements in road infrastructure since the late 2000s, much
remains to be done to improve the effectiveness of transport logistics in Cambodia as well as
within the sub-region, both in term of investment in physical infrastructure and in term of
reducing non-tariff measures, again with the view of reducing those important costs of doing
business

Total factor productivity and labor productivity are also important determinants of competitiveness.
Increases in productivity allow higher wages and improved competitiveness to go hand in hand.
Productivity increases primarily through investment in equipment that contains more advanced
technology. The use of such equipment, in turn, requires higher skill levels. There is a concern that weak
mid-level and higher skills required for more sophisticated production processes in Cambodiais holding
back productivity gains and investment that could lead to higher value added. There is also mounting
concern that, without sufficient increases in productivity, the pressure for higher wages may erode
competitiveness. Increased skills that allow Cambodians to perform tasks presently performed by foreign
personnel will reduce the costs to enterprises and enhance their competitiveness. For these reasons, it is
important to address the gap between skills presently available in the work force and the skills necessary
for the present and prospective work place.

Cambodia lacks a robust TVET system that works closely with the private sector, including
export sectors, to ensure skill needs are met
Many young people graduate from primary, secondary, or even tertiary education with weak
foundation soft skills (e.g. literacy and numeracy, communications, problem solving, team
work, etc.) Foundation soft skills are critical to life-long-learning and future retraining in the
work place

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14 Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

Cambodias higher education institutions have grown quite rapidly over the past ten years or so
leading to a rapid rise in university graduates. However, university curriculums remain quite
disconnected from skills needed in the market place and quality of education is often weak
Cambodia lacks a transparent labor market information system to help educators and labor
market entrants understand where the demand is, what the skill requirements are, and how to
assist employers in identifying where potential new workers can be found

Cambodias main manufacturingexports garments, shoes, and bicyclesoperate almost exclusively


within global value chains by assembling imported materials and parts into finished products that are then
exported. Cambodias agricultural exports mainly take the form of unprocessed agricultural products. In
both cases the value added in Cambodia is usually a small fraction of the value of the finished consumer
product. In both cases, Cambodia needs to exploit the possibilities for adding additional value in
Cambodia. In the case of agriculture, this entails undertaking processing of farm-gate output as is
already underway in the case of rice. In the case of garments, shoes, and bicycles attention needs to be
given to the production, in Cambodia, of inputs presently imported.

Creating supply linkages between Cambodian SMEs and export firms is important and should be
fostered. Foreign direct investment in the production of domestic inputs also needs to be
encouraged. Export industries should become hubs around which a network of domestic
production develops. What is true of manufacturing exports is also true of the tourism sector
where opportunities for stronger linkages to domestic suppliers should also be encouraged.
Cambodian exporters can and should seek to move into products requiring higher value
operations in Cambodiabut this will be conditioned in no small part by the capacity of exporting
sectors and educational and TVET institutions to find ways to remedy the current skill gap
Efforts to attract new investors should include targeting areas where favorable rules of origin
offer a unique advantage for Cambodia to strengthen its foothold in global value chains
Consistent quality is critical to long term competitiveness of firms. Uneven quality of inputs or
uneven quality in the production process will undermine a value chains competitiveness. For
example, rice millers/exporters are finding it challenging to ensure sustained quality of their
export product. Producers of high value silk products must learn how to better control the quality
of imported yarn.
In SPS-sensitive sectors (rice, cassava, corn, soy beans, hospitality sector, processed food,
fisheries) there is a need for producers to bring their facilities up to standards that meet
international requirements. Government must also play its part by putting in place the
surveillance and enforcement systems required to control plant pests and animal diseases, monitor
the use of pesticides, or control safety food and products in consumer markets.
Financial backstopping of export-oriented investors through dedicated programs or specialized
financial institutions is an area that has received attention from the Government, including in the
context of the July 2010 Policy Paper on the Promotion of Paddy Production and Rice Export.
Nevertheless, additional attention will be required in the coming years.
The positive experience of the Policy Paper on the Promotion of Paddy Production and Rice
Exportshould be replicated to other sectors (agricultural, manufacturing, or otherwise) that would
benefit from explicit policy guidance

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Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

15

Sustainable Human Development and Export Growth


While critical in determining Cambodias future success in graduating from an LDC to a middle-income
economy, export competitiveness cannot be viewed alone. Export competitiveness must also be reviewed
against improvement in Cambodians standard of living and sustainable human development. Table 0.1
summarizes a number of sustainable human development measures collected during the preparation of the
individual sector chapters and the skill chapter presented in the report. While the very limited availability
of hard data in Cambodia makes it somewhat difficult to fully assess results and progress in this area, the
measures presented in the table, even if impressionistic at times, do allow to point to areas of progress
since 2007 as well as remaining challenges, especially in term of:

Employment growth opportunities


Quality of jobs, working and living conditions
Geographical diffusion of the benefits of growth
Environmental impacts

Employment Growth Opportunities


In the face of 300,000 to 400,000 youths projected to enter the labor market each year over the next
decade, Cambodias biggest human development challenge, by far, is job creation. Indeed, this has
become a major, if not the top priority of the Government. With the possible exception of Silk, all nine
other sectors have solid potential for continued robust, if not even rapid employment growth in the
coming five years. Together they should be adding new jobs in the tens of thousands each year, hence
contribute greatly to addressing the job creation challenge.1
In manufacturing sectors garments, footwear, and light manufacturing assembly as well as in tourism,
significant new job creation is likely to occur mainly directly in the sector itself though service providers
to those sectors will benefit from a multiplier effect through increased demand. As argued in the report,
strong domestic supplier clusters should emerge to provide specific inputs to a few of those sectors
provided the right policies and incentives are in place.
In agricultural commodity semi-processing or processing sectors such as milled rice, semi-processed
cassava, fisheries products, processed food, or rubber the most significant job impact will continue to be
overwhelmingly on those who produce the raw inputs: the rice and cassava farmers, the fisher-men and
women, the rubber plantation workers, etc. Still,as these sectors take off, the modern processed food or
fish processing factories, for instance, could be adding a significant number of new jobs in and of
themselves.
The intrinsic value of the silk sector is somewhat different, of course. Its value may not be so much in
how many jobs it may create as much as its contribution to the cultural image of Cambodia, a hard-tomeasure asset but nevertheless critical to the promotion of tourism and Cambodias global image.
1

Growth rates, of course, are a function of the initial baseline in each sector and will be slower in larger, established sectors such
as garments and tourism even though large numbers of jobs will be created in those.

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16 Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

Quality of Jobs, Working and Living Conditions


As pointed out in Chapter 17, young Cambodians do not want simply any job. They want good jobs and
well-paying jobs. So quality of jobs, broadly defined, is the key. The quality of jobs and access to good
working and living conditions is the result of interactions among many different variables, influenced, in
no small part, but not exclusively, by Government policy, the availability of public goods, as well as
access to good income.
This report does not analyze the broader societal impact of recent growth on the livelihood of
Cambodians. This is a topic better left to the analytical work associated with the NSDP. Still the latest
World Economic Forum report does show that, on a ppp-basis (purchasing power parity), average per
capita income of Cambodians grew from approximately $1,000 in 2000 to $2,500 in 2012 a very
significant progress indeed.2 Of course, since this measure is simply an average, it says little about
income distribution.
The focus in this report is more narrow and limited to the ten sectors. As shown in chapter 5 focusing on
the investment environment as well as several of the individual sector chapters, one key factor that has
attracted a new surge in foreign direct and domestic investment is the relative low labor cost in Cambodia.
Still, as shown in chapter 17, the minimum monthly wage that prevails in much of the Cambodian
manufacturing sector tends to be high when compared to neighboring and direct competitor countries.
With the possible exception of the garment sector where employers are concerned that wage increases
might be running ahead of productivity an unsustainable situation over the long run in general it
appears that rising wages in manufacturing have been accompanied also by productivity gains. Clearly in
some of the agricultural commodity driven sectors identified in this study, there is often evidence of
strong productivity increases in recent years at the production level as measured by yield-per-hectare. In
general, monthly income in sectors others than garments tend to be lower and/or pegged against the
garment sector minimum wage. In the medium and longer term, the concern will be whether growth in
productivity will be able to keep up with demand for higher wages if the skill gap and skill shortages
cannot be bridged.
International monitoring of many manufacturers under the Better Factories Cambodia (BFC) program
remains a significant competitive advantage for Cambodia-based exporters in garments and footwear.
Nevertheless, there is some recent evidence that further improvements might be needed in the safety of
manufacturing facilities and production line (including building safety) and in the cleanliness of factories.
This is an important issue that deserves Cambodias attention, especially in light of negative
developments over the past couple of years in such countries as Bangladesh or China.
General quality of living conditions is often a function of where one works. In general, the data tends to
show that living conditions (good shelter, good access to clean latrines, and access to potable water) tends
to deteriorate for many rural workers moving to large urban centers where good living conditions are
harder to come by and more expensive. However, this does not always apply to workers taking
employment in SEZs where employers might provide their own, reasonably good shelter conditions.
2

World Economic Forum, The Global Competitiveness Report 2013-2014, Davos: WEF, 2013, p.144

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Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

17

Quality of jobs is also about the ability of the individual to build human capital through training and
opportunities to move up the career ladder. This is an area where Cambodia is facing a major challenge
across all ten sectors studied here. Weaknesses in primary and secondary schooling, weaknesses in
university education, as well as a nearly absent, solid TVET system means that most workers take on
employment with a deficit (gap) in both hard (occupational) skills and foundation soft skills. This deficit
or gap is in addition to employers facing a labor shortage (inability to find enough workers to apply for
specific jobs) as analyzed in detail in chapter 17. These human capital shortages and gaps present a
serious challenge to Cambodias continued competitiveness. Whereas this challenge may have been less
of an issue in the past when the focus of export growth was based on a purely low-skill-low-wage factor
combination, it must now be addressed head-on by Government and the private sector if Cambodia is to
remain an attractive location for new investment and succeed in moving up the value chain in a number of
export sectors.
Lastly, an interesting finding is that, while export growth in agricultural sectors may tend to favor male
employment, women are the ones that have benefited most from growth in manufacturing exports and
tourism. Some of this balance may or may not change if Cambodia is able to move up the value chain
and develop higher-skilled sectors.
Geographical Diffusion of Export Growth
Compared to 2007, there is evidence that economic activity associated with export growth has begun to
diffuse away from Cambodias initial three growth poles Phnom Penh, Siem Reap, and Sihanoukville.
In manufacturing, SEZs are beginning to attract factories close to the Thai and Vietnamese borders where
none were there before. If anything that development is likely to expand.
In tourism, development of beach-oriented tourism is beginning to spread away from Sihanoukvilleinto
the surrounding coastal provinces. Eco-tourism is getting a foothold in the countrys North-West and
Cardamom Mountains. These and other developments are pulling growth of the hospitality sector into
new provinces and regions. In agriculture-oriented sectors, the growing focus on export of semiprocessed agricultural commodities or processed food is bringing new, modern processing activities into
newer areas.
In addition, with many workers employed in processing facilities located in or near urban centers coming
originally from rural areas, less developed provinces are benefiting from a significant amount of
remittances from those workers.
Together, these trends mean a more geographically diffused distribution of the benefits of export growth
throughout the country, through a more geographically widespread location of export-oriented facilities,
through income re-distribution via remittances, and through multiplier effects.

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18 Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

Environmental Impact
Most of the fast growing export sectors, including nearly all of the ten sectors analyzed in this study, are
heavily dependent on electricity to power modern equipment. The cost of electricity in Cambodia is high
and reliability, low when compared to neighbors. This is an area where the country is clearly at a
competitive disadvantage. Interestingly enough, Cambodia is in a unique position to address many of
those needs through sustainable energy production solutions. These run from solar passive heating panels
to produce hot water in hotels and restaurants (a major source of electrical demand in those
establishments), bio-fuel gasification to power rice mills and other processing sectors, photo-voltaic
panels to produce electricity in many different applications, or other sustainable technologies as well. So
far, Cambodia has been very timid in pushing for widespread implementation of these economically
profitable solutions. The fact that, for now, Electricit du Cambodge (EDC) does not purchase surplus
electricity from small producers is preempting the development of bio-fuel gasification generating
projects in sectors such as rice milling or cassava processing. The trend towards SEZs locating near the
Vietnamese or Thai borders so they can tap into those countries cheaper electrical grids is a pragmatic
solution, but a limited one at best. It does address the problems confronted by other key development
areas where much of the nations economic activity is taking place.
Weak proper waste and water management are areas that also need attention in no small part as a means
to mitigate early on the possible negative impacts of some of the activities associated with various export
sectors. Fisheries processing, processed food, footwear and other sectors do need to focus on those
issues. Some operators point to the lack of clear environmental regulations as a negative factor on further
investment as investors are unable to assess fully the financial risks associated with new projects.
In sum, the analyses presented in several chapters and summarized here suggest that human development
progress that have been achieved as a result of rapid export growth since the last DTIS have also been
accompanied by new challenges that must be tackled by Government and Cambodian trade sector
stakeholders.

A Short Note on Data


Trade-related research in Cambodia remains somewhat constrained by limited detailed data. Chapter 1
analysis is based on data available from the General Department of Customs and Excise (GDCE), the
Ministry of Commerce (based on Certificates of Origin), and the National Bank of Cambodia (balance of
payments data.) The sector-specific chapters tend to use a mix of data including mirror trade data
available from Comtrade and TradeMap, selected data available from Line Ministries, business
associations, or other international sources such as the ASEAN Food Security Information System
(AFSIS.) The reader can safely assume that just about every source has its own strengths and
weaknesses. All efforts were made in this study to minimize inconsistencies across sources.

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Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

19

20 Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

main indirect impact

cleanliness and safety

career ops

sanitation (water/latrines)

Secondary

soil

waste

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energy
water

Environment Impact

Primary

Regional Impact

access to shelter

Living Conditions

training ops

Skills Development

labor representation
sector monitoring

Working Conditions

Wages and Working Hours

Gender Equality

sector employment (2012)


future sector growth

Employment Creation

Fabrics and chemicals

High use of electricity


High use for washing and
ironing
None known

Svay Rieng, Sihanoukville

Phnom Penh, Kandal

Quality can be poor in urban


environment

Quality can be poor in urban


environment

OTJ. No TVET. GMAC


planning TVET center
Including for line workers

Recent issues with building


safety

Mostly unionized
Monitored under BFC

Remittances to provinces
80%-90% women; under-aged
labor an issue.
Minimum $100 monthly up to
$180. 48 hours+OT/week.

370,000
10% or more

Garments

Possible negative impact from


poor mngt of waste water
Fabrics, rubber, chemicals

High use of electricity


Tanning and dyes

Phnom Penh, Kampong Speu,


Kandal
Possible expansion along VN
border

Quality can be poor in urban


environment

Quality can be poor in urban


environment

Including for line workers

Significant OTJ. No TVET

Accidents an issue; exposure to


hazardous chemicals an issue

Mostly unionized
Monitored under BFC

64,200
15%- 20% yearly based on
recent trend
Remittances to provinces
90% + women; under-aged labor
an issue. Growing share of men
Wages slightly higher than
garments. 48 hours+OT/week.

Footwear

Yes. Varies with manufacturing

High use of electricity


Relative good water treatment in
SEZs
None known

Phnom Penh, Sihanoukville,


Svay Rieng (Bavet), Koh Kong
Possible expansion along VN
border

Some SEZ employers provide


good shelter in factories. Else,
access to good shelter varies
Usually good

OTJ. Also off-site training incl.


abroad. Limited TVET
Significant, including for line
workers

Safety issues limited

Some unions
None

Wages slightly higher than


garments.48 hours+OT/week.

Possibly as many as 10,000


Very fast yearly growth: 20% to
25% or higher possible
Remittances to provinces
Not known

Light Manuf./SEZs

Table 0.1: Sustainable Human Development Impact in Ten Export Sectors

Limited except large firms


Extensive use. Limited
management of water waste
Waste could be used as compost
or fertilizer
Limited waste management

Phnom Penh, Kampong Cham,


Battambang, Siem Reap, Kandal
Many rural areas

Good access to latrines. Water:


variable

Rural living: Good access to


shelter

OTJ in a few large


establishments. No TVET
Very limited except in a few
large establishments

None
None, except few factories
meeting intl SPS standards
Challenge is poor hygiene and
abeyance to SPS standards

Impact on demand in Ag. sectors


Majority women in SMEs. Not
known in large facilities.
Wages and shift work in large
plants similar to garments

93,700
Significant growth possible

Processed Food

Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

21

future sector growth

main indirect impact

cleanliness and safety

career ops

Primary

Secondary

water

soil

waste

21 | P a g e

energy

Environment Impact

Regional Impact

access to shelter
sanitation (water/latrines)

Living Conditions

training ops

Skills Development

labor representation
sector monitoring

Working Conditions

Gender Equality
Wages and Working Hours

sector employment (2012)

Employment Creation

Extensive use. Limited management of


water waste
Solid waste can have negative impact
on soil if not managed properly
Limited management of waste

Limited except large firms

Coastal provinces, waterway provinces

Rural living: Good access shelter


Quality of latrines and water: variable

Very limited except in a few large


establishments

Limited OTJ in large establishments.


Mostly informal. No TVET

None
None except for very few factories
meeting intl SPS standards
Mostly very poor SPS except large
plants

Slow growth unless aquaculture and


processing take off
Some multiplier effect. Great impact on
main protein source for Cambodians
Balanced
Around minimum wage. Vary with
season. Work hours vary with season.

450,000

Fisheries

Could use husk for bio-fuel

None known

Electricity dependent. Could use


sustainable energy solutions
None known

Prey Veng, Takeo, Kampong Cham,


Battambang, Banteay Meanchey, Siem
Reap, Kampong Thom
Most provinces

Mills provide shelter. Quality limited


Quality of latrines and water: variable

Limited OTJ in large establishments.


Mostly informal. No TVET. Some
RUA training
Very limited except in a few large mills

none
None but modern rice mills soon
must meet intl SPS standards
See above. Modern export-oriented
mills relatively clean

Majority men
Around minimum wage. Vary with
season. Work hours vary with season

Millions of farmers grow rice

Fast growth

A few thousands in rice mills

Milled Rice

Cassava cultivation has negative


impact on soil unless mitigated
Waste can be used for bio-fuel or
fertilizer

None known

Semi processing needs little electricity

Most provinces

Battambang, Banteay Meanchey,


Pailin, Kampong Cham

Rural living: Good access shelter


Quality of latrines and water: variable

Very limited except in a few large


establishments

Limited OTJ in large establishments.


Mostly informal. No TVET

none
Pressure on processors to meet intl
SPS standards
See above

Employment in semi-processing
limited
Global demand and prices unstable.
Hard to predict
Hundreds of thousands of farmers grow
cassava
Balanced
Around minimum wage. Vary with
season. Work hours vary with season

Cassava

22 Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

future sector growth

main indirect impact

cleanliness and safety

career ops

Primary

Secondary

water

soil
waste

22 | P a g e

energy

Environment Impact

Regional Impact

access to shelter
sanitation (water/latrines)

Living Conditions

training ops

Skills Development

labor representation
sector monitoring

Working Conditions

Gender Equality
Wages and Working Hours

sector employment (2012)

Employment Creation

Negative impact if not mitigated


Little waste

Some for processing. Chemicals used

Intensive for processing

Mondolkiri

Kampong Cham, Kratie, Pailin,


Ratanakiri, Stung Treng

Processors provide good shelter


Good sanitation linked to good shelter

Very limited unless modern processing


is developed

OJT. No TVET

None
Quality monitoring about to become an
issue
Processing facility often unclean

Mostly men
Cash income based on harvesting.
Work hours varies.

About 60,000 in plantation and small


holders. Few thousands in processing.
Likely very high. Could double or
triple over next 5 years.
Families living on plantations

Natural Rubber

High use of electricity and fuel for hot


water
High use of water, especially kitchen;
waste water treatment limited
None known. Limited composting.
Limited recycling. Plastic bottles.

North West, Coastal areas, Waterways


provinces

Siem Reap, Phnom Penh,


Sihanoukville

Quality can be poor in urban envirnmt


Quality can be poor in urban envirnmt

Significant

Mostly OTJ. Lack TVET

Varies. Hygiene and sanitation key


sector development issue.

Some establishments unionized


none

40% to 60% women


No minimum wage. Starting monthly
salaries $45-$60. Long hours in SMEs.
Shift work based on 24 hours.

3% or more - 20,000 new jobs or more


- yearly
Remittances to provinces

Approximately 620,000

Tourism

Use of dyes. Phasing out use of


synthetic dyes.
None known
None known

Low use of electricity

Weaving: Siem Reap, Takeo, Prey


Veng, Banteay Meanchey, Kampong
Cham, Kampong Thom, Kandal,
Phnom Penh, and Stung Treng;
Breeding:Banteay Meanchey
none

Rural living: Good access shelter


Good access to latrines. Water: variable

Tradition-based OTJ. Risk of loss of


skill if sector declines
Limited except for higher skills (design
and marketing)

Home work environment. Usually safe

None
None

Contributes to cultural image of


Cambodia
90 to 95% women
Long hours. Wage slightly above
garments but varies with orders

slow

20,000+ weavers; 1000 breeders

High Value Silk

Cambodia Trade SWAps Roadmap 2014-2018:


20 Strategic Outcomes
To address issues at the core of trade sector competitiveness, job and income creation, and sustainable
human developmentin the coming five years,Cambodias next Trade SWAp Roadmap will focus on 20
strategic outcomes. These address specific challenges at the market access and business environment
level, at the value chain level, at the labor market and skill level, as well as in the management and
deployment of technical assistance resources and focus on areas where reforms and institutional
development are needed.
Progress against those 20 strategic outcomes will be measured in part by their beneficial impact in
assisting Cambodia to meet its larger socio-economic development goals, including, of course its goal of
enhancing trade sector competitiveness, creating new and better jobs, growing income, and reducing
poverty. Those broader impacts are captured under five Development Goals.
The five Development Goals are not fundamentally different from the Goals defined in the first Trade
SWAp Roadmap derived from CTIS 2007. The 20 Outcomes include a number of carry-overs from the
earlier Roadmap that have been updated to account for progress accomplished since 2007 and to address
further needs. The list also includes some new Outcomes that reflect new priorities that have emerged in
recent years. The following table (Table 0.2) lists the five Goals and 20 Outcomes foreseen for 20142018. They are organized along the lines of the three Pillars of the Governments Trade SWAp.
This final Full Report and the Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018 were endorsed by the Sub-Steering
Committee on Trade and Trade Related Investment chaired by the Senior Minister in January 2014. The
Executive Summary and the 20 Strategic Outcomes used to organize the study were endorsed by the SubSteering Committee on Trade and Trade-Related Investment earlier in May 2013. Thereafter, the
Ministry of Commerce worked closely with the Ministry of Planning and SNEC to ensure those 20
outcomes would be mainstreamed in the new NSDP-IV and Rectangular Strategy-III of the new
Government.

Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

23

Table 0.2: Development Impacts and Strategic Outcomes Trade SWAp 2014-2018
Development Impacts/Goals
Impact/Goal 1
Impact/Goal 2
Impact/Goal 3
Impact/Goal 4
Impact/Goal 5

Improved competitiveness contributes to reduce poverty through better and new job
Significant increase in the contribution of the trade sector to GDP and deepening diversification of
Cambodias export base
Strengthened capacity of RGC to formulate and implement trade policies and strategies
Responsiveness of RGC to private sector needs increases as a result of better dialogue
Improved planning, implementation, and monitoring capacity of RGC through implementing Trade SWAp

Strategic Outcomes
Pillar One
Outcome 1
Trade Policy Reform and Trade Negotiations: Cambodia meets its trade legal reform obligations under
WTO and ASEAN; strengthens its access to markets through trade negotiations; enhances the transparency of
its trade rules and laws
Outcome 2
Trade Facilitation:Cambodia increases its competitiveness through reduced import/export costs
Outcome 3
Trade Logistics: Cambodia increases its competitiveness through improved trade logistics
Outcome 4
Technical Standards and SPS Requirements:The capacity of Cambodian exporters to meet technical and
SPS requirements standards set by importers and importing countries increases
Outcome 5
Investment Environment for Exports: The environment for investment in the ten DTIS 2013 focus export
sectors is strengthened
Outcome 6
Intellectual Property Rights: A modern, trade-supportive intellectual property rights framework is
established, implemented, and enforced
Pillar Two
Outcome 7
Garment: Cambodia continues to grow and diversify its garment export sector through targeting new
markets, increasing domestic inputs, and expanding in higher value products
Outcome 8
Footwear: Cambodia continues to grow and diversify its footwear export sector through targeting new
marketsand developing new market segments
Outcome 9
9A: SEZs: Cambodian SEZs increase their competitiveness and attract additional manufacturing investment
9B: Light Manufacturing Assembly: Cambodia emerges as a node in regional production networks
Outcome 10
Processed Food: Cambodia continues to grow and diversify its processed food sector through new export
markets, moving to higher value products, and expanding domestic inputs
Outcome 11
Fisheries Products: A sustainable fisheries sector sees Cambodian exports increase as a result of improved
quality, growing production volumes, and strengthened access to markets.
Outcome 12
Milled Rice: Cambodia achieves the target set out under the RGC 2010 Rice Policy for export of milled rice
Outcome 13
Cassava: Cambodia consolidates its exports of Cassava through direct exports to such countries as China and
Republic of Korea and lessens its dependency on exports of unprocessed tubers to Thailand and Vietnam
Outcome 14
Rubber: Cambodia progresses towards becoming a key producer and exporter of rubber
Outcome 15
Tourism: Cambodia progresses towards RGCs 2020 target set for Tourism: 8 million foreign visitors
Outcome 16
High Value Silk Products: A small but growing number of Cambodian producers are able to design and
export high-value silk products
Pillar Three
Outcome 17
Skill Gap for Exports: RGC and Cambodian exporters meet the skill gap through the formal education
sector and increased public-private partnership to develop vocational/technical education.
Outcome 18
Mainstreaming Trade: Trade development objectives are fully mainstreamed in national development
strategy and in product and service sector strategies
Outcome 19
Monitoring and Mobilizing Aid for Trade: RGCs ability to M&E Results of Trade SWAp is strengthened,
leading to stronger mobilization of AfT inside and outside SWAp
Outcome 20
Enhancing Private Sector Participation in AfT: A better structured dialogue between private sector and
Government contributes to efficient public-private partnerships for trade development based on AfT
resources

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24 Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

Chapter 1
MARKET ACCESS AND CHANGES IN THE COMPOSITION AND
DESTINATION OF CAMBODIAN EXPORTS
Introduction
It is well known that Cambodia relies heavily on exports of garments and tourist services for its external
earnings. It is also well known that, since the late 1990s, its exports of garments have been directed
mainly at the United States.
Diversification of export products and export destinations has been a policy objective for a number of
years however. As may be seen in Table 1.1, which is drawn from available Cambodian statistics, there
was a significant movement in diversification of recorded exports during the period 2007-2011.
Table 1.1: Composition of Cambodian Recorded Exports, 2007 and 2011
2007

2011

$ millions

% Share

$ millions

% Share

4,509

100

7,335

100

Garments

2,653

59

3,978

54

Tourism

1,398

31

1,907

26

458

10

1,450

20

Total Recorded Exports


(goods + services)
Composition of Total

Other Recorded Exports

Source:GDCE for Goods; National Bank of Cambodia,Balance of Payment, for services


under Total Recorded Exports; Ministry of Tourism estimate for Tourism

In 2007, garments and tourism together made up 90 percent of Cambodias recorded exports of goods and
services. By 2011 that figure had dropped to 80 percent, a share that is still very high, but which reflects
significant movement. As will be explained further below, the change is even more pronounced if
account is taken of informal exports of Cambodias major agricultural products. And, as shown further
below, the importance of the United States as destination for Cambodias export of goods and services
has diminished noticeably over the period, falling from 45 percent in 2007 to 30 percent in 2011. Again,
these shares are lower if account is taken of Cambodias informal exports.
This chapter explores in more detail the changes that have occurred in Cambodias export products and
destinations and describes some of the factors that have shaped those changes.

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25

Services Exports
For many years services have been an important component of Cambodias export earnings. Services
exports declined in 2009, the year of international recession and crisis. All other years during the period
2007-2011 services exports showed strong growth. By 2011, service exports had reached $2.2 billion
(See table 1.2).
Table 1.2: Cambodias Services Exports, 2007 and 2011 ($ millions)
2007
Total Services
Travel

$ millions
$1,548
$1,130

2011
% Share
100
73

$ millions
$2,213
$1,612

% Share
100
73

Source: National Bank of Cambodia, Balance of Payments Statistics Bulletin,


various issues
The most important component of services exports is Travel, which accounts for almost three quarters of
total services exports. Air transport also made a modest contribution to export earnings. All other
individual items of services exports were negligible. Services exports are thus largely synonymous with
tourism.
Tourism has been an established industry and significant foreign exchange earner for more than a decade.
International tourist arrivals passed the one million mark in 2004, and, with the exception of the crisis
years 2008-2009, have shown robust growth ever since. By 2007 tourist arrivals had reached more than
two million, and in 2011 stood at almost 2.9 million.3 (See table 1.3).
Countries in the Asia-Pacific region accounted for over 60 percent of tourist arrivals in 2007, with South
Korea being the single largest source of visitors. The share of Asia-Pacific rose to over 70 percent in
2011, driven by the more than three-fold increase between 2007 and 2011 in visitors from Vietnam.
Indeed, Vietnam alone accounted for 56 percent of the total increase in visitors between 2007 and 2011,
and Cambodias threeneighbors, Lao PDR, Thailand, and Vietnam provided 69 percent of the total
growth in tourist arrivals during that period. In 2011 the three countries accounted for 30 percent of all
tourist arrivals. This outcome was achieved despite the very modest rise in arrivals from Thailand,
reflecting political tensions and border difficulties between Cambodia and Thailand during part of the
period. Data for 2012 show continued strong growth, with total international tourist arrivals growing by
24 percent to reach 3.58 million. Arrivals from Lao PDR and Thailand rose sharply, and Cambodias
three neighboring countries accounted for one third of total tourist arrivals.

An international tourist is defined by the Ministry of Tourism as any foreign visitor to Cambodia who stays at least one night
for leisure, recreation, business or other legal tourism purposes, not related to permanent residence or remunerated activities.

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26 Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

The surge in tourist arrivals from neighboring countries reflects a number of factors, including the
lightening of visa requirements, the creation of additional land border crossings, the establishment of
casinos at some of these border crossings, the upgrading of roads, in particular Route 1, and enhanced
marketing efforts. The rise in incomes in neighboring countries is also an important factor.
Table 1.3: Number and Origin of Tourist Arrivals, 2007 and 2011
2007
Total
2,015,128
Origin of Visitors as Percent of Total
Asia and Pacific
of which

2011
2,881,862

62

73

Vietnam
South Korea
China
Japan
Lao PDR
Thailand
Australia
Malaysia
Other Asia and Pacific

6
16
6
8
1
5
4
4
12

21
12
9
6
4
4
4
4
10

Europe, Americas, Africa and Mid-East


of which
United States
France
United Kingdom
Other

38

27

7
4
4
22

5
4
4
14

Source: Ministry of Tourism, Tourism Statistics: Annual Report 2007 and Tourism
Statistics: Annual Report 2011
Note: All countries providing 100,000 or more visitors in 2011 appear individually in
the table.
The sharp shift toward arrivals from neighboring countries has been accompanied by some weakening in
average expenditure per tourist, reflecting in part the increase in relatively inexpensive bus tours.
Although the average length of stay was unchanged during 2007-2011, the average expenditure by an
individual tourist declined by about $100 and the average expenditure of group tours dropped by $200
over the period. The effect of these changes on earnings was more than offset by the increase in tourist
arrivals. The Ministry of Tourism estimates that tourism receipts rose from $1.4 billion in 2007 to $1.9
billion in 2011.4

Source: Ministry of Tourism, Tourism Statistics: Annual Report, Phnom Penh:MOT,2011

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27

Recorded Goods Exports: the Evolution of Cambodias Export Destinations5


Overview
Cambodias goods exports are highly dependent on the U.S. market, and are therefore vulnerable to shifts
in that market. This vulnerability was evident in 2009 and 2010, when garment exports to the United
States declined because of the recession in that country.6Reducing reliance on the U.S. market, and more
generally diversifying export destinations, has been an important policy goal. A specific focus of that goal
is to develop export markets in Asian countries, which are seen as more dynamic markets than those in
North America and Europe.

Cambodias customs data show that the share of exports directed to the U.S. declined significantly
between 2007 and 2011, reaching about 40 percent in the latter year (See table 1.4). This change reflects
relatively weak growth in exports to the U.S. (exports in 2011 stood only 12 percent above their level in
2007), coupled with rapid growth in most other markets. Export growth to the EU was exceptionally
strong. Exports to the EU surged by more than $500 million between 2010 and 2011 alone, and the EUs
share of Cambodian exports rose from 23 percent in 2007 to 30 percent in 2011. Other destinations were
also dynamic. The shares of exports to Canada, Japan, China and South Korea increased in the latter
three countries from a low base. Small markets around the periphery of Cambodias normal export
destinations, such as Mexico and Russia, also registered very rapid export growth. The share of ASEAN
member countries in Cambodias exports also increased, but this was solely the result of the rapid
advance of exports to two of Cambodias neighbors Thailand and Vietnam. Other ASEAN countries
were not a significant source of export expansion, accounting for a mere 2 percent of Cambodias exports
in both 2007 and 2011.

5
This and the next main section of this chapter make use of a data analysis by Denis Audet, Cambodias Tariff Policy Stance and
Trade Performance, Phnom Penh: ADB, 2011, as well asadditional data analysis prepared by Mr. Audet specifically for this
study.
6
See RGC,Report by Cambodia, (WT/TPR/G/253) Geneva: WTO, 2011. Presented to the WTO Trade Policy Review held
November 2011 in Geneva.

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Table 1.4: Cambodias Recorded Goods Export Destinations, 2007 and 2011
2007

2011

Total Goods Exports ($ millions)


$2,962
Destination as Percent of Total
United States
64
European Union
23
ASEAN
5
(of which: Thailand and Vietnam)
(3)
Canada
5
Japan
1
China
*
Korea
*
Other Asia and Pacific
*
All other
3

$5,122
41
30
8
(6)
8
3
3
1
*
6

Source: General Directorate of Customs and Excise (GDCE)


Note: All Other are mainly shipments to non-EU Europe and Latin America. A star (*)
indicates less than 1 percent.

The Role of Trade Preferences


Tariff preferences have played an important role in determining the growth of Cambodias exports during
the period under review. Cambodian exports enjoy duty-free market access under a variety of duty-free
quota-free programs that developed and some developing countries have put in place for Least Developed
Countries. In addition, they enjoy duty-free (or highly preferential) access within ASEAN and benefit
from the free trade agreements concluded with ASEAN dialogue partners.
The advantage that Cambodia enjoys because of duty free access depends on the height of MFN (i.e. nonpreferential) import duties in the importing country. For those products for which MFN duties are high,
the duty-free access provided by these preferential trading arrangements improves dramatically
Cambodias competitive position. In the E.U., for example, the average MFN duty on clothes is 12
percent, while the MFN duties on bicycles and shoes are 15 and 17 percent, respectively. These
magnitudes are large when compared to profit margins, and will increase significantly in some cases
doubling the profitability of producing for export in Cambodia, as compared with producing the same
goods for export in a country that does not enjoy duty-free privileges.7 This, in turn, provides an
important incentive to invest and expand exports in those sectors.
Other preferential markets for example Canada, China, Japan also have relatively high MFN tariffs on
Cambodias main export products and, thus, provide a significant competitive advantage to Cambodia.
This section looks at the way trade flows have responded to these incentives during the period 2007-2011.
The United States:The largest of Cambodias export markets, the United States, does not provide
preferences for garments, Cambodias main export product. Consequently, almost all of Cambodias
exports to the U.S. pay the normal U.S. tariff rate.

Cambodia still needs to compete head on, however, with other countries enjoying duty free access to the preferential markets.

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Cambodias garment exports to the U.S. were severely impacted by the international financial crisis and
recession in 2008-2010. Exports to the U.S. stagnated and then declined in 2008-2009, and did not
recover to their 2007 level until 2011, when they stood 12 percent higher. In all, goods exports to the U.S.
accounted for only 10 percent of the overall growth in Cambodian recorded goods exports between the
two years. Data for 2012 show a decline in the absolute value of Cambodias garment exports to the U.S.,
and, in December 2012, garment exports to the EU were, for the first time, larger than exports to the U.S.
Thus, a further reduction in the U.S. share is underway, propelled by stagnation or even decline in the
U.S. market.
The European Union:The EU offers duty-free entry to all Cambodian exports that meet the E.U origin
criteria. Moreover, in January 2011 the EU liberalized these criteria, so that a much larger range of goods
that could be produced in Cambodia became eligible for duty-free treatment.
The result was rapid growth in Cambodias exports to the EUas shown in Table 1.5.
Table 1.5:Cambodias Recorded Goods Exports to the European Union,
2007 and 2011
2007

2011

Total Goods Exports ($ millions)


Of which: EBA (% share)

$664
72

$1,503
92

Garment Exports ($ millions)


Of which: EBA (% share)

$559
75

$1,156
93

Source: GDCE and Ministry of Commerce, Bilateral Trade Department


As may be seen from the table, roughly three quarters of Cambodias exports to the EU benefitted from
duty-free entry in 2007. In the following years exports grew modestly during the crisis years, and then
jumped dramatically by more than $500 million in 2011, when the new rules of origin took effect. This
rapid growth was the direct result of EBA and the change in its rules of origin. By 2011, more than 90
percent of Cambodias exports to the EU were under EBA. As shown in the table, the main growth was in
garments, but exports of bicycles and footwear under EBA also advanced rapidly during the period.
Most of the growth in export earnings was the result of increased export volumes. However, the new rules
of origin also created incentives to move production of more expensive items to Cambodia. The effect of
duty-free access on profit margins is greater, the higher the price of the exported item, and, in the case of
bicycles, higher end models that could not qualify under the old rules of origin became eligible for dutyfree access under the new rules.
Canada:Goods exports to Canada more than doubled between 2007 and 2011. More than 80 percent of
this growth was accounted for by products entering Canada duty-free under its DFQF program. In 2011,

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more than 95 percent of the exports benefitting from duty-free entry were garments, the remainder being
textiles, footwear, and bicycles.
Selected Dialogue Partners:Goods exports to China, Japan, and South Korea combined made up only 1.5
percent of Cambodias recorded exports in 2007. Between 2007 and 2011, shipments to these destinations
grew rapidly, and accounted for 7 percent of Cambodias recorded goods exports in 2011.
In each of the three countries Cambodia has three different possible avenues for preferential market
access: GSP programs, DFQF programs, and the free trade agreement it has with each of the countries.
For Cambodia, the GSP programs were the least advantageous, and, in practice, no use was made of them.
The choice of DFQF or FTA market access and the role that access played in expanding exports differed
from country to country. See below, a detailed analysis of the way in which rules of origin shaped these
outcomes.
In the case of China, Cambodias duty-free exports were particularly dynamic, with their share rising
from 4 to almost 30 percent of total Cambodian recorded goods exports to China over the period 20082011 (See Table 1.6). Chinas DFQF program for LDCs was the main avenue for preferential access in
2008 and 2009, but the value of exports under this program was small, and showed no growth pattern. On
the other hand, exports under the free trade agreement grew rapidly in 2010 and 2011, and accounted for
almost all of the growth of preferential trade during the period 2008-2011. Estimates for 2012 indicate a
further sharp jump in Cambodias exports under the FTA.
Table 1.6: Cambodias Recorded Goods Exports to Selected Dialogue Partners,
2008 and 2011
2008

2011

$14
4

$154
29

$7
7

$46
7

$31
93

$154
76

China
Total ($ millions)
Of which: DFQF and FTA(% share)
South Korea
Total ($ millions)
Of which: DFQF and FTA(% share)
Japan
Total ($ millions)
Of which: DFQF and FTA(% share)

Source: GDCE and Ministry of Commerce, Multilateral Trade Department


Note: Data on preferential trade is not available for 2007
In the case of South Korea, the share of Cambodias exports under DFQF and FTA in total Cambodian
recorded goods exports remained unchanged, at about 7 percent. Duty-free exports were dynamic, but no
more so than dutiable exports. Until 2011, almost no use was made of Koreas DFQF scheme. Beginning
in 2009, there was rapid and steady growth in exports under the free trade agreement. There was further
rapid growth in such exports in 2012.

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In the case of Japan, Cambodian exports enjoying preferential access accounted for more than 90 percent
of total Cambodian recorded goods exports to Japan in 2008. By 2011, however, their share had fallen to
around 75 percent. Thus, Cambodias non-preferential exports to Japan were even more dynamic than
exports enjoying preferences. Unlike in China and Korea, most preferential exports to Japan took place
under Japans DFQF program. Exports under the FTA started to advance in 2010, but from a very low
base.
Cambodias preferential goods exports to the three countries consisted mostly of garments and footwear.
In the case of China, in 2011 these two products accounted for about 75 percent of total exports enjoying
preferential access. In the case of both South Korea and Japan, the comparable share was more than 95
percent. The rapid rise of duty-free exports to China, South Korea, and Japan is thus part of the story of
the diversification of markets for garments and footwear (more on this below.) Data for 2012 show
further rapid advances in preferential exports and mark the appearance of new products natural rubber,
manioc chips, and tapioca starch in the list of products imported by China from Cambodia under the
FTA.
ASEAN: Preferential access under AFTA played a modest role in expanding Cambodias exports
between 2008 and 2011 as shown in Table 1.7. The major part of the increase in Cambodias goods
exports under AFTA was to its neighbors Thailand and Vietnam. The composition of preferential goods
exports to ASEAN was radically different from what was observed in other preferential markets.
Garments and footwear made up a small proportion of preferential exports, while most were agricultural
products.
Table 1.7: Cambodias Recorded Exports to ASEAN Member Countries, 2008 and 2011
2008

2011

Total Exports to ASEAN ($ millions)

$248

$419

Of which:Thailand and Vietnam ($ millions)


Of which, to Thailand and Vietnam under AFTA (% share)

$184
15

$338
42

Of which: All Others ($ millions)


Of which, to All Others under AFTA (% share)

$64
*

$81
10

Source: GDCE and MoC Multilateral Trade Department


Note:Data on preferential trade are not available for 2007. The star (*) indicates less than 1
percent
.
As regards Thailand, the top export products in 2011 were soybeans, cassavachips, dried chili, cassava
root bulbs, and corn. For Vietnam, the top export products were cassavachips, corn, cassava root bulbs,
and crude palm oil. Of particular note is the low level and relatively slow growth of exports to ASEAN

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members other than Thailand and Vietnam, and the very low utilization of preferential access to those
markets.
The results of the analysis of exports to the markets examined above are summarized in Table 1.8, which
aggregates the data for the seven markets. As may be seen from that table, preferential exports to the
seven markets grew by more than 200 percent between 2007 and 2011, while non-preferential exports to
the seven markets grew by about 16 percent. Roughly 80 percent of the overall growth in exports to these
markets was accounted for by preferential trade.
Table 1.8: Cambodias Exports to Seven Markets, 2007 and 2011, $ millions
Preferential access
Non-preferential access

2007
676
2,302

2011
2,096
2,681

Percent change
210
16

Source:GDCE and MoC Multilateral Trade Department


Note: The markets are: the United States, the European Union, Canada, China, South Korea,
Japan, and ASEAN

Recorded Goods Exports: the Evolution of Cambodias Product Mix


In 2007, garments made up 90 percent of Cambodias recorded exports(see Table 1.9.) By 2011, their
share had declined to 78 percent, despite growth that averaged about 10 percent per annum during the
period. This outcome was the result of vigorous growth in other export products.
Footwear exports grew at an average annual rate of 36 percent over the period and accounted for 5
percent of Cambodias exports in 2011. Shipments to the EU recorded rapid growth and accounted for 56
percent of footwear exports by 2011. Japan, the U.S., and various Latin American countries were also
important markets. A notable feature of Cambodias footwear exports is the wide range of markets being
served. GDCE data for 2011 record shipments to 75 different importing countries. Most of these
shipments were small.

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Table 1.9: Cambodias Recorded Goods Export Mix, 2007 and 2011
2007
Total Exports($ dollars)
Garments
Vehicles
Footwear
Natural Rubber
Corn
Rice (mainly milled rice)
Cassava
Other

$2,962
of which (%share of total)
90
2
3
1
*
*
*
3

2011
$5,122
78
6
5
4
*
2
*
4

Source: GDCE
Note:Vehicles covers motor-cars, motor-bikes, and bicycles including exports of
second-hand vehicles. The star (*) indicates less than 1 percent
The vehicles heading includes all types of wheeled vehicles for the transport of people or goods. In
2011, Cambodia recorded exports of the following: tractors, go-karts, motor cars, ambulances, trucks,
crane trucks, motor bikes, bicycles, trailers and semi-trailers. Of these products, bicycles and ambulances
are produced in Cambodia. The remaining items, with a few small exceptions, are re-exports of products
previously imported.
Bicycle exports, the most important of the export products produced in Cambodia, moved erratically
during the early part of the period, and then surged by more than 50 percent per annum in both 2010 and
2011, reaching a total of almost $110 million. Data for 2012 show further strong growth. Exports were
directed mainly at the EU, under the EBA program, but the U.S., Canada and Switzerland were also
significant markets.
Exports of natural rubber declined in 2007 and 2008 and, then, grew at an average annual rate of 85
percent during the remainder of the period. In 2008, 84 percent of Cambodias exports went to Vietnam,
with the rest going to Malaysia and Singapore. By 2011, Vietnams share in total rubber exports had
fallen to 58 percent, and China had become the second most important destination, accounting for 21
percent of total rubber exports. Malaysia and Singapore remained important destinations and relatively
small shipments were made to South Korea, Taiwan, India, and Spain.

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Cambodias Informal Agricultural Export:


The Importance of Thailand and Vietnam and
Impact on Volume, Mix, and Destination of Total Exports
Any assessment of changes in export volume, product mix, and destinations obviously needs to take
account of all of Cambodias exports. However, for a number of agricultural products paddy rice, corn,
soybeans, cassava, cashews most exports are informal, crossing the border into Thailand or Vietnam
without being recorded, and are thus not included in the statistics collected by Customs. These exports
occur mainly because Cambodia is unable to process the products in question to a stage at which they
may be consumed. The processing takes place therefore in Thailand or Vietnamand a proportion of the
product is then exported by these countries to third countries. In the case of cassava, a large share of
Cambodias exports to Thailand and Vietnam is simply shipped on to third countries without being
processed.
The distribution of informal shipments as between the two countries is, of course, also not recorded. With
regard to paddy rice, a rule of thumb used in the past is that one third is directed toward Thailand (mostly
aromatic varieties) and two thirds toward Vietnam (mainly IRRI varieties.) This pattern may have been
disrupted by recent Thai policy actions (See paragraph below.) Until recently, formal exports of corn
were directed toward Thailand and informal shipments probably followed the same pattern. Cassava is
shipped to both countries in roughly equal amounts.
Formal and informal agricultural exports to Thailand have been seriously disrupted in recent years
because of Thai policy actions to protect their agricultural producers. Seasonal tariff rate quotas on corn
imports have reduced dramatically Cambodias recorded exports of that product to Thailand. While it was
possible to redirect some of these exports to Taiwan, South Korea, and Vietnam, the overall impact of
these measures, which contravene Thailands market access commitments under ATIGA, was a sharp
reduction in total formal corn exports. Recently the Government of Thailand has lengthened the period
during which it allows corn imports and has increased the size of the tariff rate quota assigned to
Cambodia. But these measures still fall far short of the free access that Thailand has committed to under
ATIGA. Formal and informal trade in paddy rice has also been affected by Thailands Rice Mortgage
Program, which is designed to support prices to Thai farmers. In order to prevent Cambodian rice from
being imported and then sold to the Thai government at the Thai support price, various ad hoc
impediments, including temporary border closures, have been put in place by the Thai authorities, thereby
disrupting Cambodias exports. Disruption in the formal and informal export of cassava has also taken
place, for similar reasons. Recent measures include the imposition of a quality certificate, guaranteeing
minimum moisture and sand content; a requirement of obtaining a transportation permit for the trucking
of Cambodian cassava from the border; and, various measures to make it difficult for a third party to
purchase Cambodian cassava and ship it through a Thai port. Cambodian authorities attempt to overcome
these difficulties through almost continuous dialogue with their Thai counterparts, using the CambodianThai Joint Trade Committee, which meets periodically at the Ministerial level and more frequently at the
working level. The meeting of the Joint Trade Committee at the ministerial level in April 2013 made
some progress in identifying steps to ease Thailands constraints on Cambodian exports of corn and

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cassava.Nonetheless, the negative trend continues. According to Government officials, Cambodias


cassava exports to Thailand in the first six months of 2013 were less than half the value of exports in the
first six months of 2012.8
There is a general consensus that informal exports of agricultural products are very large relative to
recorded exports of the same products. There have been attempts to make estimates of the value of
informal exports of the more important agricultural products. These usually involve the use of mirror
statistics (i.e. import data of Thailand and Vietnam) or the calculation of an exportable surplus. The first
approach increases the information available, but falls short of an adequate assessment of the full extent
of informal exports. The second approach is more widely used, but also has severe shortcomings.
The first step in calculating the value of an exportable surplus is to establish the volume of product
available for export.In the case of paddy rice, for example, the calculation begins by estimating total
production, and then subtracting amounts for wastage, seed, animal feed, own consumption by the
producer, and amounts milled domestically. The residual that is left when these subtractions have been
made is the exportable surplus. This calculated surplus is highly sensitive to errors in any of the steps in
the calculation. A 10 percent overestimation of total production, for example, can easily produce an error
in the calculated surplus that is two or three times as large, and errors in the estimation of the magnitudes
of the items being subtracted can magnify further the mis-estimation of the exportable surplus. In general,
the smaller the exportable surplus relative to total production the greater will be the effect of errors in
estimating output on the estimate of the surplus. A procedure that magnifies in this way relatively small
estimation errors needs to be used with great caution. This issue is particularly important for estimates for
paddy rice; it is present but less relevant for the other products.
The Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries has made estimates in metric tons of the exportable
surplus for paddy rice, cassava, corn, and soybeans. These estimates were used in the exercise described
below.9
The second step is to establish the export value of the exportable surplus.For the present exercise, price
data were developed by calculating the export unit values of formal exports of paddy rice, cassava, corn
and soybeans. The unit values were derived from GDCE data and from data available from
CAMCONTROL. Unit values were also calculated from other estimates of informal export values, most
notably those of ASEAN Food Security Information.10Various ad hoc studies were consulted, and, for
cassava, Bangkok price quotations and quotations by international traders were consulted.
The result of this survey was a wide range of prices for each product for each of the years examined, with
different sources providing values that sometimes converged on an order of magnitude, but usually
differed, sometimes by as much as 100 percent.

8 Phnom Penh Post, Thai Policy Hits Cambodian Cassava Exports, September 4, 2013
9
This information can be obtained from the ASEAN Food Security Information Systems AFSIS which collects and publishes
comparable annual data for major agricultural commodities from all ASEAN members. See http://www.afsisnc.org/
10
Ibid

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As may be seen from this discussion, attempts to make a judgment about the value of Cambodias
informal exports must contend with the fact that estimates of both the quantities and prices involved are
subject to very wide margins of uncertainty and possible error. It therefore seemed best to try to establish
a range of values within which it could be said with some confidence that the actual values are located.
The lower boundary of this range of values was calculated by assuming that the estimated quantities of
exportable surpluses are overstated by 25 percent. Adjusting for this and applying the lowest figure in the
range of estimates for the export price of each commodity produced an estimate of $575 million for the
four commodities combined. The upper boundary of the range was calculated by accepting the MAFF
estimates of quantities of exportable surplus and applying the highest figure in the range of estimates for
the export price of each commodity. This produced an estimate of $1,200 million, and is the upper
boundary.
Even at the lower end of this range, it is clear that the inclusion of informal exports in the export statistics
were it possible would alter significantly the magnitude of total exports, their rate of growth, product
composition, and main destinations.
To illustrate the implications of informal trade on perceptions of the relative importance of export markets
and products, two illustrative tables have been prepared, each of which combines customs data with
assumed magnitudes of informal trade. These assumed values are not estimates, in the usual sense of the
word. They reflect simply a hunch as to where to locate, within the range of $575 - $1,200 million, a
single figure that might not be too far off the mark. The Hunch consists of accepting the MAFF
estimates of the quantities of exportable surplus and applying to those quantities the lowest of the various
options regarding price. This produces an aggregate value for informal export the four commodities of
$435 million in 2007 and $820 million in 2011. The figures for individual commodities are shown in
Table 1.10.

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Table 1.10: Composition of Recorded and Estimated Informal Cambodia Exports,


2007 and 2011
2007
$ million
Total Recorded Exports (goods + services)

4,509

Total Recorded and Informal Exports


(goods + services)

4,945

2011
% Share

$ million

% Share

7,335
100

8,155

100

Composition of TotalRecorded and Estimated Informal Exports


Garments

2,653

54

3,978

48

Tourism

1,398

28

894

18

1,907
2,418

23
29

Vehicles, mostly bicycles (recorded)

49

298

Footwear (recorded)

79

267

Rubber (recorded)

43

192

Milled Rice (recorded)

2
6

*
*

106

*
7

Paddy rice (informal - estimated)

*
356

581

Cassava (informal - estimated)

37

161

Corn + Soybean (informal - estimated)

42

78

Other recorded sectors (goods + services)

280

729

Other sectors (including informal exports)


Composition of Other Sectors

Corn + Soybean (recorded)


Cassava (recorded)

Source: GDCE for recorded goods exports; Balance of Payment forservices included in total
recorded exports;Ministry of Tourism for tourism estimate; and, see text for estimates of assumed
values of informal goods trade
Note:Vehicles includes motor-cars, motor-bikes, and bicycles. The figures include exports of
second-hand vehicles. The star (*) indicates less than 1 percent.
The inclusion of the estimates of informal agricultural exports indicates that the export concentration on
garments and tourism is even less than was suggested in Table 1.1 by looking at recorded trade alone,
with the share of other exports growing from18 to 29 percent during 2007-2011. Bicycles, footwear,
rubber, and milled rice are emerging as fast growing recorded exports; paddy rice, cassava, corn and
soybeans as fast growing informal exports.

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Table 1.11: Cambodia Goods Export Destination


Recorded Exports ($ millions)
Destination (% share)
United States
European Union
ASEAN
All others
Recorded and Informal Exports ($ millions)
Destination (% share)
United States
European Union
ASEAN
Of which: Thailand and Vietnam
Japan
China
South Korea
Canada
All others

2007
2,962

2011
5,122

64
23
5
8

41
30
8
22

3,397

5,942

55
20
17
(17)
1
*
*
4
3

35
26
21
(20)
3
3
*
6
6

Source: GDCE for recorded goods exports; assumed values of informal goods
trade (see Table 1.10). A star (*) indicates less than 1percent
As regards export destinations, the inclusion of the assumed values of informal trade leads to some
important observations. Exports to the United States as a share of total exports are declining to an even
lower level than suggested by the data for recorded exports only. For recorded and informal exports, the
share declined from 55 to 35 percent between 2007 and 2011. In contrast, exports to ASEAN + 3 markets
(ASEAN, China, Japan, South Korea)grew from 18 to 27 percent during that period and the share of
Vietnam and Thailand in total exports to that region is dominant. These two markets, taken together,
become more than twice the size of all other export markets in Asia taken together.
Two broad conclusions emerge from this exercise, both of which hold even if informal exports turn out to
be significantly different from the values assumed in tables 1.10 and 1.11. The first is that trade relations
with Thailand and Vietnam have an important bearing on Cambodias overall exportsand are the
dominant elements influencing its exports of agricultural products. The trading rules that apply to
informal trade, to the extent that they exist, are not well understood and are subject to frequent changes.
Bilateral consultations between governments are the only way to address difficulties that arise, with WTO
and ASEAN rules providing at best a weak framework for the consultations. Cambodia is unavoidably in
a difficult position in such consultations, since there are usually no practicable alternative market outlets.
Given the agricultural support policies of the present Thai government, difficulties are likely to continue,
and the management of trade relations with Thailand, and to a lesser extent Vietnam, will be a significant
preoccupation of future Cambodian governments.
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Secondly, it is obvious that Cambodia is a large and competitive producer of agricultural products, well
able to maintain past rates of output growth for several years into the future and expand further its
exports. Thailand and Vietnam hold a near monopoly on Cambodias agricultural export trade. Cambodia
cannot expect to derive the fullbenefits of its agricultural productivity until it acquires the capacity to
export directly to consuming countries and to engage in an appropriate degree of processing. This requires
developing Cambodias internal logistics and capacities for agricultural processing, with supporting
policies in areas such as trade finance, trade facilitation, SPS compliance, and agricultural extension
services. This is a big agenda, but until significant progress has been made in these areas Cambodias
second largest export sector will not be contributing its full potential to Cambodias growth and
development.

The Central Role of Rules of Origin


The duty-free access that Cambodia enjoys in certain of its export markets under various trade preference
arrangements is the key element explaining the rapid growth and changing destinations of Cambodias
manufactured exports. This access will be the key determinant of export performance in the period ahead.
A key feature of all preferential schemes is their rules of origin; i.e. the set of rules that must be followed
to determine whether or not a product produced in Cambodia is eligible for preferential access into the
importing country. This section will examine how rules of origin have shaped, and are likely to shape in
the future, Cambodias export products and export destinations. It also discusses how the rules of origin
governing Cambodias free trade agreements could be reshaped to better serve Cambodia.
Rules of Origin and Cambodias Recent Trade Performance
The dominant feature of Cambodias recent export performance has been the rapid expansion of garment
and bicycle exports to the EU and of garment exports to China, Japan and Korea as discussed earlier.
This section focuses on garment exports.
The European Union:Before 2011, EU rules of origin for garmentsrequired an originating product to
undergo double transformation. 11 This meant that in order to gain duty-free access to the EU a garment
had to be assembled in Cambodia from fabric woven or knitted in Cambodia. Cambodia produces
practically no fabric, so strict adherence to the rules of origin would have prevented Cambodia from
benefitting from preferential access to the EU market. However, the EU granted Cambodia derogation
from the rules, allowing Cambodian producers to use fabric originating in ASEAN countries. The exports
benefitting from this derogation were subject to quantitative limitations. Under this regime, Cambodias
exports to the EU averaged between $400 and $500 million during 2007-2010.

11

Throughout this section garments means articles of clothing falling under HS Chapters 61 and 62.

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In 2011 the EU introduced new rules of origin for its EBA program. The new rules allowed duty-free
entry of a garment that was sewn from two or more pieces using fabric produced anywhere. This meant
that, for the first time, garments produced in Cambodia from fabric manufactured in China could secure
duty-free access to the EU.This change produced an immediate reaction: Garment exports to the EU
under EBA doubled in 2011, and there was a surge of Chinese garment producers (and other producers
using Chinese fabric) setting up factories in Cambodia.
China:Chinas duty-free quota-free program (DFQF) covers most garment products. The rules of origin
governing this program stipulate that a qualifying garment must be produced from inputs classified in any
HS code other than the 4-digit code of the finished product. Alternatively, the garment would qualify if its
domestic content were not less than 40 percent of the FOB value. Cambodia exported successfully under
this regime in 2008 and 2009, but the amounts exported were small and showed no growth trend.
In 2009 Cambodia began trading under its free trade agreement (FTA) with China. The rules of origin
governing garments in the FTA stipulate that duty-free access will be granted any garment manufactured
through the process of cutting and assembly of fabric into a complete article. These much simpler rules of
origin attracted the attention of Cambodias exporters. As reported above, garment exports to China under
the FTA began in earnest in 2010, then rose four-fold in 2011 and doubled in 2012.
South Korea:Cambodia began exporting to South Korea under both the duty-free quota-free program
(DFQF) and the FTA in 2009. The rules of origin in the FTA governing garments require a single
transformation i.e. garments qualify if they are cut and sewn in Cambodia from non-originating fabric.
Alternatively, they qualify if their regional content is not less than 40 percent of their FOB value. These
simple rules have given rise to rapid and steady growth of garment exports to Korea.
Koreas DFQF program covers only selected garment items, and its rules of origin are more restrictive.
They state that products which are finally manufactured or processed in the exporting country by using
products, as inputs, which originate from countries other than the exporting country.shall be eligible for
preferential tariffs if the value of the inputs does not exceed 50 percent of the FOB price of the final
product.
While the DFQF rules of origin have the 50 percent restriction, a number of Cambodian producers are
able to meet that criterion. Exports under Koreas DFQF program, though small, have grown modestly in
every year since 2008. It is the FTA, however, with its wider product coverage and its simple and liberal
rules of origin,that has been the preferred channel for exporting garments to Korea. Exports of garments
under the FTA grew at an average annual rate of 125 percent during the three years 2010-2012.
Japan:The rules of origin governing garments in Japans DFQF program draw a distinction between
garments made from knitted fabric (HS Chapter 61) and woven fabric (HS Chapter 62.) In the case of
garments made from knitted fabric, the use of fabric produced outside Cambodia is not allowed. The rules
of origin governing garments made from woven fabric, on the other hand, allow fabric from any source to
be used.

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The rules of origin governing garments in the FTA allow duty-free entry to garments assembled in
Cambodia from fabric originating in any ASEAN country. There is no distinction between garments made
from knitted and woven fabric.
As regards garments made from knitted fabric, the rules of origin in the FTA are more liberal than those
of the DFQF. As regards garments made from woven fabric, the rules of origin of the DFQF program are
more liberal than those in the FTA.
As reported in Section II.B, above, Cambodian producers of garments made from woven fabric have
made good use of the liberal rules of the DFQF program, and this can be expected to continue. Use of the
FTA rules of origin by producers of garments from knitted fabric has begun to grow, and this trend too
can be expected to continue.
Prospective Changes in the GSP Programs of the EU and Canada
Both the EU and Canada have begun a process of revising their GSP programs with an eye to
graduating more advanced developing countries from their GSP programs. In both cases the graduation
is scheduled for 2014. These moves will affect Cambodia by changing the way it can use the EU and
Canadian rules of origin.
The rules of origin of both countries allow for cumulation, a procedure that allows inputs from a
country other than Cambodia to be counted as originating in Cambodia for purposes of meeting rules of
origin criteria.
In the case of the EU, Cambodia is allowed to cumulate inputs from any other ASEAN country. The
example of bicycles can illustrate how this works. The EU rules of origin state that a bicycle is
Cambodian if the value of all materials used in its manufacture that do not originate in Cambodia does not
exceed 70 percent of the ex-factory price. In this case, cumulation means that the value of bicycle parts
imported from Singapore or Malaysia for use in making bicycles is counted as originating in Cambodia
and not as part of the 70 percent. This is highly favorable to Cambodia and allows a wide range of bicycle
models to be exported to the EU duty free.
The EU now proposes to graduate Malaysia from its GSP program, and to disallow cumulation of inputs
originating in any country that is not included in its GSP program. As regards bicycles, this means that
inputs from Singapore and Malaysia, both of which are important producers of bicycle parts, will need to
be counted as part of the 70 percent. This will make it more difficult for many bicycle models to meet the
rules of origin, and will impair Cambodias preferential access to the EU market.
The graduation of countries from Canadas GSP program may also adversely affect Cambodias garment
exports to Canada.
Canadas rules of origin applicable to Cambodia require that garments should be cut and sewn in
Cambodia of fabric produced in Cambodia or in any other of Canadas GSP recipients (or in Canada
itself). Canada now proposes to graduate China, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Singapore, and Thailand from its

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list of GSP recipients. This means that fabric from those countries can no longer be used to produce
garments eligible for duty-free entry into Canada. Yet those countries are, in varying degrees, precisely
the countries from which Cambodia sources fabric. Cambodias garment exports of $300 million per year
are put under threat by this development.12
The EUs Free Trade Agreements with ASEAN Members
Three ASEAN Members Malaysia, Thailand, and Vietnam are in the process of negotiating free trade
agreements with the EU.When their agreements are concluded, these three countries will become direct
competitors with Cambodia for investors seeking duty-free access to the European market.
The impact that this will have on Cambodia depends entirely on rules of origin. Since the rules governing
these free trade agreements are currently under negotiation, it is not possible at present to assess fully this
impact. It is known, however, that EU rules of origin for their free trade agreement partners allow a free
trade partner to cumulate inputs produced in other free trade partners. To take a concrete example, once
these free trade agreements are in place, a Vietnamese producer of bicycles would be able to count parts
imported from Malaysia as Vietnamese for purposes of determining whether a Vietnamese bicycle meets
EU rules of origin. This is in sharp contrast to the situation facing Cambodia where, as described above,
cumulation with Malaysia will not be possible after 2013.
The competitive position of Cambodias bicycle producers will be affected by these differences in
cumulation possibilities. The EBA rule of origin for bicycles requires that no more than 70 percent of the
ex-factory price should consist of inputs that are non-originating, i.e. non-Cambodian. If the rule of origin
for bicycles in the EU-Vietnam free trade agreement is the same, then a bicycle producer in Vietnam will
clearly have easier rules of origin and more flexibility in sourcing inputs and Vietnam will become the
preferred investment destination for bicycle manufacturers seeking duty free access to the EU market.
Even if the rule of origin in the EU-Vietnam agreement is more stringent and specifies that no more than
50 percent of the ex-factory price should consist of inputs that are non-originating, Vietnam could still be
the preferred investment location if inputs from Malaysia, Singapore, and other countries with free trade
agreements with the EU account for more than 20 percent of the ex-factory price.
In the near term, policy must address the loss of cumulation with Malaysia and Singapore. The
Government has responded to this challenge by encouraging bicycle producers to engage in a higher level
of manufacture and encouraging bicycle parts manufacturers to get established in Cambodia. The
Government has asked the EU for a three-year derogation from their decision on cumulation, in order to
prevent injury to its bicycle industry while these policies are taking effect.
The negotiation of free trade agreements between the EU and Malaysia, Thailand, and Vietnam does not
appear likely to affect the competitive position of Cambodian garment or footwear producers. The EBA
rules of origin for these products are very liberal and cumulation is not an issue. Cambodia will remain a
fully competitive investment destination for producers of these products.

12

This threat has been eased by a recent statement by the Canadian authorities that they would take steps to ensure that the
graduation of countries from their GSP scheme would not affect their DFQF program.

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Reforming the Rules of Origin13


Cambodia is privileged to be eligible for preferential access to many important markets. The trading
regime that results from preferences, however, is complicated and is becoming increasingly complex.
Cambodia now issues twelve different certificates of origin, each one reflecting a separate and distinct set
of rules of origin. This is a challenge to government officials who must administer the regime. It is also a
challenge to the private sector and to potential investors, who must continuously assess the value to them
of the incentives created by preferential market access and the rules of origin governing that access.
The rules of origin applicable to GSP and DFQF programs are determined unilaterally by the countries
offering Cambodia those programs. Cambodia has no influence over these rules, except through moral
suasion. It seeks to leverage its moral suasion by working with other LDCs in international fora to draw
attention to the need to improve DFQF programs. Cambodia is in a position to provide leadership in
pressing countries providing DFQF programs to adopt more lenient rules of origin for their programs.
In the case of free trade agreements, the rules of origin are determined by the parties to the agreement.
Cambodia thus has a direct voice in establishing and reforming the rules of origin of the free trade
agreements of which it is a member.
The original AFTA rules of origin defined origin as occurring when 40 percent or more of the FOB value
of a product was accounted for by local processing and local and regional materials. It allowed both direct
and indirect calculation of the 40 percent. Both methods required detailed accounting, and the
requirements were particularly difficult in the case of the direct calculation. These difficulties were
gradually recognized and product-specific rules of origin were later introduced, in particular on textiles
and clothing.
When ASEAN began negotiating free trade agreements with its Dialogue Partners, it came up against
approaches to rules of origin that were different from its own. Each Partner pressed hard to have its rules
of origin reflected in the free trade agreement with ASEAN, and in most cases ASEAN and Cambodia
accepted most of the features of the Partner. The results of this were two-fold. First, the rules of origin
governing the free trade agreements with Dialogue Partners are different for each Partner, resulting in the
need to make separate assessments of eligibility and to issue separate certificates of origin for trade with
each of them. Second, various elements of the rules of origin of the free trade agreements with Dialogue
Partners were introduced into AFTA rules of origin through ATIGA. AFTA rules of origin retained the
original 40 percent rule, but the alternative of establishing origin through a change in tariff heading
became available for an increasing number of products, and additional product-specific rules of origin
were introduced.
The end result of these developments is a complex, unwieldy and confusing variety of rules of origin.
Compliance with a single rule of origin is a cost for a firm. A multiplicity of rules of origin unnecessarily
multiplies that cost. The present rules of origin regimes governing AFTA trade and trade with Dialogue
Partners do not serve Cambodia well. Reform of these regimes through simplification, consolidation and
liberalization should be an objective of Cambodias trade policy.
13

This Section has been prepared by the UNCTAD Secretariat

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The formation of the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) presents an opportunity to
bring about such reform. The RCEP is envisaged as a new free trade agreement that will include all 16
ASEAN Members and Dialogue Partners, and that will replace current free trade arrangements among
them. The RCEP will have a single set of rules of origin. The negotiation of these rules of origin will
begin in mid-2013 and is to be completed in 2015.
In developing its position for these negotiations, Cambodia needs to consider carefully its present and
likely future trade interests within the RCEP area. Cambodia has the ambition of becoming a significant
producer of intermediate inputs used in regional or international value chains. As discussed further below,
this has already begun, albeit on a very small scale. A key question, then, is what are the characteristics of
an RCEP set of rules of origin that would allow Cambodia to quickly insert itself into regional and
international value chainsand which would facilitate more generally a rapid expansion of exports?
In addressing this question, Cambodian negotiators will need to make a determination of the degree of
leniency in the rules of origin that would be in their interest. The discussion earlier in this section
clearly shows that every time Cambodias trading partners have moved to greater leniency in their rules of
origin there has been a rapid expansion of Cambodias exports, investment and employment. It follows
that leniency in the rules of origin within the RCEP area would produce the same effect. Further, regional
and international value chains are characterized by fragmentation of production, often into individual
operations adding relatively little value. Here again, Cambodias interests are best served by rules of
origin that are lenient, allowing simple steps in the production process to be located in Cambodia.
The present AFTA rules on regional value added require 40 percent of the fob value of a product to
originate in AFTA. This is too high. Cambodia should press for RCEP rules of origin that imply a
regional value added of no more than 30 percent. This should be complemented by change of tariff
classification criteria that are liberal, combined with exceptions to facilitate compliance by firms.
Cambodias representatives in the RCEP negotiations on rules of origin should also insist that the
negotiated rules of origin should reflect best international practice.
Experience with other preferential rules of origin, in particular NAFTA, has demonstrated that rules of
origin involving the calculation of domestic content are overly complex and difficult to administer. The
complexity mainly arises from the need to establish detailed rules defining what are allowable costs in
making the domestic content calculation, and what costs must be excluded from that calculation. A value
of non-originating materials approach is a much more simple and straightforward way to establish
origin. In this approach, the rules of origin are expressed as the maximum allowable value of nonoriginating materials, expressed as a percentage of the value of the final product. Cambodia should press
for the phasing out of domestic content rules of origin, and their replacement by value of non-originating
materials calculations.
In developing its negotiating position, Cambodia should also seek to apply lessons learned from the
experience of other preferential trading arrangements in areas such as the precision and accuracy of

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drafting, transparency, and predictability. Such experience would also be helpful in developing positions
on the way to handle cumulation, de minimis provisions, and roll-up (absorption.)
In addition to preparing for the RCEP rules of origin negotiations, two issues related to the rules of origin
in general require special attention.
First, Cambodia needs to streamline the issuance and verification of certificates of origin. The use of
information technology can play a significant role in rationalizing these two activities. A project is
underway that will apply information technology to the management of certificates of origin. The
execution of this project should be expedited. Cambodia also needs to have a strategy for moving toward
self-certification, a procedure under which producers/exporters issue certificates of origin within a
framework monitored by governments. Such a procedure can significantly reduce the costs of managing
preferential trade, and will become increasingly necessary as the volume of Cambodias preferential
exports grows. The process of moving toward self-certification should be begun soon on a small scale
involving only a small number of producers/exporters identified on the basis of risk assessment.
Second, the Royal Government should intensify its efforts to assist firms and potential investors to
identify export opportunities resulting from trade preferences and to comply with the rules of origin of
export markets. Small and medium-sized enterprises require particular attention. Modules and templates
for rules of origin accounting should be developed for their use.

Legal Reform and the Environment for Export Development


As has been argued in this chapter, market access conditions, including increasingly rules of origins, have
impacted critically recent changes in the volume, mix, and destination of Cambodian exports. As will be
argued in the following chapters, improvements in the business environment have also played a key role
in promoting export growth by creating incentives for new investment, either by foreign investors or by
domestic operators that have been able to take advantage of favorable market access conditions.
One issue not discussed in the next chapters but deserving some attention is the progress made by
Cambodia in improving its business environment as a result of the extensive work program for legal
reform adopted by the Government in the aftermath of the countrys accession to the WTO.
In 2004, the Royal Government of Cambodia adopted a Work Program focusing on some 104 reforms
including 73 legal reforms per se (meaning drafting and adoption of laws, issuance of Anukrets and
Prakas) and 31 institutional reforms revolving around the implementation of those new laws or
institutional changes required under the WTO.14 The November 2011 Trade Policy Review (TPR)
conducted in Geneva under the WTO auspices indicated that some 46 of the 73 legal reforms had been

14

Work Program of the Royal Government of Cambodia Resulting from Cambodias Accession to the World Trade Organization,
2004, adopted by the Council of Ministers on February 27, 2004

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completed.15Those completed, for the most part, were among the most far-ranging ones in term of scope
and impact on reforming Cambodias economy.
Subsequent to the November 2011 TPR, the RGC adopted a follow-up Work Program focusing on some
82 further reforms.16 Of these, 40 items focus on legal reforms per se (mainly legal reforms incomplete
from the 2004 Work Program) and 42 items on institutional reforms mostly related to furthering the
implementation of some of the legal reforms adopted.
The depth of what has been achieved already under this legal reform process cannot be underestimated.
While more remains to be done, it is going a long way in creating an environment that is assisting in
promoting the kind of export diversification that will be called for in the years ahead as discussed in the
Conclusion of this chapter.

Conclusion

Changes in Cambodias preferential market access are the single most important factor explaining the
growth of Cambodias exports and the diversification of its export destinations during the period under
review. The changes in the EU rules of origin and the implementation of free trade areas with Dialogue
Partners have shifted exports to those destinations, and brought about significant new investment to
expand exports. Rising labor costs in other producing countries, a reasonably friendly investment
environment, and other factorshave played a supporting role in this shift. Managing the various rules of
origin regimes and assisting exporters to identify opportunities created by preferential access has become
a key component of Cambodias trade policy.
In contrast to the experience with the EU and Dialogue Partners, preferential access to ASEAN markets,
although it produced some growth in exports to Thailand and Vietnam, has had relatively little effect on
Cambodias exports toother ASEAN members. All in all, preferential access to AFTA markets has not
been a significant ingredient in Cambodias recent export growth. In 2011 only 1 percent of
Cambodias exports went to ASEAN countries other than Thailand and Vietnam.
At the aggregate level, the shift in export destinations away from the U.S. was more or less identical with
shifts in the directions of garment trade. Almost all of the increase in exports to Dialogue Partners and
most of the increase to the EU were garments. Overall, product diversification played a relatively small
part in destination diversification. It is worth noting, however, instances in which the two were linked.
The surge in bicycle exports to the EU and of automobile parts exports to Thailand are prominent
examples of new products directed toward non-U.S. markets. As regards Dialogue Partners, shrimp,

15
See, Ministry of Commerce, Trade Sector Development and Aid for Trade in Cambodia, Phnom Penh: July 2011, pp22-fwd;
also, RGC, Report by Cambodia, (WT/TPR/G/253) Geneva: WTO, 2011. Presented to the WTO Trade Policy Review held in
Geneva in November 2011
16
Work Program of the Royal Government of Cambodia on WTO Requirements and Related Issues (2012-2015), adopted by the
Council of Ministers, July 2012

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natural rubber and cassava mark the emergence of new products to these new markets. The value of such
transactions, however, remains very small for now.
Some recent investment in the area of manufacturing indicates that the new market/new product linkage
may be more important in the future, and that the very low level and slow growth of Cambodias exports
to ASEAN may be slowly changing. It appears that some recent investment is designed to take advantage
of the duty-free access that Cambodian exports have in ASEAN markets. This is particularly true of
investment that places Cambodia in regional production chains. This is a new development and will
introduce a new dimension to the profile of Cambodias export products and destinations.
Export policy in the coming years will need to address two broad issues: How to enhance Cambodias
benefits from trade in its established export products? How to promote Cambodia as a destination for
investment in new export products?
Deepening Trade in Established Export Products
There are two related avenues for enhancing the benefits to Cambodia of its current agricultural export
products. The first consists in undertaking some degree of processing in Cambodia. The second, in
increasing direct export to final markets, whatever the degree of processing. Action along these lines will
be accompanied by an increased flow of agricultural exports through formal channels.
The Royal Governments Policy Paper on the Promotion of Paddy Production and Rice Export sets out
the Governments strategy for achieving these objectives in the case of rice. This Policy Paper, and the
mechanisms that have been set up to execute its strategy, provide an excellent template for similar action
in the case of other agricultural products. Indeed, in so far as the rice strategy deals with general issues of
producer support, logistics and export facilitation, it has already identified and begun to address some of
the elements that would be included in other strategic plans. There would thus be a good deal of mutual
support between the rice strategy and strategies that might be developed for other products.
Efforts should be made to identify additional agricultural products that could benefit from formal
production and export plans along the lines of the rice strategy. The Government has already laid out
some strategic elements in the case of rubber, including a target for total land devoted to rubber and the
improvement of the quality of trees. Thought is being given also to the question of whether rubber
production in the Cambodia-Laos-Vietnam Development Triangle might be sufficient to support a latex
processing facility. The processing of corn into feed pellets is another possibility that could be explored.
The recent decision by a Thai company to set up silo and drying facilities in Pailin province is a step in
that direction. In the case of cassava, a South Korean investorhas established a bio-ethanol plant and, in
late 2012, a Japanese company signed a deal with the Royal Government involving the production of 200
million liters of bio-ethanol by early 2020. Ethanol is extracted from cassava.
As may be seen from the above, there are elements already planned or in place that could serve as
ingredients in production and export strategies for rubber, corn, and cassava. The Royal Government may
wish to explore the possibilities of using its experience with the rice strategy to bring these elements
together in a comprehensive development plan for one or more of the three products.

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Rules of origin will play an important role in all efforts to enhance agricultural exports. Preferential dutyfree access has been and will continue to be the main determinant of the direction of exports. In all dutyfree markets, Cambodian agriculture products obtain Cambodian origin under the wholly obtained rule.
There is no problem in meeting that rule. However, neighboring countries produce almost identical
products, and these products are not eligible for duty-free access. Cambodia will thus face a big challenge
when asked by importing countries to verify the eligibility of a shipment, i.e. to demonstrate that the
product in question is indeed Cambodian, and not Thai or Vietnamese. Procedures for dealing with
verification need to be developed.
The SPS and TBT requirements of importing countries also pose a potential impediment to successful
export of agricultural products. This issue is being addressed successfully in the case of cassava exports to
China. That experience should guide efforts to address SPS issues in other markets and for other products.
The need is for ad hoc measures targeted at specific markets and products that can be successful even if
the fuller institutional requirements of an SPS regime are not yet in place. Chapter 4 focuses on a number
of those needs.
As regards established manufactured export products, significant opportunities for enhancing the gains
from trade exist for both garments and bicycles. In both cases, present production consists of the assembly
of finished product using imported inputs. However, for both garments and bicycles the scale of
production has now reached a point at which it starts becoming viable to begin producing in Cambodia
some of the inputs used in assembling the finished product.
Fabric production has begun in Cambodia, albeit on a relatively small scale. Given the size of Cambodias
present garment production, fabric production is surprisingly small. Given the scale required of most
fabric production, direct export would in many cases need to accompany production for use by the
domestic garment industry.
Several producers of bicycle parts have carried out initial assessments of investment in Cambodiaand it
appears likely that some parts production will begin in Cambodia in the near future. Again, parts
producers may need to engage in direct export, as well as supplying the domestic industry. On both
counts, it is essential that the parts manufacturers meet the origin criteria of the EU and the U.S., the
biggest bicycle markets. This will allow them duty free access to those markets when they export directly
and will allow the parts to be counted as Cambodian for rules of origin purposes when they are used in the
production of Cambodian bicycles. Chapter 5, as well as several of the product chapters in this study,
reviews some issues relating to the development of clusters of domestic part and component suppliers to
some of those bigger export sectors.
Promoting New Export Products
It has been widely noted that recent investment decisions indicate a trend toward the diversification of
manufacturing away from garments and footwear toward activities requiring higher skill levels and
paying higher wages. This process began several years ago with the sharp increase in bicycle production
for export and the assembling in Cambodia of motorbikes and in the beginning of assembling of motor

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vehicles for sale in the domestic market.More recent investment decisions have included the production
of intermediate products that will be exported for use elsewhere in the production of a final consumer
product. These include wiring harnesses for use in automobile assembly, touch screens, and vibrator
motors for cell phones, and, shortly, ignition components for motorbikes and automobiles.
The evolution toward a more diversified and sophisticated manufacturing sector is an important step in
the development of Cambodias industrial sector. It is significant that this evolution includes import
substitution as well as production for export. But opportunities for successful import substitution are
limited, and the way forward undoubtedly lies in efforts to integrate Cambodia into the production
networks of transnational corporations.
In considering how this might happen, several considerations need to be borne in mind. When viewed
from the standpoint of a transnational company, Cambodia is a small economy with a limited work force.
The production of a transnational company is typically on such a scale that Cambodia could usually not
be the sole or even main supplier of an intermediate input. This role would have to be shared with other
supplying countries. The question is whether the economies of scale in producing the input would allow
Cambodia to be competitive at the scale of production that is consistent with its size. Production of the
input would also need to involve levels of technical skill that are consistent with what the Cambodian
work force knows or can be taught at this stage of its development.
Integration into the production of a transnational corporation also requires first-class logistics, and the
ability to deliver inputs on time. Here, the role of SEZs on the border with Thailand and Vietnam is
critical, since their location allows producers in the zones to quickly plug into the logistics infrastructure
of those two countries. This issue is reviewed at greater length in the chapter focusing on manufacturing
assembly in SEZ.
The key issue, however, is the quality of the work force. At present, manufacturers are obliged to provide
training in technical production skills such as welding. This is not a viable basis for the rapid expansion of
manufacturing. This issue is taken up in much greater detail in the chapter focusing on addressing the
skill gap in exportsectors.
Possible actions intended to support Cambodias continued progress towards trade development and
diversification are identified in the Trade SWAP Roadmap 2014-2018 under Outcome #1.

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Box 1.1: ASEAN and Growing Regional Integration


With a trade sector very much focused on exporting garments and tourism services to Northern markets,
ASEAN and regional integration based on agreements with ASEAN Dialogue Partners had a limited
impact on Cambodias export economy until recently. This is changing however. Several developments
explain this change.
First, as explained in this chapter and elsewhere in this report, Cambodia manufacturing sector is
beginning to integrate into selected regional production networks. This is the case particularly in
footwear and bicycles, but also in evidence at an early stage in electronics and electrical components.
Besides advantageous labor costs and, in cases, favorable logistics, foreign investors are focusing on
relocating parts of their production process to Cambodia where they can benefit from tariff and non-tariff
(especially ROO) advantages under AFTA or preferential market access schemes such as those offered by
EU, Canada, Japan, or even China. The very fast growth of bicycle assembly in Cambodia, based on
parts imported from elsewhere within the region, destined to the EU is a case in point.
Second, the rapid growth in agricultural commodity production is opening a new window for both
informal and recorded exports to new markets, including markets within the region (e.g. milled rice to
Malaysia and possibly Indonesia and the Philippines, Cassava to China, etc.)
Third, even in tourism, the Cambodian market has been shifting somewhat away from visitors from
developed economies towards emerging markets from Asia and ASEAN.
Together, these and other developments point to the growing importance of regional integration for future
growth of Cambodian exports in the near and medium term.
Box 1.2: Changes since 2007 and Ongoing Legal and Regulatory Reforms
Cambodia Trade Integration Strategy 2007 stressed the need for Cambodia to diversify its export base.
Nineteen sectors were identified as export potentials, including not only established sectors such as
garment and tourism, but emerging ones such as footwear, various agricultural commodities, or even light
manufacturing. While garment exports and tourism have experienced robust growth since 2007, their
relative importance as a share of total exports (recorded and informal) has declined from 82 percent down
to 71 percent between 2007 and 2011 as a more diversify export basket has begun to emerge. Likewise,
export destinations have become more diversified. For goods alone (recorded or informal) the share of
the US market has declined from 55 percent to 35 percent, while exports to the EU market grew from 20
to 26 percent and to ASEAN from 17 to 21 percent. The share of the Canadian and Chinese markets has
been growing also. In sum, Cambodia is on a path towards diversification in term of both its export
basket and the destination of its exports. All evidence points to a further deepening of such
diversification provided it remains competitive.Cambodia Trade Integration Strategy 2014-2018 focuses
primarily on ten of the 19 sectors identified back in 2007 as there is evidence that further progress can be
achieved in the coming five years in those ten sectors in particular.
To expand and diversify its export base, Cambodia needs to enhance the competitiveness of its business
environment so as to attract new investment and grow new businesses and jobs. Cambodia Trade
Integration Strategy 2007 took note of the ambitious legal reform agenda adopted by the Cambodian
Government in 2004, in part as a result of obligations undertaken under its accession to the WTO but also
of its own as a means to improve its business environment. The 2004 Work Program of the RGC
identified 73 legal reforms, 46 of which had been completed as of its Trade Policy Review held in Geneva

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in November 2011. More remains to be done and the RGC has adopted a follow-up 2012-2015 Work
Program to continue pushing forward. Nevertheless, the list of 46 reforms already completed includes a
very significant number of key reformsthat have had a positive impact on export and business expansion.
Many of the reforms identified in the 2012-2015 include addressing a number of non-tariff measures that
may hinder Cambodias competitiveness (see Chapters 2, 3, and 4 for a fuller discussion of NTM issues
pertinent to trade facilitation, trade logistics, SPS and Technical Standards.) In addition, in early 2013
ASEAN Economic Ministers endorsed the "Non-Tariff Measures Work-Program (National & Regional)"
aimed at streamlining Non-Tariff Measures (NTMs) in order to boost intra-ASEAN trade. The work
program includes actions to classify, notify, and streamline NTMs. Cambodia has taken steps to start
implementing the national component of the Work Program, including draftingan Anukret (SubDecree)under MEFs leadership to set up a NTM Inter-Ministerial Committee mandated to classify,
review, and streamline NTMs. The draft Anukret has been reviewedthrough initialinter-ministerial
consultation. The draft should be submitted to the Council of Ministers soon for further review before it
is submitted to the Cabinet and Prime Minister for adoption. By implementing the NTM work program,
Cambodia is expected to improve its business environment and become more competitive.

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52 Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

Chapter 2
TRADE FACILITATION
Developments since 2004 and Current Issues
The Royal Government of Cambodia (RGC) has made significant progress in improving the countrys
trade facilitation performance in recent years. With significant technical support from the development
community, key border management institutions, particularly the General Directorate of Customs and
Excise (GDCE), have strengthened their capacity and made progress on implementing a number of
international standards and good practices. Other government agencies associated with trade have also
made progress and, collectively, contributed to Cambodias ranking as the worlds 8th most impressive
reformer in the World Banks Trading across Borders indicators.
During its 2012 ASEAN Chairmanship, the RGC acknowledged the need to review progress and upgrade
the Twelve-Point Action Plan to both maintain and further support reform momentum and accelerate
Cambodias integration within the ASEAN Economic Community (AEC.) Many AEC requirements
include improvementsin trade facilitation procedures and are seen as key steps in the process of
increasing intra-regional trade.
The 2004 Twelve-Point Action Plan
In 2004, the RGC recognized the need to take strong action to improve its business climate and national
competitiveness, based in part onthe findings from the 2004 Investment Climate Assessment (ICA.)17As a
result, the Prime Minister established a Special Inter-ministerial Task Force (SITF) for Investment
Climate Improvement and Trade Facilitation and committed Cambodia to the implementation of a
Twelve-Point Action Plan to Improve Cambodias trade facilitation performance and investment
climate.18 The Twelve-Point Action Plan was consistent with contemporary good practice and
incorporated many of Cambodias international and regional commitments.
Following establishment of the 2004 SITF under the leadership of the Senior Minister of Commerce
(MoC), a Reform Team for Trade Facilitation and Investment Climate was created in July 1, 2004.19 The
GDCE was appointed as Lead Border Management Agency although the Ministry of Commerce retains
the policy mandate for WTO matters including the current Trade Facilitation negotiations proceeding as
part of the Doha Development Agenda. In this regard both the MoC and the GDCE coordinate on
technical and policy matters pertaining to the WTO Trade Facilitation agenda. Key agencies involved in
trade facilitation include: GDCE, MoC (CamControl and selected departments under the General
Directorate for International Trade), MAFF, MIH, andMoH.
17

World Bank, Investment Climate Assessment: Cambodia, Phnom Penh: World Bank,2004
Decision # 12-SSR/2004, March 22, 2004.
19
Council for the Development of Cambodia, Prakas No1733/04.
18

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Given the significant number of government agencies involved in processing cross border trade, the RGC
formulated a strategy to better align the risk-management approach to ensure all key agencies employed a
risk-based approach to inspections and testing. This process was managed by the GDCE and involved
consolidating all agency profiles in the selectivity module included in the ASYCUDA system.
Ultimately, the results have been impressive with inspection rates falling from nearly 100 percent to less
than 20 percent by the end of 2012. The Risk Management and Audit Office in the General Department
of Customs and Excise was created and staffed. A sub-decree establishing a list of goods thatare
prohibited or require licensing or other clearances and permissions was issued in December 2007.20Risk
selectivity criteria were developed and a profiling of traders was created.
Trade agencies agreed to develop a single administrative document (SAD) to streamline documentation
requirements at the border. The number of steps in the procedure and processing of applications for a
certificate of origin and an export licence at MoC was reduced from 11 to 8 steps.
In summary, the main results achieved to date include the following:

Development and implementation of a risk management strategy in Customs;21


Introduction of Customs Automation (ASYCUDA) already deployed at all major border sites and
is being rolled out to all remaining border points;
Introduction of single-stop inspection at the border;
Establishment of the National Single Window Steering Committee (May 2008);
Partial implementation of WCO SAFE Framework Action Plan;
Initial simplification of transit operation (bilateral agreements with neighboring countries);
Development of Action Plan for Accession to the Revised Kyoto Convention; and,
Preparatory steps to implement the draft WTO Trade Facilitation Agreement that will require
implementing several actions to achieve full compliance.

These reforms have resulted in improvements in the main trade facilitation indicators monitored by
international organizations, reflecting an overall consolidation of Cambodia as an attractive investment
destination and as a strong trading partner.However, additional efforts will be required to ensure not only
full compliance with obligations originating from the ASEAN Trade Facilitation Work Program but also
to continue strengthening of Cambodias competitiveness in this critical area.

20

Anukret 209, December 2007


Anukret 21 and associated regulations (Prakas); Anukret 209.

21

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Establish a system of Transparent


Performance Measurement including
private sector monitoring.

Review the trade facilitation process to


remove overlaps and unnecessary
approvals. The process will include the
review and rationalization of import /
export documentation and the adoption of
a single form for declaring
imports/exports to be used by all
regulatory agencies.

2.

3.

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Introduce an overall risk management


strategy to consolidate and rationalize all
examination requirements of the different
control agencies.

Establish a cross-agency Trade


Facilitation / Investment Climate Reform
Team.

1.

4.

Agreed Actions
June 2004

1. Conduct training in risk management and intelligence for


Customs, Camcontrol and other relevant government officials.
Training requires specialist skills not available within Cambodian
government. AusAid indicated willingness to fund such activities
through CATAF pending request from government.
2. Design and implement a risk management strategy.

1. Commence dialogue with relevant private sector organizations.


2. Develop performance indicators and measurement
methodologies.
3. WB to fund conduct of Time Release Methodology for base line
data collection and periodic monitoring.
1. Undertake review and evaluation of current processes and
documentation. Review should be conducted with external
/independent assistance.
TOR for review and consultancy support required. EC indicated
preparedness to provide TA pending governmental request.
2. Implement single declaration form for all import / export
requirements.
3. Review and amend legal framework if required.
4. Initiate process to identify long term IT requirements to further
streamline procedures and facilitate the adoption of best practice
approaches.

1. Team established.
2. Further work required on formalizing working arrangements,
communication protocols and detailed TORs.

Proposed Activities
June 2004

1. A Survey conducted in February 2005 identified 45 documents


required for exports.
2 and 3. Single Administrative Document (SAD) introduced +
unnecessary documents eliminated to replace 45 documents. RiskBased Inspection Strategy for Trade Facilitation adopted in March
2006 under Anukret 21. Electronic SAD piloted in 2008.
4. ASYCUDA introduced in 5 customs inspection points including
Phnom Penh Intl Airport, three dry ports in Phnom Penh, and
Sihanoukville Port with initial assistance from UNCTAD
technical team (completed 2009). ASYCUDA has been running
without technical assistance for more than one year. Survey of IT
needs conducted in remaining 17 border points in 2010 by
Customs. ASYCUDA to be rolled out in remaining locations
during 2011 and early 2012. New ASYCUDA modules to be
introduced, including module allowing brokers to enter data
directly online and module on transit trade.
1. Risk Management was developed following Anukret 21 on Risk
Management (March 2006).
2. Risk Management has been introduced in 5 border inspection
points where ASYCUDA has been introduced: Phnom Penh Intl
Airport, three dry ports in Phnom Penh, Sihanoukville Port. (PHN
MSE-KPM Dryport is the fifth one to implement ASYCUDA
effective August 2010). On average, full inspection (red
channel) in the five locations has been reduced to 20 percent of
imported containers and 13 percent of exported containers.
Implementation has been assisted by the reduction in the number
of restricted goods from an original list of approximately 5000
goods down to 1537 (Anukret adopted 2007)

1. SITF team was established in 2004 (includes GDCE, MEF,


MoC, MAFF, MLSW, MoI, CDC, Port Authority of
Sihanoukville).
2. Meetings have been infrequent.
1. A cell has been established in Customs for regular meetings
with private sector to review/discuss ongoing issues and updates.
2 and 3. 2005 Time Release Study and 2010 Trade Process
Mapping prepared with WB funding.

Implemented Activities and Status


February 2011

Box 2.1: The 2004 Twelve-Point Action Plan - Completed Reforms in Trade Facilitation

56 Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

Design and pilot a single window


process for managing trade facilitation in
the port of Sihanoukville.
Introduce automation (See activities
under point 3 above)

Introduce a WTO-compatible flat fee for


service to rationalize the various fees
currently collected.

Streamline the process and reduce the


cost of incorporating with the
Commercial Register.

Streamline the process for notification of


the Ministry of Labor to start hiring
employees.

6.

7.

8.

9.

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Undertake a strategic review of the role


and mandate of Camcontrol to ensure it
most productively deploys its unique
expertise on quality control.

5.

Time limitations prevented detailed consideration by Reform Team.

1. Conduct training for border management agencies.


2. Establish appropriate physical infrastructure and facilities to
allow single window to operate
3. Review and amend legal framework to remove any obstacles to
adoption of single window.
4. Design and pilot single window approach in the port of
Sihanoukville.
1. Review all current fees to determine compatibility with WTO
provisions.
2. Design and implement new fee system and structure.
3. Design and implement website listing fees and relevant
information.
1. Conduct training for relevant officials.
2. Reduce registration fees
3. Decentralize the registration process
4. Decrease capital requirement to minimal possible
5. Introduce electronic registration system.

1. Conduct comprehensive review of the role, operations and


mandate of Camcontrol. To ensure independence the review should
be conducted by external specialists. Terms of reference need to be
prepared.
2. Government to examine recommendations and make decisions.
3. Reorganization and cross training for affected officials.
4. Evaluation and monitoring of results.

1. Current IT plans for MoC includes computerization of


Commercial Registration and COs with TFCP and TDSP funding
support. MoC is keen on progress and Senior Management has
endorsed plans.
2. Minimum capital for commercial registration has been reduced
from $5,000 down to $1,000. Cost of registration reduced from
$630 to $105 in 2007. Registration time also reduced.
3. COs now issued in SEZs. Discussions underway on possible
issuance of COs in key provinces (e.g. Battambang, Siem Reap) to
assist with expansion of exports of milled rice (COs now issued in
Phnom Penh)
Some simplification of process in SEZs. Unchanged elsewhere.

1. A Camcontrol Strategic Risk Management Plan was developed


with assistance of an international consultant and adopted by MoC
in 2010. A Camcontrol Risk Management Unit (RMU) was
created in September 2010
2. A project proposal for capacity development of Camcontrol
RMU has been prepared and approved for funding by TDSP.
3. An Inter-Ministerial Prakas on the Implementation and
Institutional Arrangement for Food Safety Based on the Farm-toTable Approach has been adopted in October 2010. Prakas
clarifies SPS role of various agencies at the border.
1. ASYCUDA will be a key building block of Single Window. A
Single Window Committee has been established
2. More time needed for GDCE and other line Agencies to review
how best to design a Single Window for Cambodia. Using
international standards and protocols. Implementation will follow
ASEAN Single Window schedule. Laos, VN, Myanmar,
Cambodia have until 2012 to introduce but ASEAN-6 are late.
1. Estimates of the recurring costs of automated customs
operations have been developed. Analysis of recurring costs for
other Agencies is needed as well. More time needed.

Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

57

Monitoring and reporting.

12.

1. Establish Assessment Committee


2. Conduct seminars and workshops
3.Implement and monitor
(Note: Activities associated with this initiative are currently being
undertaken by Ministry of Commerce).
Time limitations prevented detailed consideration by Reform Team.
1. Some form of reporting and monitoring in context of bi-annual
G-PSF
2. Customs uses five-year strategic plans to guide its progress
going forward.

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Red lane: physical inspection. Yellow lane: documentary check prior to clearance. Green lane: straight forward, immediate clearance once duties and
fees are paid. Blue lane: post clearance audit.

Source:
Source:GDCE, Asycuda World Single Administrative Document Status (2010-2012)

Box
Box 2.2:
2.2: Import/Export
Import/Export Inspection
Inspection Rates,
Rates, 2010-12
2010-12

Source:Ministry of Commerce, Trade Sector Development and Aid for Trade in Cambodia, Phnom Penh: July 2011, pp 32-33

Implement a national award to promote


good corporate citizenship and
governance in the private sector.

11.

Current Trade Facilitation Environment


The November 2011 WTO Trade Policy Reviewpointed out that Cambodia has made good progress in
reforming its customs regime and streamliningits customs operations for more efficient trade facilitation.
The 2007 Customs Law prepared the way for the adoption of several regulations including those intended
to fulfil commitments to ASEAN, move to the Common Effective Preferential Tariff (CEPT) scheme,
adhere to the 1999 Revised Kyoto Convention, and implement the WTO Agreement on Customs
Valuation. In 2010 Cambodia notified the WTO that it no longer had any laws or regulations on PSI.As
of January 2011, all imports complied with WTO valuation methods.
According to Doing Businessindicators, Cambodia has achieved tremendous progress in improving trade
facilitation. As noted earlier and as shown in Figure 2.1, in the past seven years, the number of
documents to export has been slashed by half, with a similar reduction in time to export.
Figure 2.1:
2.1: Number
Number of
Figure
of Documents/Time
Documents/Timeto
toImport/Export
Import/Export
60
50
40

Documents to
export (number)

30

Time to export
(days)

20

Documents to
import (number)

10

Time to import
(days)

0
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013

Source:World Bank and IFC, Doing Business2013, Washington, D.C.: 2013


Source:
However, as shown in Figures 2.2 and 2.3, there remains significant potential for further reduction in the
number of documents and time to import/export. On both indicators, Cambodia ranks above regional
average. Vietnam, Bangladesh, and Sri Lanka, some of Cambodias most direct competitors in garments,
rank better in terms of number of documents. Compared with the same group of competitors, Cambodia
ranks better only than Bangladesh on time to import/export.

58 Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

Figure
to Import/Export.
Import/Export. Cambodia
Cambodia vs.
vs. Other
Other Asian
Asian Countries,
Countries, 2013
2013
Figure 2.2:
2.2: Documents
Documents to
12
10
8
6
4
2
0

Documents to export (number)

Documents to import (number)

Source:Doing Business 2013


Source:

Figure
vs. Other
Other Asian
Asian Countries,
Countries, 2013
2013
Figure 2.3:Time
2.3:Time to
to Import/Export.Cambodia
Import/Export.Cambodia vs.
45
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0

Time to export (days)

Time to import (days)

Source:
Source:Doing Business 2013
Figure 2.4 shows that the costs to import and to export a container have increased slightly in recent years.
Transport costs from a factory (in Phnom Penh) to Sihanoukville Port are included in the figures shown in
Figure 2.4 and they appear to be an area where improvements can be made. ADB calculates that logistics

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59

cost were $0.20 per ton-Km (more on this in Chapter 3.)22Compared with other countries in ASEAN,
Cambodia does better than Laos PDR (and probably Myanmar, not included the Doing Business survey),
but import/export costs are lower in all of the more developed ASEAN Member States (Figure 2.5.)

Figure
Import/Export ($
($ per
per container)
container)
Figure 2.4:
2.4: Cost
Cost of
of Import/Export
1000
900
800
700
600
500
400
300
200
100
0
2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

Cost to export (US$ per container)


Cost to import (US$ per container)

Source:Doing Business 2013


Source:

Figure
Cost to
to Export/Import.Cambodia
Export/Import.Cambodia vs.
vs. Other
Other Asian
Asian Countries,
Countries, 2013
2013
Figure 2.5:
2.5: Cost
2,500
2,000
1,500
1,000
500
0

Cost to export (US$ per container)


Cost to import (US$ per container)

Source:Doing Business 2013


Source:

22

Asian Development Bank, Trade and Trade Facilitation in the GMS Sub-Region 201,Manila: ADB, 2012.

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60 Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

With appropriate actions and reform, within the next five years, Cambodia could reasonably lower its
export costs per container to 120 percent of the ASEAN-6 average ($552/container) and reduce time
necessary to export a container to the ASEAN average of 16 days.
Improvements in trade facilitation performance is due largely to the customs modernization plan
implemented since 2004 which culminated in the automation of customs procedures through the
introduction of ASYCUDA at all main traffic border points. Remaining, smaller border points are to be
automated by the end of 2013. Despite the significant gains achieved, inefficiencies remain. For
instance, customs declarations can be submitted electronically for imports but hardcopies must be
submitted together with supporting documents. Moreover, a survey of traders carried out in 2012
indicated that,all too often, clearance is delayed because customs officials are unavailable for
processing.23Further delays are caused by the time needed to obtain import licenses and permits and by
the percentage of cargos still requiring physical inspection. That percentage remains high despite the
introduction of a risk-assessment and -management process.
As reported in theTransport and Trade Facilitation Assessment-2012, the major source of delay for
exports is issuance of the certificate of origin, which is issued only after shipment and can require 5-10
days.24This delays the transfer of documents to the buyer and payments to the exporter. The cost for
reapplying for a CO is also high, about $280.
The information for clearing imported cargo is entered into the system at the customs office by the
customs officer or the broker. Delays in the clearing process are caused primarily by missing supporting
documents or errors in evaluation. Imports are cleared either at the point of entry, either an ICD or an
inland customs facility. The fees charged for clearing cargo vary with some brokers charging by
declaration and others by the quantity of goods cleared. There are significant differences in the fees
charged. Large international firms have significantly higher fees than their competitors; however, the
absolute amount of informal fees seems to be the same for all firms.
The Transport and Trade Facilitation Assessment-2012 further indicates that the time to obtain an import
license or a certificate of origin varies depending on the issuing agency, the firm, and the commodity
(manufactured or agricultural products). For example, a large international forwarder is able to obtain
these documents within one day for manufactured products, but it can take up to ten days for smaller
firms. For agricultural exports it takes three and a half days. The time to clear exports depends on the
gateway. The fastest clearance time is two to six hours at the airports. At the land borders, cargo is
cleared in two to twelve hours. At seaports the time is half a day to two days while at ICDs it is between
half a day and one day. According to the firms interviewed, it often is not clear what the exact document
requirements are or what the rates for duties and taxes will be. Furthermore, there is a problem with
discretionary behavior of officials, informal payments, and inconsistent enforcement of laws and
regulations.

23

World Bank, Cambodia Transport and Trade Facilitation Assessment-2012, Phnom Penh: World Bank, 2012
World Bank, Ibid.

24

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Current Issues
Cross Cutting Issues: From consultation with national stakeholders and based on findings from recent
analytical work together with stakeholders consultation, it is possible to identify a number of remaining
issues that will need attention in the coming years to strengthen further Cambodias competiveness.25
These include:
1. Simplification of import, export, transit procedures and processes to decrease further clearance
costs and time
2. Full automation of border procedures covering all border agencies (National Single Window),
including automation of Certificates of Origin and Sanitary and Phytosanitary Certificates. On
November 26, 2013, the Senior Minister, Minister of Commerce, announced a series of measures
intended to achieve significant automation of COs by late 2014.26
3. Improvement in risk-assessment and -management procedures and processes by GDCE and other
relevant agencies, including by setting up a system of Authorized Economic Operators
4. Implementation of official fees established under the Prakas issued in December 2012 and
elimination of unofficial payments
5. Establishment of service level agreements to improve predictability of clearance time
6. Improvement in Customs Valuation
7. Increased transparency of customs tariffs and other trade regulations by making them available
on-line and free of charge (National Trade Repository)
8. Development of a mechanism to resolve custom related issues between GDCE and the private
sector
9. Improvement of cross-border procedures and processes to support full integration in the ASEAN
Economic Community and benefit from linking to regional production networks and supply
chains
10. Elimination of checkpoints, and related informal payments, along the main trade corridors
Current Issues for Main Export Products: Some issues for three of Cambodias priority exports are as
follows:
Milled Rice:There are no significant problems with documentation for the exports although
completing required testing can be an impediment. The times for acquiring the necessary export
documentation are:
Certificate of Origin about three days
Phytosanitary certificate - seven days
Fumigation certificate - one day
Quantity certificate - four days
Chemical testingseven to twelve days

25
World Bank, Cambodia Transport and Trade Facilitation Assessment-2012 and Cambodia Trade Corridor Performance
Assessment-2012, Phnom Penh: World Bank, 2012; Asian Development Bank, Trade and Trade Facilitation in the GMS SubRegion 2012, Manila: Asian Development Bank, 2012
26
H.E. Sun Chanthol, Sr. Minister, Minister of Commerce, Improving Business Environment in Cambodia, Phnom Penh:
November 26, 2013

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Garments:Difficulties with submission of various shipping documents and with clearing the cargoes
are among the concerns mentioned by factory managers.27Factories reported, among others, the following
issues:
Customs declarations can be submitted electronically for imports but hard copies must be
submitted together with supporting documents
The application for import permits should take only one day but, in practice, can require three to
four days
Delays with issuance of the certificate of origin (CO), which can only be issued after shipment
and can require five to ten days
Footwear: The trade documents that present the greatest problem are import permits and technical
certificates that normally require three to five days to obtain instead of one day. The headquarters
arranges the shipment of exports, which are shipped on a weekly basis. The principal document required
for the exports is the certificate of origin, which requires three to five days to obtain and is usually issued
post shipment.

Box 2.3: Trade Facilitation from a WTO Perspective


As indicated in the November 2011Trade Policy Review, while Cambodia has put in place most of the key
regulations to implement its Customs Law, several Prakas have yet to be issued:
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.

Prakas on Setting of Interest Rates on Debts


Prakas on Procedures for Temporary Seizure of Goods, Conveyances, Documents and Other Items
Inter-Ministerial Prakas on Seizure (offence) Report
Prakas on Appeal Procedures
Prakas on Exemption for Travellers, Crews, and Border Crossers
Anukret on Authorization for customs officers to carry out duties outside the customs territory and granting
of permission for foreign customs officers to carry out duties in the customs territory.

The Transaction Value Management Unit, responsible for overseeing TV implementation, and the Customs-Private
Sector Partnership Mechanism (CPPM), to coordinate and improve mutual understanding between Customs and the
private sector, have been established. Additional capacity building is needed in the two bodies.
Cambodia needs to develop legal text on Rules of Origin to ensure compliance with the WTO Agreement on Rules
of Origin.

Box 2.4: Trade Facilitation from an ASEAN Perspective


Improvements in regional infrastructure have led to increased connectivity and deeper integration between ASEAN
Members over the past decade. ASEAN has identified Twelve Priority Integration Sectors to serve as catalysts for
further regional economic integration. To establish the ASEAN Economic Community by 2015, a comprehensive
agenda of reform has to be implemented both at regional and national level. Among other issues, ASEAN Member
States have decided to improve transparency of trade by establishing an ASEAN Trade Repository (ATR) that
should provide information on tariff nomenclature and preferential tariffs; Rules of Origin; non-tariff measures;
national trade and customs laws and rules; documentary requirements; and lists of authorized traders of Member
27

World Bank, Cambodia Transport and Trade Facilitation Assessment-2012, Phnom Penh: World Bank, 2012.

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States. The ASEAN Single Window (ASW) is also being developed with the objective of providing an integrated
partnership platform among government agencies and end-users. In the area of Rules of Origin, reforms have been
carried out to facilitate regional trade and a pilot Self-Certification Scheme is being implemented in several Member
States for the benefit of certified economic operators which have demonstrated their capacity to understand and
comply with existing rules.
Chapter 5 of ATIGA covers Trade Facilitation:
1) Art. 45 of ATIGA indicates that Member States shall implement a comprehensive ASEAN Trade Facilitation
Work Program, as an integral part of ATIGA. The Work Program is very comprehensive and covers actions to be
taken by Cambodia in: Customs; Trade Procedures; Standards and Conformance; Sanitary and Phytosanitary
Measures; and ASEAN Single Window.
2) Art. 49 of ATIGA says that Member States should establish a National Single Window in accordance with the
Provisions of the Agreement to Establish and Implement the ASEAN Single Window and the Protocol to Establish
and Implement the ASEAN Single Window.
3) Art. 47 of ATIGA lists the ASEAN guiding principles on trade facilitation, namely: transparency;
communications and consultation; simplification, practicability and efficiency; non-discrimination; consistency and
predictability; harmonization, standardization and recognition; modernization and use of new technology; due
process and co-operation.
Chapter 6 of ATIGA fixes a comprehensive list of obligations for Member States. Commitments in this area are
related to: Pre-Arrival Documentation (Article 55), Risk Management (Article 56); Customs Valuation (Article 57);
Application of Information Technology (Article 58); Authorized Economic Operators (Art. 59); Repayment,
Drawback and Security (art. 60); Post Clearance Audit (Art. 61); Advance Ruling (Art. 62); Temporary Admission
(Art. 63); Customs Co-operation (Art. 64); Transparency (Art. 65); Enquiry Points (Art. 66); Consultation (Art. 67);
Confidentiality (Art. 68); Review and Appeal (Art. 69). These obligations are complemented by those described in
the Strategic Plan for Customs Development (SPCD) 2011-2015 and the ASEAN Customs Agreement, signed in
2012.

Additional Trade Facilitation Reforms


At present, GDCE is implementing its "Strategy and Work Plan on Reform and Modernization of the
General Department of Customs and Excise Department Strategic Objectives: 2009-2013." Several
reforms are listed in the plan including in the following areas: increasing taxpayer awareness; developing
an anti-smuggling policy; introducing an automated customs clearance system; developing and
implementing the Cambodia National Single Window; introducing risk-management and post-clearance
audit; implementing the WCO SAFE Framework of Standards; acceding to the revised Kyoto
Convention (Cambodia signed a letter of intent but has yet to become a contracting party); and,
strengthening Cambodia's enforcement capacity to combat illegal trade in arms and narcotics. Trade
Facilitation reforms and actions under the updated Trade SWAP Roadmap, 2014-2018will need to be
consistent with the Customs Modernization Plan, but also cover reforms needed in all other border
agencies, beyond customs, that play a role in facilitating trade.It should be noted that targets shown in the
Trade SWAP Roadmap, 2014-2018are achievable if sufficient financial and Technical Assistance
resources are deployed.

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Compliance with Obligations of the ASEAN Economic Community


Cambodia has taken on several commitments to ensure its full integration into the ASEAN Economic
Community.In the next three years, the RGC is expected to implement several reforms, including the
following:
1. Develop and implement a National Single Window and connect the National Single Window
gradually to the ASEAN Single Window.
2. Establish a process to recognize Authorized Operators (art. 56 ATIGA).
3. Ensure compliance with Art. 62 of ATIGA on Advance Rulings. Existing informal procedures for
providing advanced rulings on tariff classifications and origin could be codified into formal
processes and operating procedures. A database could be developed to share information with all
customs posts.
4. Ensure compliance with Art. 61 of ATIGA on Post Clearance Audit. Expand current Post
Clearance Audit function to include audits at company premises.
5. Ensure compliance with Art. 57 of ATIGA on Customs Valuation. Further decentralize current
practices.
6. Implement the new HS Classification (AHTN 2012: 9563 TL.)
7. Improve FTAs preferences utilization by joining the second ASEAN pilot program on selfcertification of origin.
8. Establish the legal framework to establish and maintain the National Trade Repository (NTR),
which will have to be linked to the ASEAN Trade Repository.
Compliance with WTO Commitments28
In addition to the measures necessary to address outstanding commitments (Box 2.3 above), the RGC
needs to review carefully the WTO Agreement on Trade Facilitation adopted in December 2013 as part of
the Bali Package.29Cambodia largely complies with several of the provisions that were already included
in an earlier draft of the Agreement. Notwithstanding progress achieved so far, Cambodia might consider
adopting early measures to achieve progress in the following areas:
1. Publication.All relevant laws, regulations, procedures, fee schedules, rules, restrictions and
prohibitions, penalty provisions, appeal procedures, and administrative procedures are formally
published when implemented as required by Cambodian law. However, with the exception of the
GDCE, which publishes a comprehensive volume Customs Law and Regulation and conducts
formal training programs for the trading community and customs brokers, other border agencies
publish only via the Gazette or official journals but references are scattered and not easily

28

Reforms listed in this paragraph include also good practices.


WTO Ministerial Conference held in Bali in December 2013. The agreement covers some of the following issues: Publication
and Availability of Information, Prior Publication and Consultation, Advance Rulings, Appeal (Review) Procedures, Disciplines
on Fees and Charges, Release and Clearance of Goods, Consularization, Border Agency Cooperation, Declaration of
Transshipped or in Transit Goods (Domestic Transit), Formalities Connected with Importation and Exportation, Freedom of
Transit, Customs Cooperation, Mechanism for Trade Facilitation and Compliance, Institutional Arrangements, National
Committee on Trade Facilitation.
29

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accessible to traders. Preliminary steps are being taken to set up a Trade Repository (following
also ASEAN commitments.)
2. Enquiries. The GDCE maintains a formal Public Relations Unit responsible for answering
general enquires from the public and traders. Access to advice is provided via telephone, face-toface contact, or e-mail. A similar service is provided at major Customs Houses throughout the
country. The service is publicized via the GDCE website. More detailed technical answers are
provided by relevant technical areas when they cannot be addressed by the Public relations Unit.
The consistency of general enquiry servicesprovided by other border management agencies
varies. Typically enquiries are addressed via visits to relevant officers or by telephone. These
services are not formalized, however, as is the case with services provided by the GDCE.
Consideration could be given to establishing one point of contact for all trade related information
perhaps via a single Information Point. As lead border management agency, it would be logical
for GDCE to coordinate and oversee the development of one or a series of Information Contact
Points including all key agencies involved in the regulation of import/export and transit activities.
An appropriate coordination and governance mechanism would need to be established and
commitment from all relevant agencies secured. Standard operating procedures as well as an
initial clearing house for enquiries would need to be established and staffed with knowledgeable
officials. Agreed contact points would need to be designated in each agency and appropriate
details publicized.
3. Opportunity for Comments on New and Amended Rules.In practice, whenever possible an
opportunity is provided via various consultative fora for any significant changes to be discussed
with affected parties however this is not codified in law. The process for publicizing any
amendments or changes contemplated and for formal consultations with affected stakeholders
should be formalized.
4. Consultations.In 2010, GDCE established a Customs Private Sector Partnership mechanism
which consists of a Management Board and three specific technical committees. It meets at least
twice yearly and is attended by the representatives of all relevant private sector organizations and
interests. The purpose is stated as building trust and mutual understanding between customs and
the private sector; promoting fiscal morality in trade facilitation in order to enhance compliance;
and, ensuring all customs related issues are shared and resolved before they are brought to the
Government Private Sector Forum.No similar formal mechanism exists for consultation between
border management agencies and the private sector outside of Customs. Either the CustomsPrivate Sector Partnership could be expanded to include other agencies or one or more similar
consultative mechanisms could be established to address non-Customs border management
matters.
5. Advance Rulings.GDCE used to provide informal advice to traders on matters pertaining to
classification, valuation, origin, preferences etc. At times, thismay have resulted inuneven
treatment of taxpayers and might have beenmisleading since the informal advice was not legally
binding. To resolve this issue, GDCE issued a Prakas on Advance Ruling for Tariff
Classification, Origin, and Customs Valuation in January 2013establishing a legally-binding
Advance Ruling System. The implementing procedure for Advance Ruling for Tariff
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Classification and Customs Valuation was issued by GDCE in April 2013. The implementing
procedure for Advance Ruling for Origin has yet to be issued. No exporter/importer has filed a
case since the implementing procedure for Tariff Classification and Customs Valuation was
approved. Some guidance support geared at the private sector isrequired to ensure that the system
is used in an effective manner. In addition, technical assistance is needed to develop capacity
among customs officials, establish a database, and organize information sharing amongcustoms
offices throughout the country.
6. Fees and Charges.Technical assistance might be required to ensure all border agencies have
introduced a WTO-compliant fee structure to cover adequately the direct border management
costs related to their activities and services, including for the future maintenance of the National
Single Window. GDCEand Camcontrol replaced their ad-valorem fees with fixed fees in 2012,
but other border agencies need to reform their fee structures.
7. Release and Clearance of Goods.GDCE has implemented partially the ASYCUDA World
Declaration processing system. The system provides for the advance lodgment of Customs
declarations prior to arrival of the goods and the Customs Law also provides for pre arrival
submission of declarations. In practice, however, such provisions are only employed on a very
limited basis and typically only for goods destined for the SEZs. To date, however, the
ASYCUDA World Manifest module has not been implemented. This makes automatic
reconciliation of the declaration with the cargo report impossible, thus eliminates any meaningful
benefit from early submission. Likewise, it is currently not possible for the manifest to be entered
electronically in advance of the arrival of the goods.
8. Publication of Average Release Times. GDCE undertook a WCO-supported Time Release
Study (TRS) in 2008 and regularly collects operational statistics on clearance times and other key
parameters including the rate of red, yellow, and green channel declarations and revenue
collection performance (see Box 2.2 above.) The TRS is currently being updated with support
from ADB. A mechanism could be established to collect this information periodically.
9. Authorized Economic Operators.While GDCE employs a relatively sophisticated process for
identifying and analyzing the performance of traders and the compliance risk they pose, there is
no formal AEO scheme currently in place. GDCE intends to introduce such a scheme under its
2009-2013 reform and modernization plan. Technical assistance will be needed to develop an
appropriate legal framework and series of administrative procedures, including opportunities for
regional harmonization and mutual recognition.
10. Expedited Shipments.GDCE offers special facilities and procedures for the air express industry
and strives to assist with the release of air cargo on an expedited basis in line with the WCOs
immediate release guidelines.Presently, however, the capacity does not existfor submission of
manifests by electronic means. Cambodia allows immediate release of documents but does not
apply a de minimis limit under which no formal declaration is required.
11. Reduction/Limitation of Formalities and Documentation Requirements. In many cases
Cambodia agencies require original copies of commercial document that have already been
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submitted to another government agency. In the short term, regulations could be amended to
authorized submission of notarized copies of such documents. Ultimately this problem will be
solved by the implementation of the National Single Window.
12. National Single Window.Under ASEAN, Cambodia committed itself to the implementation of a
National Single Window by 2012. While GDCE is progressing with implementing the
ASYCUDA World system, automation of other key trade processes, including automation of
Certificates of Origin and Sanitary and Phytosanitary Certificates, hasprogressed more slowly.
However, and as noted earlier, on November 26, 2013, the Senior Minister, Minister of
Commerce, announced a series of measures intended to achieve significant automation of COs by
late 2014.In addition, MoC is committed to working with MEF to develop a Trade Information
Repository as required under ATIGA. MAFF is studying how to automate the issuance of PhytoSanitary Certificates. Many other permit issuing authorities are not currently automated and there
is no automated system for sharing information among agencies. GDCE is currently working
with line ministries and agencies to design a functional model for the National Single Window,
whose deployment should start in 2013. A revision of the current structure of the NSW Steering
Committee might be necessary to ensure strong commitment at the highest level of key agencies.
13. National Committee on Trade Facilitation. Cambodia has established several coordination
bodies associated with trade facilitation. In view of theWTO Trade Facilitation Agreement
agreed upon under the December 2013 Bali Package, Cambodia mayneed either to modify the
terms of reference of an existing coordinating body or to establish a new body to oversee
implementation and serve as the focal point for national coordination on Trade Facilitation.
Sucha High-Level Steering and Coordinating Committee might need to be established under the
Deputy Prime Minister to ensure strong inter-ministerial cooperation and oversight of trade
facilitation initiatives.
A Revised Twelve-Point Action Plan for Trade Facilitation and Investment
On December 17-18, 2012, 26 officials from MoC, GDCE, CamControl, CDC, and MAFF, with support
from the World Bank Trade Facilitation Team, participated in a workshop to formulate a possible new
Twelve-Point Action Plan. RGC officials reviewed progress made in implementing the 2004 Action Plan,
recognizing that, despite important achievement in many areas, significant additional changes and reforms
are needed, including in the area of border automation and risk management.
Although cooperation across government agencies has improved considerably, inter-agency coordination
have proved the most difficult to implement.Additional efforts are needed to achieve progress in the
following areas, in particular:
a) Establishment of the National Single Window;
b) Development of a WTO-compatible flat fee;
c) Strengthening the implementation of the Risk Management strategy in non-Customs agencies;
and,
d) Establishment of an Authorized Economic Operators system.

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Participants to the workshop drafted a new Twelve-point Action Plan that encapsulates key reforms in the
area of trade facilitation to be implemented by 2017 and areas where technical assistance from
development partners might be required. The draft Action Plan covers comprehensively the multilateral
and regional commitments described above. It also addresses most of the product-specific bottlenecks
which, if reduced, would boost their competitiveness in the regional and global market. The draft Action
Plan is under further review by Government officials and subject to final endorsement by the relevant
Government committee.
Actions to implement key reforms identified in this chapter are identified under Outcome #2 of the Trade
Swap Roadmap 2013-2015

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70 Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

Chapter 3
TRADE LOGISTICS
Background30
Global and Regional Connectivity Issues
In a shifting global environment, new growth poles are emerging and prospects for regional trade are
increasing. In this context, logistics is a key ingredient for competitiveness. As a region, ASEAN
logistics performance is strong as measured by the World Banks Logistics Performance Index (LPI).
There is great potential for improvement, however, particularly with respect to intra-ASEAN
connectivity. With the AEC becoming reality, the ASEAN Single Market will present opportunities to
increase integration through regional supply networks, but increased connectivity will be fundamental to
take advantage of this opportunity. While hard infrastructure may not be the binding constraint (road-rail
basic connectivity should be significantly improved by 2015), increased attention will needto be placed
on soft infrastructure (regulations, procedures, expertise.)
Regional framework agreements are in place, including the ASEAN Trade in Goods Agreement
(ATIGA)and the Cross border Transport Agreement (CBTA), but implementation on the ground needs to
be strengthened. National Single Windows, Trade Portals or Trade Repositories, and increased
automation of border processes will help improve coordination and simplify interaction between officials
and traders across the region. However, national differences in logistics regulations across ASEAN
complicate the intra-regional movement of goods (e.g. axel load limits in main transport corridors.)
Quality of logistics services is mixed: capacity needs to be developed and professional accreditations
systems put in place.
Cambodian Connectivity Issues
Currently, much trade in the South East Asian region is conducted through large-scale sea shipments
among the major ports of Thailand, Vietnam, Singapore, Malaysia, China and other countries. The low
volume of traffic on overland routes is in part due to theirlimited capacity and quality, as well as the high
costsof road transport in comparison to sea transport routes. In addition, fast-growing middle income
economies are currently constrained in their trade with less-developed countries such as Cambodia that
lack capacity to handle time-sensitive goods at low risk. Trade logistics improvements will be critical to
30

This chapter is based on the findings of the recent Transport and Trade Facilitation Assessment (TTFA) and Transport Corridor
Assessment (TCA) completed by the World Bank in 2012. The TCA looks at the main routes for trucked and shipped goods into
and out of Cambodia and examines them through the lens of trade efficiency and cost. The report looks at transport costs, transit
time, and the impediments to transit along each of the examined corridors. The TTFA is designed as a snapshot of a countrys
trading environment, viewed from the perspective of four key industries. In Cambodia, the industries selected were rice,
garments, footwear and silk. Additional chapter inputs are drawn from ADBs book, Trade and Trade Facilitation in the Greater
Mekong Sub-Region, Manila: ADB, 2012, and, in particular, Chapter 3 on Facilitating Trade along the Southern Economic
Corridor.

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enable Cambodia to join fullysome of the regional production networks that are developing in the South
East Asia region. Trade facilitation and logistics are issues that continue to holdback Cambodias export
potential.
As noted in the previous chapter, Cambodia has introduced important reforms in Customs and is starting
to implement a National Single Window as part of its ASEAN commitments. Besides the broad
improvements taking place in this area, the leading export sectors of Cambodiahave specific needs that
need to be identified in turn. Garment exports are part of a supply chain that requires reliability in
delivery. Rice exports depend on reliable internal freight connections and adapted storage facilities.
Cambodias supply chain performance also faces the curse of size too small to justify large investments
or improve efficiency while its main competitors (Vietnam, China, and Bangladesh) all enjoy the
advantage of economies of scale.This implies that Cambodias logistics must be even more efficient than
that of its neighbors if it is to maintain international export competitiveness. Cambodias Logistics
Performance Index, while in line with that of country like Laos, is still below that of major competitors
such as Vietnam.31Several of the supply chains are also controlled by external buyers rather than local
producers. Therefore, not only is it important to improve trade facilitation at a national level, it is also
critical to address the specific requirements of its key export sectors.
Cambodias exports of rice and manufactured goods risk outstripping shortly its logistics capacity. The
Royal Government of Cambodia has set ambitious targets for export growth in the coming years,
including for Cambodia to becomea major exporter of milled rice and to join regional supply chains using
its growing Special Economic Zones. Weak logistics will be a major constraint requiring attention. For
instance, currently, most milled rice is exported in containers through Sihanoukville Port. By 2030,
Cambodia is expected to produce about 7 million MT of paddy surplus, up from 4.3 million MT in 2012,
thanks to better irrigation and improvement of extension services. This could lead to major growth in
exported milled rice above and beyond the current 1 million MT target. Alternative routes must be
identified and developed to increase efficiency and competitiveness.
There is great potential for Cambodia to leverage its lower labor costs as a way of joining regional
production networks. New investors in Cambodian Special Economic Zones (SEZs) require more
sophisticated and integrated logistics services than are currently available in the country. Cambodia has
been promoting SEZs for the past few years. Their development is based on Anukret no. 148issued in
2005. Since then some 22SEZ licenses have been granted. For now, most SEZs are located along the
border with Vietnam and Thailand (Koh Kong, Bavet, Poipet), in Phnom Penh, and at the Port of
Sihanoukville. The location of theseSEZsis an indication of the high logistics costs that would be incurred
elsewhere in the country. In fact, the main concerns expressed by Japanese investors are the high costs of
electricity and logistics. SEZ investors seek to take advantage of the incentives offered by the zones as
well as Cambodias relatively low labor costs, while minimizing logistics costs. There is potential for
Cambodia to expand the economic impact of SEZs. In order to do so, however, logistics
performancemust be improved.

31

World Bank, Connecting to Compete, Trade Logistics in the Global Economy, Logistics Performance Index, Washington,
D.C.: World Bank, 2012

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While both emerging investments in regional supply chains and growing agricultural exports will
continue increasing the demand for logistics services, the demands of the two are very different: milled
rice requiresbulk handling capabilities; SEZ operators tend to need seamless, fast, and cost-efficient
logistics.
Cambodias Main Trade Corridors and Clusters
Cambodia is connected to regional and international trade markets by several domestic and international
trade corridors.The main domestic corridor links Phnom Penh to the port of Sihanoukville, while the main
international corridor connects Bangkok through Cambodia to Ho Chi Minh City in Vietnam. Most traffic
originates in Bangkok and travels through the Poipet border post to Phnom Penh (734km) and/or between
PhnomPenh and Ho Chi Minh City in Vietnam (228km.) Traffic volume is higher on the latter route and
has been increasing, especially in containerized cargo. This is mainly due to shippers who prefer using
Ho Chi Minh as their export gateway.
The trade corridors serving Cambodia have had a significant impact on trade. They have improved access
to the port at Sihanoukville but also provided access to the more efficient ports in Vietnam thereby
reducing the time and cost for international shipment. They have fostered regional trade by expediting
both formal and informal trade with Vietnam and Thailand.
The four major trade corridors are:
1.
2.
3.
4.

Western Cambodia-Poipet-Bangkok
Central/Eastern Cambodia Bavet-Ho Chi Minh
Phnom Penh- Sihanoukville
Central Cambodia- Mekong- Saigon Port to Cai Mep

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Map 3.1:
3.1: Cambodias
Cambodias Four
Four Main
Main Trade
Trade Corridors
Corridors
Map

The transit time is two to three days in Sihanoukville including the time for loading and unloading and
four or five days for Cai Mep. A typical container barge has a capacity of 144 TEU, length of 78 meters,
and draft of 4.8 meters.
The most important corridors are those providing connections to Vietnams deep-water facilities (# 2 and
4). For agricultural goods, these provide access to larger general cargo vessels. For containers they
provide access to direct calls by vessels operating on the global corridor to the US and to Europe. Both
offer savings in freight rates because of the larger traffic volumes at the Vietnamese ports. Main
constraintsare the procedures for border crossing and movement of goods in transit. Another constraint is
Dead Weight Tonnage (DWT) that can be transported on river routes based on seasons.
Table 3.1: Routes to China Sea
Sections
Phnom Penh - Vam Nao Pass
Vam Nao Pass - South China
Sea

River
Mekong
Mekong
Bassac

Km
154
194
188

DWT
Low Water High Water
3000-4000
5000
3000-4000 3000-4000
5000
5000

In general, the performance of these corridors is improving as shipping lines become involved in
providing feeder services to the ports. Additional improvements in performance should be prioritized
based on the impact on the cost and time for movement over the entire length of the corridor.

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Cambodian manufacturing is clustered mainly around Phnom Penh while agricultural production is
clustered near the borders with Vietnam and Thailand. A large number of garment factories can be found
on the border with Vietnam, in SEZs that serve as transfer points for goods moving through the port
facilities near Ho Chi Minh. In addition to the Bavet Dry Port, there is only one logistics hub along the
Mekong near Phnom Penh.32However, this is more a collection of cargo-handling facilities than a fullservice hub offering a wide range of storage, transport and trade facilitation services.
Some further agglomerations of garment and footwear industries are likely to gain size at the largest
zones. It is also expected that the Phnom Penh logistics hub will grow in terms of capacity and variety of
services. Efforts to improve the existing clusters and develop additional clusters could focus on
increasing competitiveness by providing efficient connections to the trade routes and encouraging
development of domestic suppliers to serve the factories located with these clusters. This will require
stronger coordination between government and the private sector in planning the development of the
clusters. The development of new zones should be based on a value proposition that emphasizes efficient
logistics rather than taxes and other financial incentives.

Current Issues
The TTFA and TCA have identified in some detail key issues that need to be addressed to improve the
trade logistics environment in Cambodia. They include:
1. The lack or poor implementation of cross-border transport agreements is causing inefficiencies
and decreasing competitiveness of Cambodian products.
2. Third party insurance covering cross-border transportis lacking.
3. Cambodia and its neighbors use different axle load limits.
4. The container market lacks liquidity as result of import-export flow imbalances.
5. Despite recent improvements, roads are not yet considered sufficiently safe by truck drivers.
6. A few large trucking firms dominate the road haulage sector in Cambodia, with old fleet due to
low competition.
7. High fuel cost is considered to be the greatest impediment to business operations, driving up total
costs.
8. Foreign companies cannot compete on most Cambodian roads so prices remain high for truck
shipments.
9. Cambodias railway network is not connected to Thailand.
10. Port infrastructure is adequate for the current trade volume but needs strengthening to ensure
sufficient capacity to support trade expansion.
11. Use of alternative waterways particularly along the Mekong should be encouraged as
opportunity exists to use Vietnams port infrastructure.
12. Costs components making the final priceare opaque, with complex chain of brokers.

32

http://www.songuongroup.com/dryport/index.php?page=bv

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13. There is a high level of informal payments to clear cargo, a large proportion of which seems to be
captured by shipping companies.
14. Logistics to support formal export of rice and other agricultural commoditiesis insufficient.
Cross Border Agreements
Route competitiveness is weakened by the lack of a clear cross-border agreement between Cambodia and
its neighbors, Thailand and Vietnam.As a result, trans-loading of cargo is prevalent at the Poipet and
Bavet borders with Thailand and Vietnam respectively.At present, Cambodian trucks are not allowed to
operate in Thailand and a very limited number of Cambodian trucks operate in Vietnam. Similarly, Thai
and Vietnamese trucks are generally restricted from operating in Cambodia, except to trans-load goods
within the immediate border area, as outlined in greater detail further below. The lack of a transit
agreement forces trucking companies to trans-load goods near the border leads to delays, additional costs,
restricted competition, and a limit on the price and shipping options available to the general public.
Until recently there has been no exchange of traffic rights between Thailand and Cambodia apart from
limited arrangement in the border areas. This is so despite the fact that a first step was taken to
implement the CBTA through an MOU, signed in May 2010, providing for an initial quota of 40 trucks
per country to be allowed to operate into each others territory. However, the Thai parliament has not
ratified the MOU. Presently, Thai trucks can only enter Cambodia up to an ICD in Poipet where the
goods are transshipped, with one exception. The company Minebea is now permitted to drive its goods,
in sealed containers, from Bangkok to Phnom Penh without transshipment at the border.
There is a bilateral agreement between Cambodia and Laos that allows trucks to cross the border. The
agreement limits each side to 20 permits, though, presently, demand is so low that the permits are
underutilized. Route management between the two countries is not viewed as a constraint to trade at this
time.
Cambodia and Vietnam have a bilateral agreement that provides for each side to issue up to 300
permits.However, freight transport operators on both sides prefer to operate only to the border, reportedly
because of the high cost of obtaining the necessary permits. Out of the quota of 300 permits each side is
allowed, more than two-thirds are used for passenger services. Trucks carrying goods for the SEZ at
Manhattan near Bavet, on the Vietnam border, are exempt with pre-clearance. Though inefficient, this
practice seems to be widely accepted in the ASEAN region and can be seen at similar checkpoints in
other countries such as the Thai-Malaysia border on the Bangkok-Kuala Lumpur-Singapore route. The
cost of transshipment on the Cambodia Vietnam route is about $80 per container.
Third Party Insurance
ASEAN does not have a functional regional third party liability insurance scheme. Goods and vehicles
registered in one country require third party liability insurance in case there is damage to property or
personal injury in another country. Insurance companies do not cover cargo beyond their national borders
and this represents a risk to the consigner and consignee. For instance, in case of an accident in
Cambodia, a truck and its cargo may be impounded and it may take months to be released, incurring high

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fees and charges (shipping line container fees) in the process. Presently cross border operators must
arrange independently for insurance when Thai trucks cross the border. International best practice is to
introduce a regional third party liability insurance scheme. There are several well established schemes in
Europe and Africa.
Axle Load Limits
One of the outstanding features of regional harmonization is axle load limits. Presently each of the
countries in South East Asia has a different maximum axle load limit (Table 3.2.) Suffice to say such
disparities necessitate heavy overload control infrastructure with attendant negative impacts on trade.
Table 3.2: Axle Weight Comparison among Neighboring Countries

Gross Weight Allowed


18-Wheel Truck

Lao PDR
(Maximum Tonnage)

Thailand
(Maximum Tonnage)

Cambodia
(Maximum Tonnage)

39

45

40

The reasons offered by trucking companies for vehicle overloading are threefold:

Cost competitiveness: There is a perception that shipping overweight is needed (or is a


calculated risk) in order to remain cost competitive, particularly in an environment where some
large players benefit from informal relationships.
Availability of trucks capable of carrying heavy loads:Foreign truck makers have been
building wider and higher vehicles to reduce costs but the additional size and weight of these
trucks are not suited to Cambodias roads. National legislation has not been updated to cover
their use.
Demand for heavy goods: Cambodias relatively rapid economic development is increasing the
demand for movement of heavy construction materials and agricultural goods.

Weighbridges provide one of the major opportunities for improper practices along regional trade
corridors. Vehicle overloading imposes an economic cost on the economy by increasing infrastructure
maintenance costs while accruing benefits to individual operators. However, the enforcement of weight
requirements also opens up opportunities for improper practices unless it is properly regulated. In some
cases, the weighbridge stop is used by some operators as an opportunity to offer payments to officials so
they can let overloaded trucks through. Stricter enforcement of good practices with respect to fee
collection at weighbridge stations may be warranted.
Scarcity of Containers
Overall the economy presently generates around 340,000 standard containers of cargo per year, both
imports and exports (Figure 3.1.) However, the demand for export containers is much less than for
imports. The imbalance between import and export volumes in Cambodia results in a scarcity of
containers available for shipments in key routes, due to significant number of empty containers being
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shipped abroad. This contributes to a lack of liquidity in the container market as containers are
sometimes unavailable and incur high charges to the shipper if they are returned late to the shipping
company. The majority of such empty box shipments are to Singapore and Thailand, reflecting a desire by
shipping lines to position empties in these markets.
Figure 3.1:
3.1: Cambodia
Figure
Cambodia Freight
Freight Transport
Transport Market,
Market, 2010
2010

Source:
Source: TTFA
Shipping lines impose strict limits on the return of empty containers to the ports. Shipping companies
(owners of the containers) require empty containers to be returned within seven days.33These limits are
much more generous in Cambodia than they are in Laos, where containers have to be returned within four
days. Given the distance and time performance of domestic logistics in Cambodia, trucking companies
typically do not pay container storage fees. Containers are instead stored at dry ports (often owned by
trucking companies) at no charge. In general, there is a collegial business relationship between shipping,
freight forwarding, and trucking companies with respect to containers, although overall industry
coordination could be improved as evidenced by the large number of empty containers being both
imported and exported. The rationale for shipping empty containers is that large shipping companies have
container leasing agreements with ports in other countries (i.e. Singapore, Hong Kong) and have to reexport the empty containers to avoid paying demurrage fees. Since containers cannot be stockpiled, the
result is that empty containers of different sizes are being both imported and exported in order to meet
export demand from Cambodian firms and to meet contractual requirements from leasing agreements.
33Maersk estimates that empty containers account for 10% of the 400 containers sent per week to Singapore.

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Table 3.3: Number of Empty Containers Exported to Regional Countries


First Half of 2011
Country
Other Asia
Singapore
Thailand
Hong Kong
Others (Not Stated)

20ft
1179
837
884
170
156

Volume of Containers (first half 2011)


40ft
1495
902
641
283
161

45ft
5
6
0
0
2

Road Safety and Infrastructure


Cambodia has a road network of approximately 38,257 km including 4,757 km of national roads and
5,700 km of provincial roads that fall under the stewardship of the Ministry of Public Works and
Transport as well as 27,800 km of tertiary roads for which the Ministry of Rural Development is
responsible. Major roads link Phnom Penh and regional centers to all neighboring countries. The network
has been much improved since the mid-1990s and is generally in fair to good condition. However, road
quality in Cambodia is not always optimal, with some new roads deteriorating quickly when they have
not been built to international standards. Trucking firms perceive the condition of roads in Cambodia not
to be as wide or as well maintained as in neighboring countries. Some firms mention the need for further
road infrastructure development in the future in order to keep up with regional standards, which could be
harmonized together with axle load limits.
In terms of other infrastructural impediments, trucking companies point to road safety and accidents as a
major problem. According to the Climate Investment Funds, Cambodia has one of the highest
incidences of road accidents in the world, with 10 fatalities per 10,000 vehicles in 2010. This is a 44
percent decrease from 2007, but still represents the highest accident rate in Southeast Asia. Thus, road
safety continues to be a major sector concern, especially with the growth of traffic in provincial and rural
areas.34
Trucking Industry
A few large trucking firms dominate road haulage in Cambodia. There are many operators with some
fleets, typically operated in an informal way. The twenty largest companies have on average 20 to 30
trucks each and, together, operate more than 1,000 trucks. The largest firm has more than 200 trucks.
The government is now encouraging such operators to become formalized. This is being promoted
through the association of trucking firms.
The major trucking firms are organized in a formal trucking association, the Cambodia Trucking
Association (CAMTA). As of September 2011, CAMTA had 15 members. Together, the firms owned a
34

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total of 800 large trucks (majority semi-trailer.) CAMTA member companies represent more than half of
the heavy vehicle fleet in the country. The membership has not changed significantly in recent years
though the government is now actively encouraging all operators to join. The distribution of the fleet of
CAMTA members compared to the general population is shown in Figure 3.2.

Proportion of firms

Figure 3.2:
3.2: Distribution
Distribution of
Figure
of Trucking
Trucking Fleet
Fleet Sizes
Sizes (Phnom
(Phnom Penh
Penh Operators)
Operators)
50
45
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0

ALL
CAMTA

Less
than 5

6-20

21-40

41-60

61-80 81-100 More


than
100

Number of trucks

Source: TTFA, data from EMC and CAMTA


Source:
Most trucks operate on two routes connecting Phnom Penh to the ports of Sihanoukville and Ho Chi Minh
City in Vietnam. Traffic volumes have been increasing fastest on the route to Vietnam.
Some of the key characteristics of the trucking industry are as follows:

The fleet is generally oldand prone to frequent breakdowns.Trucks are purchased and imported
second-hand, mainly from Korea, Taiwan, and the USA. There is presently no legislative limit
on the age of trucks when first imported, though the average is 5-7 years.
The cost of vehicles and access to financeare challenges for trucking companies.Operators can
borrow money from the bank to purchase trucks though most prefer to finance using their own
resources due to high interest rates charged by banks. This explains the use of second-hand
trucks. This leads to higher maintenance costs (in addition to fuel costs) and affects prices
charged by truckers and the overall efficiency of the Cambodian trucking fleet.
Cambodias trucks are under-utilized significantly in international terms.Trucks average 5-6 trips
per month with an average annual mileage of less than 40,000 km. This is about one-third that
reported in Southern Africa, for example. The low level of utilization is partly a function of lack
of return loads, low frequency of truck movements, and the industrys limited geographic scope.

High Fuel Cost

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Operators considerhigh fuel cost to be the greatest negative factor, driving up total costs. One trucking
company reports that fuel accounts for up to 70 percent of the total transport costs. This proportion of
cost of fuel to other costs is consistent with reports from Lao PDR and Thailand, where fuel cost are also
reported to be a major constraint. This is a huge limitation in investment in new rather than usedtrucks by
fleet owners. In other regions of the world, fuel costs typically are less than half of total costs.
Weak Competition in the Trucking Sector
Competition among trucking companies is mostly local.Foreign trucks are restricted from operating
deeply into Cambodia, so international competition does not influence strongly pricing policy for trucking
services.35Cambodias WTO Schedule of Service Commitmentsplaces no restrictions on market access
and national treatment for road freight transport under all modes of supply, except for the movement of
natural persons, and places no significant limitations on horizontal commitments, except for the
movement of natural persons and ownership of land by foreign individuals. Accordingly,one might
assume that limited competition from foreign trucks results primarily fromother Non Tariff Measures
(NTMs), including several suggested in this chapter such as thelack of third party insurance, lack of
ASEAN axle load common standards, cross-border truck quotas allotted only to majority-owned
Cambodian firms, etc.
The transport logistics landscape is changing, however. Selected new international players entering the
market, as evidenced by Japanese logistics companies Nippon Express, Yusen Logistics and Sojitz
Logistics setting up office in Cambodia. These companies have potential to strengthen the logistics
environment, especially as CBTA is implemented and BRTAs between Cambodia and its neighbors are
finalized.
Several trucking companies report that more than 50 percent of their sales originate from one key client
a finding that suggests market entry is predicated on having an anchor client rather than based on free
competition for services. A recent survey by EMC for the World Banks Transport Corridor Assessment
(2011) found only one logistics company reporting a large number of customers (approximately 1,000),
with only 11-25 percent of revenue coming from its most important one.In short, current operational
practices limit contestability in Cambodias trucking market.36
Railways
At this stage, given its limited availability, railway transport does not influence pricing and competition in
the transport service markets. But this might be changing.
Like in Thailand,Cambodia has a one-meter gauge network. The network was concessioned to a private
operator in 2009. The network consists of the Northern line linking Phnom Penh with Sisophon (338
km), the Southern Line linking Phnom Penh to Sihanoukville (264 km), and a branch line from Phnom
Penh to the petroleum storage facilities at Tonle Sap River (6 km). The railway system is only partly
operational and is undergoing rehabilitation. The branch line between Phnom Penh and Sihanoukville has
35

EMC, "Transport and Logistics Corridor Assessment, Cambodia", Phnom Penh: EMC, 2011
EMC, Ibid

36

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been renovated and regular scheduled service was introduced in 2013 and will be expanding. The
Northern line is under renovation. Itwill include the reconstruction of the missing stretch of rail from
Sisophon to Poipet (48 km) on the Thailand - Cambodia border. This stretch of railway was removed
during the war in the 1970s and its restoration will enable a link from Cambodia to Thailand. When it
becomes operational, the railway could help overcome some of the costs incurred in transshipping cargo
at the Cambodia-Thailand border. However, this will depend on the efficiency of wagon transfers on
crossing the border. Finally, the Government is studying options, including financing, to build a rail link
between Phnom Penh and Vietnam.
Ports and Shipping Services
Cambodia is served by two main domestic ports one river port in Phnom Penh and a seaport in
Sihanoukville. Both ports are state-owned but autonomously operated. A third port, called the Mong
Rithy Port, is private and operates under a semi-official status. Sihanoukville is operated by Port
Autonomous Sihanoukville (PAS) and Phnom Penh by Phnom Penh Automous Port (PPAP) trusts.
Cambodia has access by road and inland water transport to seaport trade gateways. Cargo to
Sihanoukville from Phnom Penh is transported mainly by road,but, with the recent reopening of the rail
connection between the two cities, scheduled freight rail service is gradually being expanded. Freight to
the Vietnamese ports moves either via the Mekong River via staging points in Cambodia to the deep
water port of Cai Mep (some 35 miles southeast of Ho Chi Minh City) or directly to Ho Chi Minh City
(HCMC) port. The port of Cai Mep was opened in 2006 as a joint venture between the shipping line
Maersk (49 percent) and the Vietnam-based Saigon Port and Vietnam National Shipping Lines Vinalines.
The HCMC port serves as a gateway either for direct service to the US West Coast or other major Asian
ports or for other international service by means of transshipment viaSingapore and Tanjung Pelepas in
Malaysia. Cai Mep port is used as a gateway for direct liner services to most hub ports in the US, the
Middle East, and Asia.
The Sihanoukville Port is the largest seaport in the country.The port was constructed in the 1950s and
became operational in 1960. It has an old berth that can accommodate four medium sized vessels on both
sides. A new quay was constructed in the 1960s which can accommodate three vessels with about seven
meters draft. A container terminal opened in 2007 to handle vessels with about 10.5m draft. Current
cargo volume is close to 2.5m tones per annum, more than two thirds of which is containerized.
The Port of Sihanoukville has limited draft currently 10m deep which restricts the sizes of vessels that
can call at the portto a maximum 1,000 TEU. However, the Port Authority of Sihanoukville is building a
13.5m deep multi-purpose terminal and dredging a channel with a Japanese loan which will allow much
larger ships.The small volumes of traffic and the trend in the shipping industry to rely increasingly on a
hubs and spoke system (large vessels using mega ports with feeders from smaller ports) are some of the
reasons why Sihanoukville is predominantly a feeder port linked to main world destinations by feeder
services to Singapore and Hong Kong. In short, Sihanoukville should seek to increase its competitiveness
as a feeder portthrough greater efficiency and lower costs.

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Volume of Cargo ('000 tonnes)

2,500

500
450

2,000

400
350

1,500

300
250

1,000

200
150

500

100
50

0
2003

2004

2005 2006
TEUs

2007

2008

2009

Volume of Containers ('000 TEUs)

Figure 3.3:
3.3: PAS
PAS Cargo
Cargo Throughput,
Throughput, 20032003- 2010
2010
Figure

2010

Gross Throughput (t)

Sihanoukville remains the main trade gateway for seaborne cargo entering or leaving
Cambodia.Sihanoukville handles approximately three-quarters of all trade traffic by volume. In 2008 the
port handled about 250,000 TEUs while the river port handled about 50,000 during the same year. Cargo
volumes transiting through Vietnam have increased in recent years, due to the perceived competitiveness
of both the overland and sea routes.
Vessels calling at Sihanoukville Port are small by international standards (maximum 1,000 TEU.)The
Port is smaller than all other seaports in neighboring countries and is characterized by much lower
international connectivity, as measured by the UNCTAD Liner Shipping Connectivity Index.37The
biggest ports in the region through which Cambodia traffic is transshipped (Hong Kong and Singapore)
are more than 100 times larger than Sihanoukville in terms of container volumes. The port is also
considerably more expensive than ports in Cai Mep and Ho Chi Minh City.38
The port is operated by a Government agency and the private sector is advocating the adoption of
measures to improve its competitiveness compared to other ports in the region. The added value of
specific services, such as those provided by KAMSAB, could be reviewed and possibly streamlined.
Attention might also be given to relying on private operators for the ports expansion and management.

37

http://data.worldbank.org/indicator/IS.SHP.GCNW.XQ
2.6 times more expensive per TEU, according to Maersk Lines.

38

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160
140
120
100
80
60
40
20
0

Figure 3.5:
3.5: Distribution
Distribution of
Sizes Calling
Calling at
Figure
of Vessel
Vessel Sizes
at
Cambodia
Ports
Cambodia Ports
300
Number of Vessels

Number of Vessels

Figure
3.4: Number
Number of
of Vessels
Vessels Calling
Figure 3.4:
Calling at
at
Cambodia
Ports
Cambodia Ports

250

PPAP

PAS

200
150
100
50
0

PAS

Carrying capacity (gross tonnage)

PPAP

Source:
Source: World Bank and Containerization International2010
(http://data.worldbank.org/indicator/IS.SHP.GOOD.TU).
Figure 3.6:
3.6: Container
Container Volumes
Volumes at
at Cambodias
Cambodia's Main
Figure
Main Ports
Ports

Number of containers, TEU

300000
250000
200000
150000

PPAP
PAS

100000
50000
0
2003 2004

2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010

Source: TTFA, data from PPAP and PAS


Source:
The trade traffic volume on the major trade routes out of Phnom Penh to the seaports is influenced in part
by the frequency of vessel calling at the respective ports. So, while some shipping lines, such as APL,
provide a regular weekly service to Sihanoukville, it is only a feeder service to Singapore. In comparison,
Ho Chi Minh and Cai Mep have many direct vessel calls to numerous overseas destinations. Shippers
typically make an assessment of the option that gives the shortest possible transit time within the
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constraints imposed by their overseas buyers. Cambodias ports should improve their efficiency and
competitiveness as feeder ports, in line with international trends in the shipping industry which is
increasingly using large vessels operating in mega ports such as Singapore and Tanjung Pelepas in
Malaysia. Improvements in physical capacity including adding cranes, blasting and dredging to deepen
the entrance channel would be required for direct vessel calls, especially by the larger vessels now used in
international shipping.
Alternative Waterways
The most competitive route for shipping is via the Mekong River from Phnom Penh to Cai Mep port in
Vietnam. Traffic through PPAP has been growing in recent years. This is mainly due to the connection to
Cai Mep port in Vietnam by river barge, which is an option that offers international connectivity
advantages over both Sihanoukville and Ho Chi Minh ports. Sailing down the river from Phnom Penh to
Cai Mep and linking to a deep sea vessel to the United States is $200 cheaper per container and two days
shorter than driving from Phnom Penh and connecting through Ho Chi Minh. The same route is also
$100 cheaper and 3 days shorter than going through Sihanoukville.
Ho Chi Minh City does not offer direct service to Europe. But it is extremely competitive for intra-Asia
container services, with tariff freight rate (excludingsurcharges) from Ho Chi Minh to Shanghai, for
example, being around $100 compared to around$250 from Sihanoukville. A new port with an adjacent
container terminal is under development in Phnom Penh, some 30km downstream from the current port,
which will ultimately have a capacity of 300,000 TEU per year. This will add to the efficiency of the river
transport option for shipments from Cambodia to Vietnams deep-sea ports. However, current draft in the
Mekong River is limited and only barges up to 120 TEU are allowed transit. Options to dredge the river
in Cambodia and Vietnam should be explored.
Clearing and Forwarding Services
Logistics services in Cambodia are provided by numerous brokers, each contributing one activity to the
final clearance of the goods. The multiplicity of actors makes it more difficult for traders to track
payments.This can be illustrated by the case of textile exports, where manufacturers pass shipments to
Inland Container Depot operators who work with forwarding agents and trucking companies to get a
shipment to the port. For many exports, shipping lines have typically been designated in advance by the
overseas buyer. In order to ensure smooth operations, the agents working with the designated shipping
line tend to be preferred over independent agents, creating an informal bias in favor of one shipper that
impedes competition and impacts on costs in general. As a result, while, in theory, there is competition in
logistics services, in practice, shippers have to work with service providers linked to one or other of the
shipping lines. The lack of clarity about the roles played by various brokers presents exporters with an
opaque process and regulatory environment that is characterized by limited competition and unusually
high costs for shippers. In agriculture, the practices are similar though processors and exporting
companies have greater control over the farm-gate portions of their supply chains. Processors purchase
from middlemen who buy directly from farmers and have to work with forwarders to export their
produce. As a result, there is little in-house management of logistics services by the countrys private
sector.

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Freight forwarders are probably the most important players in organizing logistics in Cambodia. EMC
found significant overlaps among services provided by trucking and freight forwarding firms. Some
trucking companies provide basic transportation services while a few also offer freight forwarding
services and warehousing.39 Some freight forwarders offer standard clearance services while others also
own their own trucks. In many cases, businesses claim to provide a wide range of services but actually
outsource the activities to another party. The most common overlap between trucking and freight
forwarding companies is provision of customs brokering and warehousing services. In total, there are
approximately 200 freight forwarders operating in the country.
The freight forwarders in Cambodia are organized in a national association, the Cambodia Freight
Forwarder Association (CAMFFA). CAMFFA was established and recognized by the government in
2004. It has 21 members 19 regular members and 2 associated members. CAMFFA and the Cambodian
Trucking Association (CAMTA) are active in the same Government-Private Sector Forum (G-PSF)
working group, which allows for dialogue between the private sector and government on logistics and
trade related issues.
Informal Payments
A fundamental problem underlying the logistics market in Cambodia is the opacity of the costelements
that determine the final price for shipments.This is one of the reasons manufacturing firms do not invest
in in-house logistics capability - because they wish to avoid having to deal with some of the informal
practices that are encountered along the trade corridors. Importantly, the desire to avoid informal fees
or the desire to avoid being personally involved in making informal fee payments enhances the power
of agents and brokers to increase the charges involved in transporting goods into and out of the country.
The ability of agents and brokers to claim the existence of high informal fees, and use it as justification
for charging high shipment prices, seems to be one of the main contributors to Cambodias high logistics
costs. Furthermore, the agents and brokers have a financial incentive to maintain the opacity of the
regulatory environment so as to discourage any outside investigation of the amount that is really paid by
them in informal clearance fees versus the amount that is retained by them in the form of abnormally high
profits.
Generally, trucking firms consider lack of access to accurate and up-to-date information as a constraint.
They perceive information regarding fees, regulations (particularly upcoming legislation changes) and
procedures to be unclear at times. Problems may also arise because of poor dissemination of information
by government agencies and lack of knowledge in the private sector about where to access the
information provided. According to operators there is little to no advance notice regarding new
regulations that have come or will come into effect. Informal fees are charged sometimes for obtaining
information. The lack of transparency proves a fertile ground for informal payments, including to various
border officials.
Informal payments are reported to take place at weighbridges, en-route checkpoints, and
customs.Trucking firms report that informal fees are collected routinely by police at checkpoints on main
39

EMC,2011, ibid.

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roads. On the route between Phnom Penh and Poipet, for example, informal fees range between 5,000 and
20,000 riel, though fees as high as $10 have been reported. Weighbridge stations also provide an
opportunity for informal fee collection due to truck axle-weight and length issues. Many truckers elect to
pay an informal fee simply to avoid losing time from inspections.
Traffic police collect informal fees from truckers for every perceived minor problem, as stated by one
interviewee.40While this may well be justified, there is a perception of harassment and unclear and unfair
application of traffic laws,for purposes of extracting informal fees. Operators on the PAS route report
paying informal fees ranging from 10,000 to 50,000 riel relating to every single mistake related to truck
safety.41
The informal fees are also levied at border crossing and during customs clearance. Most operators are
reluctant to even discuss informal fees. Unequal treatment by border officials, based on informal
relationships, may also skew some responses more positively than is otherwise the case.42
There are also high levels of informal payments to clear cargo. Typically agents pay $180 to $210 to
clear each twenty-foot container. The payments are shared between the clearing agent and border
officials. Stakeholders view the border processes as the main contributor to high trade costs in the
country. Exports of agriculture goods such as rice, cassava, or cornalso require payment of informal fees.
In sum, the cargo clearance costs at Cambodias ports of entry and land border crossing points are high,
even by regional standards.
The informal costs are passed on to shippers, but without supporting receipts, leading to opacity about the
real rate of informal payments that are truly required for clearance of each shipment and exacerbating the
distrust between agents and shippers. In any event, agents add a premium on each informal payment that
they make. The practices are similar at both ports and land border crossings where informal payments are
common, though the clearance procedures can vary amongst the different ports and border crossings.
Each crossing or port has its own rules and informal fees have to be paid in different situations to varying
amounts.
Logistics Issues Related to Specific Products
Milled Rice:Milled rice is transported to Phnom Penh by road then shipped through Sihanoukville or Ho
Chi Minh City. The typical size of export shipments varies from three to 15 TEU. However, small traders
will ship a single TEU, especially for fragrant rice. The minimum shipment size for large traders is
usually five TEU and they accept orders with multiple shipments. The time from confirmation of the
order to loading on the ship is 5-14 days. The order cycle from order confirmation to delivery to the
buyers warehouse is 35-42 days for Europe but can be as little as 14 days for East Asia and less for
Southeast Asia. The percentage of delayed shipments varies by trader but is generally 10 percent or less.
Most delays are the result of problems in the outbound supply chain including:
40

EMC, 2011, Ibid


EMC, 2011, Ibid
42For example, major trucking companies in Poipet reported having a perfect relationship with Customs and not paying any
informal fees, despite contrary information from clearance agents.
41

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lack of reliability in terms of domestic transport;


lack of available 20 containers suitable for carrying food;
inefficient handling at the loading port; and,
lack of available customs officials.

Garments:The order cycle from confirmation of order to delivery to the export gateway averages about
90 days. For smaller orders of simple products, the average is closer to 45 days while for larger orders
that require special fabrics and/or various samples to be approved prior to production the average is closer
to 120 days. The delivery time for imported fabrics is three-to-eight weeks and the value of shipments is
in the range of $50,000 to $75,000 per TEU. Factories receive consignments on a weekly basis with most
shipments organized by the supplier on a C&F basis. Payments for imports are made a specified time
after receipt of goods, typically a week or two, using an electronic transfer. For vendor factories, the
parent company manages the finances and transactions. For local firms, the transactions often require a
Letter of Credit and are financed by discounting the buyers letter of credit.
Finished garments are packed and labeled for delivery to retail outlets. The garments are then shipped in
ocean containers to the retailers distribution center. Ocean transport is arranged by the buyers
designated forwarder. Containers are loaded at the factory for transport to Sihanoukville. Time for
overseas shipment adds 15-35 days to the total order cycle depending on the distance to the overseas
destination. Larger orders are sent in multiple consignments, usually on a weekly basis. Airfreight is
used only for time-sensitive or delayed shipments, which account for 1 percent and 5 percent of
shipments, respectively.
The cost for moving the container from Sihanoukville to the factorys warehouse is $700-$900 per FEU,
which includes the terminal handling charge. For transport from the factory to the port, the range is from
$450-$1000. Most firms give five-to-seven day advance notice when arranging truck transport to the
port. The garments produced have an average value of $3-$4 per unit. The higher cost items have more
trim and embroidery. The value per FEU varies from $100,000 to over $200,000. The garments are
shipped FOB or FCA with payment by TT, usually 7-30 days after loading on the vessel. International
freight rates vary by destination but are currently about $800 per FEU for East Asia, $1800 for North
Europe and $3600 for the US East Coast.
Footwear:The principal destinations are Japan and the EU. Nearly all the exports are shipped by sea in
containers that are loaded at the factory. The movements are arranged by forwarders or shipping lines.
The smallest shipments are one or two TEU per week with 3000-5000 pairs per TEU. A typical shipment
however is three to 15 TEU with a value between $110,000 and $550,000. Airfreight is used for less than
10 percent of shipments. The principal trade corridors used for footwear exports link factories with the
loading ports. The firms located in Manhattan SEZ near the Vietnamese border use Cai Mep while those
located in or around Phnom Penh usually use Sihanoukville.

Possible Reforms to Improve the Competitiveness of Cambodian Logistics

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The issues described above are critical to sustain Cambodias trade expansion. There is a need for fruitful
inter-ministerial cooperation in designing and implementing reforms in the area of trade logistics. A High
Level National Task Force with the mandate of formulating a National Logistics Blueprint (NLB) could
be set up with responsibility foridentifying clear tasks, objectives, and timeframes. The NLB should be
developed and implemented in synergy with initiatives in support of specific supply chains and aiming at
improving trade facilitation. The NLB should adopt a multi-modal logistics approach, identifying and
prioritizing solutions that ensure maximum benefits. Accordingly, the Task Force and the NLB should
operate within the existing Trade SWAp structure to ensure maximum coordination among ministries and
agencies involved and between RGC and private sector organizations.
Box 3.1: National Logistics Plan
International best practice suggests that a National Logistics Plan should be developed through
consultation among Government officials, private sector operators, and academics aiming at
identifying key short- and long-term priorities and actions. It is critical to set up an effective
mechanism for the various public and private sector stakeholders to co-produce a shared logistics
vision and strategy for the country. Also in this area, high level Government engagement to lead and
monitor implementation has proved a fundamental ingredient for success: for instance, the Prime
Ministers office in Thailand or the Vice-President office in Indonesia. Experience suggests
developing sector plans (air/land/water) into multi-modal, integrated plans, ideally sharing practices
with ASEAN neighbors. A strong governance structure is needed with a clear delineation of
responsibilities. National Logistics Plans need to be comprehensive, addressing issues related to
infrastructure, regulations, competition, partnerships, etc.
When formulating the NLB, the relevant stakeholders should take a whole-of-corridor approach to
dealing with shipping liner connectivity at the regional hub ports of Ho Chi Minh, Singapore, or Hong
Kong. They should also focus on problems related to the implementation of existing bilateral agreements,
including transparent allocation of quotas for trucks. The lack of transparency in quota allocation
prevents more advanced foreign operators to invest in Cambodia and contributes to increased costs. The
NLB would need to address comprehensively and with detailed responses the issue of informal payments
which is at the root of many of inefficiencies affecting the system and high costs.
The Logistics reform actionsthat would need to be considered under the NLB can be broadly categorized
in cross-cutting reforms and sector-specific reforms that are presented in the non-prioritized list that
follows. Additional discussion will be necessary, possibly in the NLB Task Force, to develop a
prioritized, sequenced, and resourced plan of action. It should be noted that targets identified in the
attached Trade SWAp Roadmap under Outcome #3 have been identified based on what would be feasible
to achieve if sufficient resources are deployed to support implementation.
Cross-cutting Logistics Reform Actions
The interventions that would benefit the overall trading competitiveness are the following:

Negotiate with Thailand and Vietnam improved agreements for an integrated road transport
market. Those agreements should include the extension of specific permission provided to large

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companies operating in SEZs (i.e. Minibea) and ensuring regulatory support for cross-border
shipments along the Mekong.
Link the National Logistics Plan to existing ASEAN frameworks such as the "Roadmap for the
Integration of Logistics Services".
Draw the attention of other ASEAN Member States to the need to ratify and implement existing
agreements (see details in ASEAN box).
Improve transport regulations (liabilities, axle loads limits, drivers' qualifications and conditions,
safety standards, contracts, etc) including by adopting international standards to attract
investment.
Establish a regional third party liability insurance scheme and harmonizing axle load limits in
main transport corridors.
Introduce a road fleet modernizing scheme with appropriate financing and quality enforcement
mechanisms.
Remove impediments to FDI in logistics, in order to improve sectors competitiveness and lower
cost of services to traders.
In cooperation with private sector associations, developcapacity among: a) Clearing and
forwarding agents, based on FIATA courses; b) Trucking firm operators on fleet management and
modernization; and, c) Transport sector regulatory authorities on port, road and railway regulation
and rate setting principles.
Reconnect the Thai and Cambodian railway network prioritizing freight operations.
Study options and financing for new rail link between Phnom Penh and Vietnam
Liberalize port fees in order to encourage cost competition between ports and improve
competitiveness of Cambodian ports compared to those of neighboring countries.
Review the ongoing port operating model and consider giving operating licenses to international
port operatorsin order to reduce needs for public investment and increase efficiency.
Review the value added provided by KAMSAB and consider streamlining its operations.
Consider dredging the Mekong between Phnom Penh and Ho Chi Minh City to enable access to
barges larger than 120 TEU.
Carry out a security review to identify measures to bring Sihanoukville and Phnom Penh Ports in
line with international security standards and prevent recurrent problems of pilferage of
containers.
Identify options for increasing the use of out-bound empty containers, possibly through export of
semi-processed and processed agricultural products (cassava, rice, corn, rubber, etc.).

Reform Actions to Improve Milled Rice Logistics


Inbound supply chains will be strengthened by the current trend towards increasing the size and efficiency
of rice mills. Larger capacity mills require a more efficient system for collecting paddy to achieve
economies of scale. This begins with a more efficient mechanism for aggregating paddy in order to
reduce the cost of delivery to the larger mills. New facilities for storing and drying paddy need to be
established near growing areas and operated by mills or third parties. The mills could purchase the paddy
either from the farm or from these new storage facilities, maintaining inventoryin those and removing it
just before for milling. These facilities could allow greater flexibility in locating new mills, especially at

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locations that provide direct access to inland waterways. Existing mills located close to the areas of
production could use these facilities to supplement their own storage.
Improvements in performance on the outbound supply chains require upgrading the trade corridors
connecting the rice growing areas to the loading points for international shipments. These corridors
include those used for:

Aromatic rice transport by road from the Northwest through Poipet to Laem Chabang for
container shipments and through Khlong Toey for general cargo shipments;
Aromatic, traditional, and high yield varieties transported by barge to Saigon port for loading
general cargo ships;
Aromatic, traditional, and high yield varieties transported by truck to Sihanoukville for loading
on general cargo vessels; and,
Aromatic, traditional, and high yield varieties transported by road to Phnom Penh for transfer into
containers and either loaded in Phnom Penh port or trucked to Sihanoukville for loading on
container vessels.

The first two corridors require simplified procedures at the borders and the provision for movement of
trucks across the border. The second requires simplified transit procedures based on the 2009 Agreement
between Vietnam and Cambodia on Waterway Transportation.43 Improvements in all four corridors
would provide economies of scale for general cargo shipments and improve connectivity for container
shipments. They would also provide shorter transit times, more competitive services, and lower freight
rates for both container and general cargo shipments.
Although there has been considerable improvement in documentation and transport services in recent
years, further improvements are required to support a significant increase in export volumes.
Reform Actions to Improve Garment Logistics
The logistics of the garment industry are complicated by the need to import inputs and to match these
against exports. Manufacturers continue to report difficulties in processing duty-free inputs and delays in
exports related to licensing requirements and inspections. To improve logistics specific to garment,
resolving inefficiencies in trade facilitation and border procedures are critical. Margins are low in this
sector and any improvement in logistics that reduce costs and increase reliability of delivery will lead to a
larger benefit.
The private sector has been effective in organizing production of simple garments and expanding the
volume of exports. It is quite likely that the sector will diversify in part by moving into production of
higher-value garments. Depending on products, those have slightly different requirement in terms of
supply chain performance.

43

The purpose of the current Agreement is to establish a legal framework for effective implementation of freedom of navigation
in the Mekong river system and to create favorable conditions for transit and cross-border trade.

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Table 3.4: Selected Markets for Higher-Value Garments


Product
Higher quality

Market
characteristics
Quality of inputs
Skill intensive

Cycle time

Capabilities

Moderate

Procurement, Quality control throughout


chain, Pool of skilled labor, Specialized
logistics and equipment
Quick setup, Quality control for inputs
and outputs
Flexible production, Tight logistics
Procurement and supply chain
management
Flexible production
Client management
Procurement, Quality control for inputs
and outputs

Fashion basics

Short order cycle


Short shelf life

Short

Specialty
garments

Small order
Special fabric and
trim complex inputs

Flexible

Small brand
manufacturers

Small order
Flexible production
runs

Short to
Moderate

Most higher-value markets would require a reduction in the order cycle times. Current cycle times vary.
The time for ordering fabric varies between three and eight weeks depending on availability. The
production runs are typically four weeks but depends on the size of the order. The time for delivery
ranges from two to five weeks depending on the destination. The result is a total order cycle of two and a
half to four months. A movement into high value products implies an increase in the order time for
higher quality fabric. Any reduction in order sizes would have relatively little impact on production time
because of the fixed time for setting up a new production line. The delivery time is determined by
destination, which may change with the diversification into new markets.
Efforts to reduce the order cycle to two to three months would require a tightening of the inbound supply
chain, primarily though improvements in the trade corridor linking Phnom Penh with the international
container terminals near Ho Chi Minh City. This would include both the road linkage via Bavet and
container barge connection from Phnom Penh port. Current efforts to finalize the transit agreement with
Vietnam and to introduce simplified procedures for the movement of goods in transit should ensure
reliable connections to scheduled container shipping services. This trade corridor provides a shorter
transit time than the current route through Sihanoukville due to the combination of a larger number of
scheduled services and more direct connections. Initially the savings will be relatively small because the
new container terminals have yet to attract the anticipated traffic. The shipping lines have been cautious
about expanding services following the global financial crisis. While these ports already offer better
connectivity, it is anticipated that the time savings will increase over the next five years. For Asian trade
the savings in the transit time to Asian sources of fabric and to customers in Japan, Korea, and Taiwan
should be one to two weeks while for the European trade it would be two to three weeks.Additional
savings in transit time should be achieved through improvements in trade facilitation that are needed to
reduce the clearance time for both the imported fabrics and the exported garments (see chapter 2.)

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Outcome #3 in the Trade SWAp Roadmap identifies a number of possible Actions to bring about some of
the improvements and reforms identified in this chapter.

Box 3.2: ASEAN and Trade Logistics


The ASEAN Framework Agreement for the Facilitation of Goods in Transit
(AFAFGIT)identifies a package of measures pertaining to the regulation of frontier posts,
harmonization and simplification of customs procedures, traffic, transit transport services, road
transport permits, technical requirements of vehicles, mutual recognition of inspection certificates,
mutual recognition of driving licenses, and motor vehicle third-party insurance.
The AFAFGT offers great potential for Cambodia.It recognizes also that the benefits of improved
infrastructure across South East Asia will remain unrealized unless the regulatory environment is
modernized to remove regulatory bottlenecks.A main bottleneck is in the granting of transit and traffic
rights. Common practices at most border posts is for trans-loading cargo from a vehicle registered in
one country to another registered in the other country and for the transit procedure to be initiated at
each land border crossing.
Under itsConnectivity Master Plan, ASEAN has identifiedsix key strategies:
1. Fully operationalize three Framework Agreements on transport facilitation:
ASEAN Framework Agreements on the Facilitation of Goods in Transit (AFAFGIT);
ASEAN Framework Agreements on Inter-state Transport (AFAIT);
ASEAN Framework Agreements on Multimodal Transport (AFAMT).
2. Establish integrated ASEAN Highway Network:
Upgrade below-Class 3 sections of Transit Transport Routes (TTR), as agreed under
Protocol 1 of AFAFGIT, with the highest priority to Class 3 or above44
Upgrade other below Class 3 sections of the ASEAN Highway Network to Class 3
or above.
Install road signs to all designated routes, with a specific priority on TTR.
Upgrade Class 2 or 3 sections with high traffic volume to Class 1 (by 2020).
3. Implementan efficient and competitive maritime transport system:
Accelerate the formulation of the strategy for ASEAN Single Shipping Market.
Enhance the capacity of 47 designated ports, with the priority set in the studies done
and being done under the cooperation with Japan and Korea (under MTWG).
Establish efficient and reliable shipping routes (including RORO) in consistence with
the related subregional initiatives such as BIMP-EAGA and IMT-GT.
Develop emerging and/or potentially important international routes: Penang
Belawan, Malacca Dumai, Davao Bitung, Zamboanga - Sandakan, Muara
nearby ports.
Linkages with global and regional trunk routes and domestic shipping routes.
4. Establish ASEAN Single Aviation Market:
44

For the classification of Asian Highway Standards see table 1 (page 17) and table 4(page 21) of the Intergovernmental
Agreement on Asian Highway Network: http://treaties.un.org/doc/source/RecentTexts/XI_B_34_E.pdf

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Operationalize the Multilateral Agreement on the Full Liberalization of Air Freight


Services (MAFLAFS) by 2011.
Operationalize the Multilateral Agreement on the Full Liberalization of Passenger Air
Services (MAFLPAS) by 2013.
Formulate a strategy for further upgrading (beyond 5th freedom) of ASAM after
2015, by considering the timeline proposed in CAPA report on ASAM (2008).
5. Accomplish the implementation of Singapore Kunming Rail Link and build the missing link
sections:
Cambodia: (1) Poipet Sisophon (48km), (2) Phnom Penh Loc Ninh (254km)
Vietnam: (3) Loc Ninh Ho Chi Minh (129km), (4) Mu Dia Tan Ap Vung Anh
(119km)
Myanmar: (5) Thanbyuzayat Three Pagoda Pass (110km)
Thailand: (6) Three Pagoda Pass to Nam Tok (153km)
Lao PDR: (7) Vientiane Thakek Mu Dia (466km)
Formulate a strategy for a seamless operation of SKRL.
6. Establish harmonized, integrated, and seamless multimodal transport system:
Conduct a study on potential multimodal transport corridors to empower parts of
ASEAN to function as land bridges in global supply routes.
Complete the East West Economic Corridor (EWEC): Construct the missing link in
Myanmar.
Develop/upgrade terminal ports: Yangon, Da Nang.
Promote the Mekong India Economic Corridor (MIEC) as a land bridge.
Mekong bridge in Neak Loung (National road No.1 in Cambodia).
Dawei deep sea port (by 2013).
Highway between Kanchanaburi and Dawei (by 2013)

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Chapter 4
SANITARY AND PHYTOSANITARY MEASURES AND
TECHNICAL STANDARDS
Introduction
The Royal Government of Cambodia has identified ten priority export sectors for further strengthening
and diversification of the countrys export basket. The challenge in the years ahead will be to consolidate
existing markets, open up new ones including deepening penetration of fast growing Asian markets, and
move up value chains by focusing on new opportunities for more in-country processing and valueaddition. If anything, competition from neighboring countries will increase as a result of deepening
ASEAN integration and put new pressure for Cambodia to improve its export performance. Expanding
into new and traditional markets as well as moving up value chains will mean also being able to meet
technical and SPS standards of importing countries.
This chapter analyzes constraints in Cambodias ability to meet SPS measures and Technical Standards
that must be resolved in order to facilitate the Governments targets forexport growth.It is organized in
two thematic sections one on SPS measures and the other on technical standards followed by a
conclusion and three summary boxes. The three summary boxesfocus on (1) the implications of ASEAN
and Regional Integration for SPS Measures and Technical Standards; (2) human resources constraints in
the two areas of SPS and Technical Standards; and, (3) a stock-taking of progress since 2007.

Sanitary and Phytosanitary(SPS)Measures


This thematic section is organized into three subsections. The first sub-section reviews the nature and
scope of SPS measures in the context of international trade. The second sub-section looks at the growing
importance of agriculture, food, and forestry (AFF) exports for Cambodia and the SPS challenges they
must meet. The third section takes stock of the current state of the SPS system in Cambodia, including
how it is able to address the needs of the fast growing AFF export sectors.
WTO and Protection against Trade-Related Health Hazards
The WTO agreements provide members with binding disciplines aimed at promoting global trade. The
agreements allow countries to regulate trade in plants, animals, and foods to prevent the spread of
diseases and other health hazards and to protect human health, provided countries follow WTO
principlesand, in particular, the Subsidiary Agreement on the Application of Sanitary and Phytosanitary
Measures, generally referred to as the SPS Agreement45.
45

The SPS Agreement is included in the Final Act of the Uruguay Round of Multilateral Trade Negotiations, signed in Marrakesh
on 15 April 1994, and is available from the WTO website http://www.wto.org/english/tratop_e/sps_e/spsagr_e.htm#fnt5

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SPS measures, as defined in the SPS Agreement, encompass virtually every measure that is related to
protection of consumers, animals and plants against pests, diseases, additives, contaminants, toxins and
disease causing organisms in food and feed(see Box 4.1.)
Box 4.1: Definition of SPS Measures
SPS measures include:

protecting human or animal life from risks arising from additives, contaminants, toxins or
disease-causing organisms in their food;
protecting human life from plant- or animal-carried diseases;
protecting animal or plant life from pests, diseases, or disease-causing organisms;
preventing or limiting other damage to a country from the entry, establishment or spread of pests.

These measures include sanitary and phytosanitary measures taken to protect the health of fish and wild
fauna, as well as of forests and wild flora.
Source:Understanding the WTO Agreement on Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures, Geneva: WTO
1998. http://www.wto.org/english/tratop_e/sps_e/spsund_e.htm
The SPS Agreement contains (i)principles to which SPS measures must comply; and (ii)
recommendations for harmonization with standards developed by international bodies such as Codex
Alimentarius, the International Plant Protection Convention (IPPC), and the International Organization
for Animal Health (OIE). However, countries are allowed to apply stricter requirements as long as these
measures are based on scientific justification. Countries may also apply fewer and less stringent
standards.
In general, SPS measures must comply with the following WTO principles:
1. Non-discrimination.Measures are applied equally to importers as well as domestic producers. All
trading partners are subject to the same requirements.
2. Transparency. Information on SPS measures is easily accessible. There are set procedures for
notification of new or amended measures to the WTO. Each country must establish an SPS Enquiry
Point.
3. Minimal trade disruption.Measures are not more trade-disruptive than required to achieve their
appropriate level of sanitary or phytosanitary protection.
4. Equivalence.There is mutual recognition among trading partners of different measures that achieve
the same level of protection.
5. Use of science-based measures.Measures to protect plant, animal, and human health are based on
scientific principles with sufficient scientific evidence. Generally, this requires the assessment of risks
involved and the definition of the level of risk that is acceptable.
6. Regionalization within countries.This principle recognizes the possibility of disease- or pestaffected countries having disease- or pest-free areas or regions and allowing exports from such
disease- or pest-free areas or regions.

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These principles are intended to avoid that SPS measures are used for protectionist purposes and to ensure
they are not unnecessarily restricting trade. In particular the principle on minimal trade disruption gives
a legal foundation for trade facilitation measures under the SPS WTO framework.
These and other WTO principles are used by ASEAN and GMS (Greater Mekong Sub-Region) countries
as the basis for harmonization and economic integration with the stated objective that countries in the
region are progressively implementing similar SPS measures. The WTO SPS Agreement provides
disciplines for measures that apply to imports. Implementation of those disciplines by trading partners
should lead to less disguised protection and greater opportunities for trade.
Designing and implementing SPS measures are technically complicated and expensive processes. Many
countries tend to give higher priority to promoting exports than to protection of health. Since their exports
face SPS import requirements in other countries the preoccupation often is with SPS management
capacity that can be used for gaining and maintaining market access for specific products in specific
countries, so-called product-market combinations. While there is scope for targeting SPS measures
linked to market access for specific product-market combinations, it is important to outline a number of
critical limitations. Many resources needed for SPS import controls and for obtaining export market
access are the same. Without such basic resources, imports cannot be controlled effectivelyand market
access cannot be promoted. Capacity for different products, pests, and diseases has much in
common,while SPS import requirements differ much between countries and products. Importantly,
requirements are evolving all the time.
AFF Exports from Cambodia
The Growing Importance of AFF Exports for Cambodia:As discussed in Chapter 1, Cambodias foreign
trade statistics understate actual volume because of large unrecorded exports and imports in agriculture,
food, and forestry (AFF) products, especially with Thailand and Vietnam which are the two main
destinations for unrecorded trade. Chapter 1 provides an estimate for 2011 unrecorded exports of four
agricultural commodities (rice, cassava, corn and soybeans) ranging between $575 million and $1.2
billion. The data in Chapter 1 are based on estimates of exportable surplus.
Mirror trade data are used often to compensate for more limited data at the country level. However,
experts suggest that the boom inunrecorded exports of rice, cassava, rubber, corn, or other AFF
commoditiesthat has taken place over the past five years may not be well reflected in the Thai or
Vietnamese mirror trade dataas of yet.
The data shown in tables 4.1 and 4.2 are based on available mirror data for Cambodia, Lao PDR, and
Myanmar. Like data available from national government bodies, mirror data have their own limitations
leading possibly to either under- or over-estimation. Notwithstanding their limitations, the data are useful
indicators of AFF trade flows within GMS and changes that have taken place in Cambodia over the past
ten years or so.
Table 4.1 suggests that Cambodias AFF sector is strongly interwoven with GMS countries.In 2011
nearly 70 percent of AFF export from Cambodia ($549 million out of $796 million) was destined to three

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GMS countries Thailand, Vietnam, and China and approximately 85 percent of Cambodias AFF
imports ($840 million out of $979 million) came from three GMS countries Thailand, Vietnam and
China.
In 2011, about half of all AFF exports to other GMS countries ($ 10.2 billion) were from Thailand, nearly
$ 4.5 billion from Viet Nam, and $ 3.6 billion from China.
Table 4.1: Estimates of GMS Exports and Imports of AFF Products, $millions, 2011
A. Exports of Agriculture, Food, and Forestry Products (AFF) 2011

From
Cambodia
China
Lao PDR
Myanmar
Thailand
Vietnam
Total
GMS

To Cambodia

China Lao PDR

Myanmar Thailand Vietnam

GMS

OECD

Others

Total

796
53,155
843
2,760
44,080
21,385

18
637
185

103
285
539
8,071
4,025

3
394
20

59
390
3

52
1,586
110
139
259

393
157
90
549
1,936 3,602 29,899 19,654
343
101
4
739
80
244 1,759
757
714 10,206 19,902 13,972
- 4,492 9,188 7,705

840

13,024

416

452

2,147

3,466 20,345 59,491 43,184 123,019

B. Imports of Agriculture, Food, and Forestry Products (AFF) 2011

By
Cambodia
China
Lao PDR
Myanmar
Thailand
Vietnam
Total
GMS

From Cambodia

103
52
393
549

China Lao PDR

Myanmar Thailand Vietnam

GMS

OECD

Others

Total

979
84,905
427
822
10,425
9,150

3
59
1,019
493

285
110
343

539
139
80

637
7,947
394
390
589

185
81
58
840
2,387 11,261 35,748 37,896
20
9
2
416
3
97
273
452
298 1,617 4,108 4,700
- 1,898 3,192 4,060

1,591

739

757

9,957

2,892 16,485 43,234 46,988 106,707

18

Source:ADB, GMS SPS Project Preparation, 2009; Project Preparatory Technical Assistance Update, 2011
Note: For Cambodia, Lao PDR, and Myanmar, data based on mirror export and import statistics from trading
partners obtained through World Integrated Trade Solution (WITS) from Comtrade.

Table 4.2, also based on mirror statistics, suggests that Cambodias AFF imports and exports have been
growing rapidly.On the basis of mirror statistics, total AFF exports grew nearly ten-folded from $ 77
million in 2001 to $ 796 million in 2011. Main growth was in cereals, vegetables and fruit (includes dried
cassava and cashew), oil seeds, rubber and wood and wood products. Total recorded AFF imports grew
from $135 million in 2001 to $ 979 million in 2011 in response to increased income and diversified
demand.

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Table 4.2: Estimates of AFF Product Exports and Imports by Cambodia based on Mirror Data,
$ thousand, 2001-2011
2001

Imports
2009

2011

2001

Exports
2009

2011

Total AFF Products

134,601

603,322

979,078

77,433

285,120

796,233

Food &Live Animals

132,201

601,069

973,339

23,033

119,631

375,593

214
387
16,726
7,716
22,403
12,620
49,352
1,358
1,501
19,924

46,526
2,346
48,943
23,555
61,714
51,560
194,810
11,488
59,287
100,838

52,109
26,750
73,128
29,071
106,353
55,154
292,634
32,757
121,400
183,984

1,869
0
1,868
14,186
1,175
2,336
22
21
19
1,537

8,968
393
3
11,623
22,660
70,405
260
598
1,316
3,405

12,143
28
0
17,410
138,478
177,280
16,105
1,501
12,621
26

2,400

2,253

5,739

54,400

165,489

420,640

311
1,898
48
143

658
968
601
26

2,010
3,572
137
20

233
30,112
23,471
583

23,323
92,544
49,106
516

5,617
321,147
93,162
714

Live animals except fish


Meat & preparations
Dairy products & eggs
Fish/shellfish/etc.
Cereals/cereal preparation
Vegetables and fruit*
Sugar/sugar prep/honey
Coffee/tea/cocoa/spices
Animal feed ex un-milled cereals
Miscellaneous food products

Non-Food Products
Oil seeds
Natural rubber
Wood and wood products
Nat. gum/resin/pharm. plants etc

Source: ADB,GMS Action Plan, 2001; ADB,GMS SPS Project Preparation, 2009; Project Preparatory Technical
Assistance Update, 2011
Note: Based on mirror export and import data of Cambodias trading partners obtained through World Integrated Trade
Solution (WITS) from Comtrade.
* fresh and dried cassava are classified in SITC as vegetables and fruit

Information provided elsewhere in this report suggests that, while Cambodia is making progress in
exporting semi-processed and processed AFF products through official channels, much of its AFF exports
continue to leave the country unprocessed and informally. The two main destinations are Thailand and
Vietnam. Acceptance of informal imports in those two countries is based in part on the facts that (i)
phytosanitary risks of imports from Cambodia are considered limited because of similarity in ecosystem,
(ii) food safety and quality requirements for imports from Cambodia are low, (iii) processing, storage, and
logistics systems are better developed, and, (iv) handling costs are generally significantly lower than in
Cambodia.
Priority AFF Export Sectors:As part of its diversification efforts, RGC is seeking to promote AFF
exports, especially in milled rice, semi-processed cassava, natural rubber, processed fish, and processed
food.
Milled Rice: Milled rice is a much differentiated product characterized by different kinds of rice
(white rice, aromatic rice, others), varieties, and qualities, by many markets with different tariffs,
preferences for quality, and SPS requirements. Profitability of the many product-market combinations

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varies greatly with requirements and market conditions. At present, Cambodia produces a combination of
fragrant rice and non-aromatic rice with exportable surplus in both.
SPS requirements for export of aromatic rice to Thailand and white rice to Vietnam are limited. In
principle, regulatory requirements, if any, can be taken care of by means of the phytosanitary certificates
issued by the General Directorate for Agriculture of the Ministry of Agriculture (MAFF/GDA) and Thai
and Vietnamese traders. However, requirements may differ much between low and high quality market
segments within these countries.
SPS requirements for the EUare more stringent and include testing for pesticide residues, aflatoxin, and
salmonella, assurance of absence of genetically modified organisms (GMO), fumigation (absence of
storage pests,) and phytosanitary certificates. Requirements of private buyers tend to give different weight
to particular parameters and GMP or HACCP46 certification of the millers. Only GDA can issue
phytosanitary certificates and provide information about the pest and disease situation for rice in the
country, but private inspection companies take care of all other required testing and certification. The
intensity of testing (and related cost) will depend on the risk of non-compliance. In particular testing for
GMO is expensive. The cost of testing could be reduced by effective (public sector) surveillance of GMO
and quality of pesticides, which reduces risk on non-compliance. Typically, testing is done in accredited
laboratories in Thailand, Vietnam, or other country of choice of the private inspection company.
SPS requirements for China are even more demanding since they include traceability.47This involves
indication of the rice variety, the place of production, the packing house, and storage house. Similar to
the EU, China requires phytosanitary certificates, fumigation, and based on general food safety
requirements testing will be necessary for pesticide residues, aflatoxin, and possibly GMO. This will
require RGC to register production areas, producers, seed (varieties used), mills, storage and transport, to
conduct surveillance of rice pests and diseases, and probably pesticides used in the production areas.
China requires services of the private China Certification and Inspection Company (CCIC), which is
related to the General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection, and Quarantine (AQSIQ), the
Chinese public quarantine and inspection service. CCIC provides services comparable to other private
inspection services but it has an exclusive gate keeper role for import into China. CCIC sends samples for
testing to Bangkok, Ho Chi Minh City, Hong Kong, or China.
SPS requirements for other countries will generally range between those for Thailand and Vietnam, and
the EU. The tasks for Government services are (i) registration and surveillanceand (ii) compliance with
agreed protocols. Registration and surveillance are technically not very complicated but require good
organization. Surveillance can be costly due to the need for field surveys, testing and diagnostics.
Opportunities for charging farmers for surveillance seem quite limited. If anything, they might
undermine the financial sustainability of the export supply chain. Export inspections and certification of
milled rice are conducted by Camcontrol. They are not required by importing countries but an internal

46

HACCP is a quality and safety management system


Traceability is a general requirement of market access agreements between China and its GMS neighbors. Registration of
production and storage establishments usually includes GHP/GMP thresholds. The (draft) protocol for milled rice exports
between China and Cambodia dated October 2010 has no explicit requirements on food safety testing MRLs for pesticides and
heavy metals as is the case for the protocol for cassava dated 13 December 2010.
47

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requirement in MOC to obtain a certificate of origin. Since they are unlikely to have value added, they
erode profitability of formal exports.
As of December 2012 reported exports of milled rice to China have been very limited (approximately 20
tons per month) whereas exports to other countries have been growing significantly. It is not clear yet
whether complexity of the requirements or profitability is the main constraint for export to China.
Cassava:Cassava is easy to grow on sandy uplands. It requires little or no fertilizer and
pesticides. Cassava became a major crop in Northeast Thailand from the 1960s onward in response to
rapidly expanding transport infrastructure and external demand. As a result the cultivated land area grew
rapidly. In recent years production has spread rapidly to Cambodia, Laos, and Vietnam in response to
relatively high prices for cassava starch and the use of cassava to produce ethanol (to be mixed partly with
gasoline), animal feed, or alcoholic beverage. After harvesting, roots are chipped and spread on pads for
drying in the sun. After light processing, the product is ready to be sold as pellets, chips, or flour. If the
product is dried on dirt pads it will get mixed with soil and create opportunities for mold contamination.
SPS requirements for export to Thailand and Vietnam hardly exist. In case of storage or export, traders
in these countries will probably fumigate the product. SPS requirements for China are much more
demanding and include traceability.48 This involves registration of production areas, producers,
surveillance of cassava pests and pesticides used in production areas, registration of cassava drying
factories and storage plants, phytosanitary certificates, fumigation, and probably testing of residues of
pesticides and heavy metals contaminants. China requires services of the same inspection company
(CCIC) as for rice. By December 2012 CCIC had approved 20 companies for exports. Export volumes
to China are increasing steadily, which suggests that export to China is commercially attractive and
requirements not too difficult. However, the Cambodian Government services will need to spend
resources to put in place the required surveillance and registration systems. SPS requirements of other
countries are likely to be limited as in the case of Thailand and Vietnam, but fumigation and perhaps
phytosanitary certificates may be required. As for milled rice, mandatory inspection and certification of
exports has no added value from an SPS/TBT perspective. It only increases transaction costs and should
be done away with.
Fisheries Products:Most inland fisheries products are consumed in the domestic markets. Some are
exported to Thai and Vietnamese markets with low requirements for quality and safety. Aquaculture
production is increasing but it is still mainly oriented towards similar low requirement markets. Large
parts of the catch of marine fisheries products is probably landed in Thailand orVietnam or sold at sea to
large vessels from Taiwan, Hong Kong, and a few other countries. A few large-scale Cambodian fish
traders and processors export to Japan, Korea, Australia, and the USA. However, such exports remain
limited and fluctuating because of the lack of a regular catch supply of suitable quality. Buyers in those
countries require that exporting plants meet standards of hygiene and GMP. Market access in those
countries appears to be much dependent on guidance from the importing companies. Only one company
in Cambodia has HACCP in place at present. A few of the other companies reportedly come close to
HACCP standards but do not want to invest in upgrading and benchmarking because the markets do not
require those. If there would be interesting export opportunities they could quickly adopt HACCP.
48

Protocol on Phytosanitary Requirements for the Export of Tapioca from Cambodia to China, signed 13 December 2010.

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The EU requirements for market access are more demanding than for other countries. They include not
only HACCP approvals of processing plants prior to export but also recognition of the countrys
competent authority (CA). The Fisheries Administration (FiA) is the designated CA. However,
recognition as CA for export to the EU can only be obtained if the FiA has the capacity to control
traceability throughout the supply chain from catch or cultivation to export. In 2002 a team of EU
inspectors assessed the capacities of the FiA and identified gaps to be addressed. Laboratory capacity in
the FiA and other laboratories (CamControl, ILCC, and Pasteur) includes testing microbiology, but,
except for Camcontrol,does not include the expensive testing equipment for MRLs of heavy metals and
antibiotics that will most likely be required by the EU.49FiA uses testing by Pasteur to issue health
certificates because it is trusted abroad more than other laboratories.
Technically the EU requirements are clear. They are the same as for other fish exporting countries in the
region, and systems, equipment, and service providers are readily available. The two main challenges for
the Government are (i) to upgrade the organization and skills of the FiA and (ii) and to sustain
organization and skills in part through appropriate funding to cover the significant costs of operating a
CA. The main other constraint for export to demanding markets is the insufficient and erratic supply of
exportable product from catch and aquaculture. A successful export strategy will depend in part on the
ability of exporters to generate sufficient supply of quality product through improved supply chain
organization. High regulatory costs may make supply to low demanding informal markets more
competitive.
Apart from the question of access to the EU market, there will be a need to upgrade sanitary standards in
Cambodian fisheries in response to increased demand for quality and safety in all market segments
domestically or overseas.
Processed Food:Requirements for food processing in demanding markets are straight forward:
application of HACCP-based quality management systems. Systems, equipment, and service providers
are readily available in the region. Most difficulty for food processors aiming at demanding export
markets is to manage safe and secure supply chains of raw materials either through large scale production
or systems of contract farming. The role of Government is more to mitigate bottlenecks in the investment
climate than direct intervention. It should keep the regulatory burden low, including informal payments,
and it should focus on relevant public goods such as surveillance of the quality and safety of pesticides,
veterinary drugs and growth enhancers in the market. Testing of residue levels and contaminants in
exported food can generally be left to the food processors and their customers.
Rubber:Rubber products generally face no SPS requirements and market access problems(except
for fumigation of wooden cratesused to export natural rubber.)Important for profitability of rubber export
is product quality which will be discussed in the next main thematic sectionfocusing on Technical
Standards. Yet, there is a role for the public sector in controlling the risk of entry and spread of pests and
diseases on rubber trees. This risk management requires control on imports of planting material and pest
surveillance in the field.
49

Camcontrol hasthe appropriateequipment for testing MRLs but lacks experience. Thus far, it has not received samples for using
HPLC, Graphite Furnace AAS, and GCMS.

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Other AFF Export Products:Other AFF exports that could lead to significant export might include corn,
soybean, fruits, vegetables, and cashew.
Corn:In recent years, corn production for grain has increased significantly in Laos and Cambodia
in response to relatively high international prices and growing demand in the GMS region, mainly for
animal feed production. This has happened largely through expansion of cultivated areas. Corn
cultivation generally requires fertilizer and pesticides. Aflatoxin contamination can be a problem for
product harvested under humid conditions, which should be mitigated by proper post-harvest practice and
use of dryers. On-farm shelling can result in soil and other foreign material contamination with the
product. Exports can go to neighboring Thailand or Vietnam as well as to China and other overseas
markets. As in the case of milled rice and cassava, current capacity for milling, storage and production in
Cambodia is limited and logistics and handling costs relatively high compared to Thailand and Vietnam.
SPS requirements for export to Thailand and Vietnamare limited, or moderate at most, and may include
phytosanitary-certificates and, occasionally, testing of pesticides residues and aflatoxin.50SPS
requirements of export of corn to China have not been included in a bilateral protocol as of yet. They
will include most likely traceability requirements similar to those for milled rice and cassava, as
evidenced from a comparable market access agreement for corn between China and Lao PDR.
Traceability requires registration of production areas, producers, and seed varieties used, surveillance of
maize pests and pesticides used in production areas, registration and GHP/GMP requirements for shelling
plants, drying facilities, storage and transport, phytosanitary certificates, fumigation, and probably regular
testing of pesticide residues, aflatoxin, and possible other contaminants. It is possible that drying plants
will be required to prevent mold and mycotoxins. Most likely, CCIC will provide the same services as
for milled rice and cassava. Cambodian Government services will be required to do the relevant
surveillance of pests and diseases and quality of pesticides and will bear the cost for this, including testing
of pesticides quality. SPS requirements to other overseas markets will range likely somewhere between
those for Thailand and Vietnam and those for China.
Other Crops:For crops that are currently exported, priority for Government should be on
collecting information on pests and diseases through conducting pest surveillanceas well as ensuring
safety and quality of pesticides in the market and as used by growers through market surveillance.
Compliance with food safety requirements should primarily be left to the exporters.
The SPS System in Cambodia
Since both capacity and costs of SPS management contribute to the competitiveness of formal and
informal supply chains, an important question is what type of efficient SPS system could contribute to
enhancing production and formal exportsin sectors targeted by RGC. RGC is also committed to comply
with its WTO commitments and similar commitments under ASEAN.

50
In years of surplus and low prices there may be political resentment to imports by farming communities in these countries as
was the case with corn exports from Lao PDR to Thailand a few years ago and import constraints may be tightened. So it will be
important to diversify export markets.

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The scope and sophistication of an SPS system differ with the size of a country, its level of economic
development, product mix, product-market combinations, and geopolitical location. Yet, crucial elements
of an effective SPS system are basically the same for all countries as described in Box 4.2.
Box 4.2: An Effective SPS System
At a minimum, an effective SPS system includes the following elements:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.

7.
8.
9.
10.

A legal and regulatory framework in place, implemented, and compliant with WTO principles
A suitable number of SPS standards and technical regulations in place, compliant with international
principles, and usable for conformity assessment and enforcement
Information on food safety, plant health (pest) and animal health (diseases), available to international
bodies and trading partners and allows risk analysis
Capacity to respond to emergencies and outbreaks
Risk-based import controls in place
Systems of quality assurance and risk management adopted that can be implemented by the private
sector, such as Good Agricultural Practice (GAP), Good Hygiene Practice (GHP), Good
Manufacturing Practice (GMP), Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points (HACCP)
Systems of conformity assessment and certification in place
Access to conformity testing and diagnostics that meets international requirements for recognition
Effective coordination across stakeholders with SPS mandates
Capacity to engage effectively in market access negotiations with trading partners

Notes:
a. Phytosanitary and veterinary certification can only be done by government. Most other tasks can be
left to service providers. Service providers for inspection, conformity assessment, diagnostics, and
certification need not be in the country, but there is a need for legal recognition of such work.
Accordingly, Government should provide some oversight, which implies that its staff needs to have basic
skills in performing these functions.
b. Items 2, 6, 7, and 8 include SPS and TBT issues.
Legal Framework:A robustlegal framework is the most important factor for compliance with
international commitments, cost-effective implementation of SPS measures and good governance.
Cambodia has made progress in developing a legal framework for guiding animal and plant health SPS
management.

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The main pieces of legislation are:

Law on the Management of Pesticides and Fertilizers promulgated in 2012


Law on Fisheries promulgated in 2006
Draft Law on Animal Health and Production submitted for Council of Ministers considerationin 2012
Sub-Decree on Phytosanitary Inspection promulgated in 2003
Draft Law on Phytosanitary Measures under preparation and targeted for submission to the National
Assembly in 2013.
Draft Law on Agricultural Product Quality and Safetytargeted for 2013.

MAFF has primary mandate for implementing these laws. A remaining challenge is to prepare the many
Anukret (sub-decrees) and Prakas (Regulations) needed for implementation.
The responsibility for food safety is shared among six ministries (MEF, MoC, MoH, MAFF, MIH, and
MoT) and still lacks a modern legislation comparable to those adopted by other ASEAN countries. Some
progress has been made by clarifying existing mandates of the respective Ministries through the InterMinisterial Prakas (No. UATH.BRK 868, 22 October 2010) on The Implementation and Institutional
Arrangements of Food Safety Based on the Farm to Table Approach.51However, the Prakas simply
clarifies the mandates of the Ministries but does not change the body of existing food safety
legislation.Since its adoption, little further action has been taken to start modifying the existing legal
framework and adding missing mandates. In comparison to other countries in the region, especially MOH
has missing legal mandates in food safety.52
With support from ADB, MoH is formulating a national food safety policy and prepared Prakas 1202
(October 24, 2012)On Modalities and Requirements for the Issuance of Mandatory Hygiene Certificate
for Restaurants and Catering Establishments as well as Prakas 1309 On Modalities and Guidelines for
the Issuance of the Voluntary Certificate of Good Hygiene Practice for Restaurants and Catering
Establishments.
The overall quality of the SPS legal framework deserves attention. Thus far, legislation has often been
developed in an ad-hocmanner and there is a lack of a comprehensive assessment of gaps, consistency
across legislations, terminology used, and compliance with WTO principles and ASEAN
recommendations. Because the preparation of laws is difficult and requires much time, the tendency is to
manage at the ministerial level through regulations (Prakas) that should be governed by or, at least
defined in primary (law) or secondary level (sub-decree) legal texts. Conversely, whenever a law has
been adopted, sub-decrees and regulations are often lacking to implementlaws.53The November
51

The use of the farm-to-table approach as the basis for institutional delineation was proposed in 2006 by the MUTRAP and
FAO/NZ food safety projects. See, Digby Gascoigne, Efficient and Effective Food Safety Arrangements for Cambodia, Phnom
Penh: MUTRAP, 2006a; Digby Gascoigne, Revitalizing and Strengthening Import and Domestic Food Inspection Programs in
Cambodia, Phnom Penh: MUTRAP, 2006b; Bourgeois, Improving Food Safety and Management in Cambodia, Lao PDR, and
Vietnam, Phnom Penh: FAO, 2006.
52
Missing mandates are listed in Table 1 of FAO, An Action Plan to Improve SPS Capacity in Cambodia. STDF Report 246,
Geneva: 2010.
53
For illustration: Developed countries may have 6-12 major laws for SPS and TBT. They will have a larger number of pieces of
secondary level legislation and a much larger number of regulations for implementation. Altogether there may be hundreds. For

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2011Trade Policy Review (TPR) organized by the WTO points to many outstanding issues of compliance
and legal quality.54In response to the TPR, the Council of Minister adopted in 2012 an updated work
program on complying with WTO requirements and related issues for the period 2012-2015.55This is a
follow up to a much larger work program adopted in 2004. The 2012-2015 program contains a list of 84
actions including several in the SPS TBT area.
Standard Setting: There is a backlog in standard setting for SPS measures (see also the discussion under
Technical Standards further below). There are virtually no national standards for safety of food and feed.
In particular national maximum residue limits (MRLs) for pesticides, veterinary drugs, and other
contaminants in food are missing. This means that inspectorates and testing laboratories are operating
without a proper regulatory framework for conformity assessment. Although Cambodia has agreed with
ASEAN recommendations in this area, ASEAN standards have no legal recognition in Cambodia as of
yet.
In the absence of national standards, MAFF has added MRLs for 42 pesticides in an Appendix to the
Ministerial Proclamation On Good Agricultural Practices for Fresh Fruit and Vegetables(MAFF
Ministerial Declaration #099 dated 10 March 2010) and MoH included Codex Standards in the Annex to
the aforementioned Prakas 1309 governing voluntary GHP/GMP certification grading of restaurants. The
MAFF draft Law on Agricultural Product Quality and Safety is also an attempt to fill the gap of missing
legislation on food safety at the primary and primary processing level. This scattered adoption of
standards at ministerial level is not best legal practice. The National Codex Committee is now considering
a sub-decree for establishing national MRLs on food.
Information for Market Access:Under the WTO-SPS Agreement, trading partners have the right, to ask
for information on animal diseases, plant pests, and the food safety situation based on international
standards to support decisions on market access. The country does not have sufficient surveillance as of
yet to provide such information. This also means that sanitary and phytosanitary certificates for export
may be based on insufficient information. The establishment of surveillance systems is being planned.
However, the scope and quality of this work will need to be strengthened by operational funding as well
as adoption of MRLs and other SPS standards from Codex Alimentarius, IPPC, and OIE.
The number of phytosanitary certificates issued has increased dramatically from 640 in 2010 to 1679 in
2011 and 7000 during the first 11 months of 2012. This reflects rapid production growth and the need for
certificates to export to neighboring countries. The issuance of phytosanitary certificates in Cambodia is
highly centralized compared to other countries in the region. Until recently, phytosanitary certificates
were issued only in Phnom Penh. A limited step has been taken to issue certificates for some products to
Vietnam at the border, but a decision to start issuance of certificates in the Northwest is still pending.
Still large quantities of AFF products are exported to neighboring countries without phytosanitary
certificates, though this could suddenly change. For example, in 2012, imports of AFF products into
developing countries like Cambodia the number of laws will be about the same, and a couple of dozens of pieces of secondary
and tertiary legislation.
54
See the Secretariat and Government reports prepared for the November 2011 Trade Policy Review at
https://docs.wto.org/dol2fe/Pages/FE_Search/FE_S_S006.aspx?Query=(%20@Symbol=%20wt/tpr*%20or%20press/tprb/*%20)
%20and%20(%20@Title=%20cambodia%20)&Language=ENGLISH&Context=FomerScriptedSearch&languageUIChanged=tru
e#
55
Office of the Council of Ministers, Work Program of the Royal Government of Cambodia on WTO Requirements and Related
Issues, 2012-201,Phnom Penh: CoM, 2012.

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Vietnam through one main border post were suspended suddenly until a Government to Government
agreement stipulated that those should be accompanied by phytosanitary certificates. Availability of
services and cost for obtaining certificates could be much improved by introduction of e-based systems,
first for requesting certificates and later also by issuance of certificates.
Emergency and Outbreak Response:Several development partners are helping MAF and MoH develop
capacity for emergency response in case of outbreaks of plant pests and diseases, animal diseases, and
food poisoning. Stronger capacity is needed to protect the country against the introduction and spread of
plant and animal pests and diseases that could damage production and cause problems of market access
for exports. In order to mitigate the risk of entry of pests and diseases through seed and propagation
material, post-entry quarantine (PEQ) is being planned.
Risk-Based Import Handling and Controls: There are agreements between MEF and other ministries
about implementing risk-based import management systems for border release procedures, but it will take
much effort to develop the necessary capacity and systems. The current organization of the inspectorates
based on paper-based workflows will thwart implementation of risk-based systems in the immediate
future. Since risk-based inspections are largely public goods and cannot depend solely on fees, also
funding issues have to be resolved.
Cambodia needs a food safety policy and strategy to protect consumers against sub-grade and unsafe
food. The strategy should be implemented through risk-based annual national programs for promoting
hygiene, surveillance and inspection, supported by food testing.
Testing and Diagnostic Capacity: Although gradual improvement has been made, building testing and
diagnostic capacity comparable to those in most other ASEAN countries and adequate to facilitate
protection of health, will take sustained efforts over a long period of time.
There are five laboratories with foodtestingcapacity: Camcontrol (MoC), ILCC (MIH), MoH laboratory
for drug and food, MAFF Fisheries Administration (FiA), and Pasteur (independent). None of the food
laboratories, except ILCC and Camcontrol, has adequate capacity for testing residues of pesticides,
veterinary drugs and growth enhancers, heavy metals and other contaminants.56Camcontrol has a
relatively new, well-equipped chemical testing laboratory with sophisticated equipment, young staff, and
increased remunerations.57 Most likely, MAFF will also obtain laboratories for testing quality and safety
of primary plant and animal products, financed through a planned $7 million Chinese
support.58MAFF/GDA has a well-equipped laboratory for testing quality and safety of pesticides,
laboratories with basic capacity for diagnostics ofplant and animal pests and diseases, but does not
have laboratory capacity for testing veterinary drugs and growth enhancersas of yet.
In general, most existing laboratory capacity is still weak, despite significant donor support received in
the past. One point of view is that the lack of modern equipment is the main bottleneck for upgrading
56

ILCC and Camcontrol have begun developing capacity in pesticides.


Funded through 30% of anti-fraud income.
58
The support reportedly includes a building, equipment, and operational costs for three years. It will be built in 2013 at the Prek
Leap University located 12km from Phnom Penh. The institutional arrangement for the laboratory and the funding after
termination of the external support has to be decided.
57

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laboratories. Experience from other countries suggests otherwise. Management, organization, work
programs, and recurring operating funding are equally important bottlenecks that have to be solved.
Likewise, the small number of samples collected for testing and diagnostics causes underutilization of
equipment and staff and stifles building of expertise in testing. In addition, weak incentives for laboratory
specialists and the consequent high turn-over to positions in inspectorates where incentives are betterare a
serious hindrance to proper development of experienced staff.
The number of tests of food and water conducted by Camcontrol, the main inspectorate for food safety,
has increased from 1240 in 2008 to 1950 in 2011. ILCC carried out about 3,500 tests in 2012, whereas the
numbers of food tests by other food laboratories are much lower. Although increasing, these numbers are
still nearly insignificant for a country of the size of Cambodia and given the range of equipment available.
Present Government procurement procedures for laboratory supplies and spare parts lead to great
inefficiency. Supply and spare part lists must be submitted for central procurement more than a year
ahead. Robust estimation of needs so far ahead is impossible which leads to either excess of supplies, or
supplies running beyond expiration dates, or critical shortages that block the ability to test.
Because of their weakness, most laboratories have no international accreditation and opportunities for
obtaining it seem remote. ILCC is the only food laboratory with ISO 17025 accreditation (for 11 test
parameters).59 It is generating its volume of samples for testing and major part of its funding through fees
from regulatory powers. It should be noted that this is not based on private sector demand and because it
is not risk-based it is not international good practice.
Private sector demand for conformity testing of product quality and safety within the country is small and
should not be expected to increase dramatically in the medium term. As in many other countries, major
exporters use accredited testing facilities in other countries. Cambodian exporters generally use testing
facilities in Thailand, Vietnam, or the country of destination of goods. Also importers can request their
suppliers to provide conformity testing certificates from other countries. Preference of many regular
international traders is to use private laboratories rather than public regulatory laboratories since they
work 24/7 and provide quick results. Moreover, in some market segments, foreign buyers allow only third
party independent laboratories.
Cambodia, like other countries, needs a minimum number of regulatory laboratories with basic capacities
for testing food, pesticides and veterinary drugs, and diagnosis of animal and plant pests and diseases.60
Priority for all regulatory laboratories in Cambodia should be:

Annual work programs with much larger numbers of testing samples both to make use of available
capacity and to maintain technical skills of personnel;
Gradual improvement in the quality of basic testing and diagnostic services and broadening of
technical capacity;
Improved management and adoption of Good Laboratory Practice (GLP);

59

ILCC has received support since 2004 from UNIDO and in recent years also from ADB.
Views expressed on laboratory upgrading in this report are largely in line with the laboratory section in FAO, An Action Plan
to Improve SPS Capacity in Cambodia. STDF Report 246, Geneva: 2010.
60

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A gradual shift towards some financial autonomy, sufficient to help retain trained personnel and to
cover the cost of laboratory supplies;
A MEF-approved fee structure for tests carried out by Government laboratories, based on
transparency and proper use of public resources; and,
Output-based public funding based on work programs and number of regulatory tests.

Present duplication in food testing capacities is not a serious problem and not causing high inefficiency
because the equipment is relatively simple.61With adequate operational funding for regulatory testing
there should be enough basic testing work for all. Beyond that, there are no guidelines yet for making
good use of advanced expensive equipment for testing, for example for pesticide residues and veterinary
drugs with detection levels required in demanding markets. Duplication of such equipment should be
avoided. Any procurement should be based on a clear understanding that appropriate operational funding
will be available and on some agreement among agencies about joint fee-based use by all.
Quality Assurance and Conformity Assessment: GAP, GHP, GMP, HACCP and other hazard
preventive systems have been adopted in Prakas and ISC standards and can be implemented by private
enterprises. However, the country needs a national legal framework for conformity assessment and
certification of such systems that meets international recognition. For international recognition
certification by accredited service providers from other countries is the only option. Fortunately, such
services are readily available in neighboring countries.
Coordination: Unlike more advanced GMS and ASEAN countries, Cambodia has no effective interministerial SPS coordination mechanism as of yet for discussion of cross-cutting issues, joint planning
and implementation, mitigation of possible inter-agency jurisdiction overlaps, and alignment of activities.
The Inter-Ministerial Committee for Coordinating Inspection of Quality and Safety of Products and
Services, chaired by the Minister of Commerce, is mandated to coordinate work and activities of line
ministries concerned with food safety management, but from its establishment in 2002 till mid 2010 it
never met. The National Codex Committee, established in 2001 and also chaired the Minister of
Commerce has been inactive as well. There have been recent efforts to activate both committees. The
SPS Enquiry Point and the Notification Authority are not functioning well. Contact points and
information should be available on the WTO and MoC web sites and notifications should be made.
Contacts with IPPC and OIE appear to be more frequent than with Codex Alimentarius.
Cross-Cutting SPS Issues:Two cross-cutting issues deserve special attention: Funding SPS Operations
and SPS Governance.
Funding Operations: Building and operating an effective public SPS system requires annual
public operating funding. To date there is very limited operational funding available for surveillance,
inspection, testing, and diagnostics. Legal provisions for funding generally stipulate that fees for
activities will be established through joint Prakas between MEF and line ministries. This is good practice
for firm- or user-specific services. However, many activities and controls for food safety, plant, and
animal health have a public goods character for which possibilities for recovering costs through fees are
61

Some consolidation of laboratory capacity remains an option to consider.

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limited or absent. Funding options are analyzed in Table 3 below. The table covers both SPS and
Technical Standards tasks (Technical standards are discussed in the next major heading of this chapter).
In the current Cambodian context, the tendency is to use regulatory powers as para-fiscal instruments and
for rent-seeking. Common examples are:

More inspections are carried out than necessary. For example 100 percent inspection is applied, when
a risk-based system, with differentiated inspection rates, would be good international practice;
Many superficial inspections are carried out that do not significantly contribute to safety, such as
routine document controls at the border and routine visits to establishments and market traders;
Requirements for import licenses, permits, and certificates, and additional inspections are introduced
whereas such documents or controls may not be justified by risk assessment;
Mandatory inspections and certification for exports are introduced even though they are not required
by foreign buyers or importing countries;
Agencies set high fee rates for restricted supply of services, such as fumigation; and,
Agencies demand the use of mandatory standards and public inspections, whereas good international
practice would only require voluntary standards.

Unnecessary controls and informal payments add to the cost of doing business for the private sector,
which is high when compared to Thailand and Vietnam. Since the regulatory and tax burden targets
primarily the formal sector there is a high incentive for enterprises, traders, and exporters to remain
informal. This has two main undesirable consequences.First, informal trade and smuggling cause higher
risks to health protection. Traders of sub-grade and unsafe consumer goods, pesticides, and veterinary
drugs will try to escape controls and seek to enter the country through informal channels. Effective
control of transboundary animal diseases requires high control rates that are difficult to achieve on an
informal trade basis. Second, by escaping most of the regulatory burden, the informal sector undermines
the competitive edge of the formal sector. For example the formal rice milling sector faces a high
regulatory burden and has to compete for paddy with informal traders who export paddy to millers in
neighboring countries that have a lower regulatory burden.62 In short, public funding for public goods is
important to remove distortive and negative impacts on business competitiveness.
Governance.Quality and cost-effectiveness of SPS management require good governance.
Because of their complex technical, managerial, institutional, and human-resource requirements, and their
significant financial costs, SPS systems in many developing countries are often weak. This is the case
forCambodia. Mandates of SPS agencies need to be strong, but combined with insufficient governance,
they tend to lead to rent-seeking behavior that impacts negatively on the quality and cost-effectiveness of
operations. Low public funding strengthens institutional bias toward activities that can generate fees and
these activities may not be highest priority areas from a perspective of health protection.
Moreover, in a rent-seeking culture there is limited interest in reform necessary for trade facilitation.
Therefore, strengthening governance is a priority for most SPS agencies. Increasing salaries as the
62

The deleterious impact of regulatory burden on rice trade is well documented bySok Siphana and Associates, Operationalizing
the Rectangular Strategy for Growth: Towards Better Business Processes, Presentation of Findings to the Supreme National
Economic Council, Phnom Penh: SNEC, February 24, 2011and Tom Slayton and Sok Muniroth, Turning Rice into Gold, Phnom
Penh: World Bank, unpublished study, 2012

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Government has started to do is one aspect of improving governance. Other aspects include improving
the regulatory framework, strengthening the rule of law and accountability, and improving transparency.
Market Access Negotiations: Capacity for market access negotiations with trading partners needs to be
strengthened. This involves technical skills of staff, back-up research capacity, and provision of data
required by the trading partners. Without sufficient capacity, Cambodia could be subject to unnecessary
precautionary measures by trading partners.
Progress and Current Limitation: Progress has been made in capacity building for SPS, in particular in
the formulation of legislation, in the development of technical capacity for pest and disease surveillance
and diagnostics, and in testing of food and pesticides. However, a number of weaknesses in the
Cambodian SPS system remainthat constrain access to more demanding and better paying markets and
more effective protection against the risks of trade related health hazards. Weaknesses include:

Limitations in providing adequate information about pests, diseases, and use of agrochemicals as
required by importing countries due to weak surveillance systems
Very limited adoption, thus far, of hazard prevention systems such as GAP, GHP, GMP, and HACCP
in exporting firms
Remaining gaps and deficiencies in the SPS legal framework including: (i) absence of decrees and
regulations needed for implementation of laws, (ii) non-compliance to the WTO Agreements, and (iii)
lack of key laws including a modern food law comparable to that of neighboring countries
Backlog in adoption of international SPS standards at the national level, including standards and
MRL recommended by ASEAN
Weak SPS coordination including inter-ministerial cooperation and management of enquiry point and
notification body
Weaknesses in the management, organization, funding, and technical competency of regulatory SPS
laboratories
Insufficient funding for public goods constraining surveillance and risk-based inspection

Possible directions for resolving and mitigating weaknesses might include:

Enhance market access of export products by implementing regular surveillance programs for pests
and diseases and for the use of agrochemicals as required by importing countries
Strengthen market access through implementation of GHP, GMP, or HACCP by exporting firms and,
selectively, implementation of GAP at farm and aquaculture level
Continue efforts to develop further a consistent and WTO compliant body of SPS legislation
Strengthen coordination in SPS management, including, in particular,food safety management and
coordination for adoption of national MRL standards
Pursue development of further capacity in SPS laboratories
Better define public goods in the areas of surveillance, inspection, diagnostics, and testing, and to
improve funding modalities. This needs to be done in consultation with MEF.

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Conformity assessment quality


and safety required by private
sector
Active surveillance on
transboundary animal
diseases, quarantine, and nonquarantine pests, safety of food
and food handling, and quality
and safety of pesticides and
veterinary drugs

Standard setting for market


efficiency, grading, and quality
(not SPS, but TBT)

Setting SPS safety standards


(technical regulations) for
health protection of crops,
livestock, consumers
TBT technical regulations for
safety protection of consumers,
enterprises, environment
Regulatory inspections,
including sampling and testing
for enforcement of SPS and
TBT safety standards

Setting legal and regulatory


framework

Tasks
Awareness raising at all levels

Government mandate

Set mandatory standards for


domestic markets; sometimes also
for exports
To issue licenses, permits, and to
verifycompliance with public
requirements for protection of
consumers, livestock and crops
against health hazards
To set typically voluntary
standards for transparency in
markets with the goal of reducing
transaction costs
To confirm compliance with
quality and safety conditions in
contract
To provide information needed:
(i) to meet requests from
importing countries for access to
their markets; (ii) for risk
analysis to manage plant and
animal health, and food safety;
(iii) to justify SPS restrictions to
importers

Largely public
sector; some
scope for cost
recovery

Largely public
sector

Largely public
sector

Largely public
sector

Funding options
Largely public
sector

Largely public
Many commodity and industry
sector
standards have been developed by
private sector organizations (ISO,
commodity markets)
Fully private
Public responsibility for legal
Full responsibility for obtaining
sector
recognition, contract enforcement
conformity compliance documents
from public or private providers
Fully public sector
Private enterprises will not fund
Active surveillance, testing,
these services; however, private
diagnostics, maintenanceof
providers may be contracted for
databases, and provision of
providing some of these services
information are basically public
goods and their funding is public
responsibility
Adoption/recognition of standards
is mostly public role

Government mandate

Advocacy for update and changes.


Participation in legal reform and
drafting
Some services could be
subcontracted to private providers

Government mandate

Set mandatory standards for


domestic markets; sometimes also
for exports

Private sector role


Private sector associations could
provide some awareness-raising
services within their domain. Most
associations are weak.
Advocacy for update and changes.
Participation in legal reform and
drafting
Advocacy for update and changes.
Participation in legal reform and
drafting

Public sector role


To provide information, education,
and advocacy

Government mandate

To create a reference framework


and set out transparent rules

Purpose
To alert public and private
stakeholders about health and
market access risks

Table 4.3: Public and Private Sector Roles in Key SPS and TBT Tasks

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113

To meet certification
requirements of trading partners
based on international standards
and requirements(e.g., IPPC,
OIE and Codex). Mostly not
required for food products
To meet conformity assessment
requirements of many buyers as
a means to ensure safety and
quality of products
To assessing the safety status of
products. To identify or rule out
existence of pests and diseases.
Limited demand by private
enterprises.

To protect consumers, animals


crops; prevent spread of
economic damage
To assist producers in meeting
process and product standards
required by importing countries

To carry out fact finding to


generate information used by
TBT regulators, for risk analysis,
and by trading partners

Basically private services, although


Government may regulate
certification and accreditation of
service providers
Regulatory food testing as well as
plant and veterinary diagnostic
services for surveillance and
inspection depend largely on
public funding. Governments
generally prefer having their own
diagnostic capacityin order to
support regulatory tasks and not be
dependent on private providers and
laboratories abroad

Because of possible negative and


positive spillover effects, the
Government can use regulation,
subsidy, and investment to
encourage implementation by the
private sector
Government mandate, but since
these are toll goods (only
partially public goods) private
sector can be charged a fee

Public responsibility; typical


public good

Government mandate

Private sector laboratories can


perform many testing services, but
usually offer a limited range of
services. They play very limited
roles in diagnostics for plant,
animal, and human health in
developing countries.

Private enterprises can be charged;


most services can be provided
privately

Some possibilities to contract


private enterprises as service
providers

Private enterprises will not fund


these services, but may participate
in the effort
Basically a private sector function
with possible spill-over effects

Some services could be


subcontracted to private providers

Largely public
sector

Largely private
sector

Fully private sector

Largely private
sector

Largely public
sector

Fully public sector

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Source:Edited fromADB, Trade Facilitation: Improved Sanitary and Phytosanitary Handling in Greater Mekong Subregion Trade Project.
Economic Analysis.Manila: ADB, 2012

Operating diagnostic and


testing laboratories

Conformity assessment of
traded goods

Issuance of phyto, animal


health, and food safety
certificates to confirm safety of
products and/or absence of
pests, diseases and specific
health hazards

Implementation of GAP, GMP,


HACCP (quality assurance
systems) by producers

Outbreak response

Active surveillance of safety of


non-food products, processes,
environment (TBT)

Technical Standards
This second thematic section is divided into three sub-sections. The first sub-sectionsummarizes the
principles of the WTO-TBT Agreement. The second sub-section discusses the role of quality management
as well as and standards and technical regulations with special attention to the selected priority export
sectors. It is followed by a third sub-section focusing on the TBT system in Cambodia and capacity
needed to support Government policy.
The WTO TBT Agreement
The WTO Agreement on Technical Barriers to Trade aims to ensure that regulations, standards, testing,
and certification procedures do not create unnecessary obstacles, while also providing members with the
right to implement measures to achieve legitimate policy objectives, such as the protection of human
health and safety, or the environment.63 Principles and recommendations of the TBT Agreement include:
1. Minimal trade disruption. Avoidance of unnecessary obstacles to trade
2. Non-discrimination. Non-discrimination between countries and between domestic and foreign
enterprises
3. Harmonization. Recommended harmonization with international standards such as those prepared
under the auspices of the International Standardization Organization (ISO), the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC), and the International Telecommunication Union (ITU)
4. Equivalence. Acceptance of equivalence
5. Mutual recognition. Recommendation to enter into mutual recognition agreements
6. Transparency. Transparency obligation through notification of technical regulations and through the
operations of an Enquiry Point
7. Code of Good Practice. Acceptance and compliance with the Code of Good Practice for the
Preparation, Adoption and Application of Standards (Annex 3 of the TBT Agreement)
Cambodian Exports: Moving up the Value Chain and Meeting Technical Standards
Quality
Standards, grading, and conformity assessment are important tools for quality management and
coordination in the supply chains. For many traded products, such as for rubber and milled rice, there are
international private product standards and grading scalesthat can be used in contracts and by supplychain leaders for purposes of coordination and quality management among suppliers and buyers.
Conformity assessment can be used for confirming quality. It can make use of scientific methods and
laboratory testing, but also specialized graders/auditors/inspectors can perform classification and visual
conformity assessment for the purpose of certification. Certification of quality provides information to
traders and consumers about characteristics of products which is otherwise costly to obtain or not timely

63

The text of the TBT Agreement is included in the Final Act of the Uruguay Round of Multilateral Trade Negotiations. It is
available from the WTO website http://www.wto.org/english/docs_e/legal_e/17-tbt_e.htm

114 Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

available. Sometimes suitable grades and standards may be lacking and it may be useful for the private
sector to develop them.
The public sector has a role to play in enabling quality management by the private sector through a
system of metrology, accreditation, standardization, and quality (MAS-Q), adequate for the need of the
country. It may also support targeted interventions in areas of private sector weakness, for example as a
result of scattered supply chains, insufficient scale of enterprises, and difficulty to coordinate large
numbers of small firms.
RGC is seeking to encourage expansion, value-adding, and diversification of its export base especially in
such sectors as milled rice, cassava, rubber, fish, processed food, as well as tourism, silk, garment,
footwear, and manufacturing assembly. Other export opportunities are not ignored, of course, and they
too may need some assistance. Voluntary standards and mandatory technical regulations are tools for
achieving these goals.In addition, the Government wants to ensure that Cambodia does not become a
dumping ground for sub-grade, dangerous, and forbidden food and chemicals.
Generally, private sector buyers specify technical standards and grading of the product they wish to buy.
In addition, Governments may also set specific quality, safety, and sometimes traceability requirements
for products in their markets. Since Cambodia remains a small exporter, with no dominant exports in
world markets, it is a standard-taker in international markets, not a standard-setter. Whether national
technical standards are useful for export facilitation is a question that has to be considered carefully in
consultation with exporters and producers. Mandatory standards for exported products are generally
undesirable as they increase the regulatory burden for formal exports and do not add market value.
Indeed, in countries such as Cambodia that have no accredited capacity for conformity assessment, such
national requirements can only have negative impact.
In the area of chemicals, cosmetics, nutrition, construction, transport and electrical products, in particular,
technical regulations can be required to ban or regulate the use of risky products for consumer protection.
This kind of regulation if enforced can also be of benefit to exporters. Voluntary technical standards and
grading can be desirable for market transparency. Generally national standards, technical regulations, and
grading requirements, if desirable, should be harmonized with ASEAN recommendations and especially
with those of Cambodias main trading partners within ASEAN namely, Thailand and Vietnam. The
ASEAN Consultative Committee on Standards and Quality (ACCSQ) established in 1992 is the main
body for promoting regional harmonization.
To date, there is very little empirical analytic information available in Cambodia from surveys of
enterprises that indicates which gaps or redundancies in technical regulations and standards pose
limitations to export performance and protection of buyers. However, product quality is an important
factor for competitiveness. It affects directly the price that can be obtained in markets, for example for
milled rice, rubber, tourism services, or garments. It is foremost the responsibility of private firms to
pursue quality as demanded by buyers. However, firmswithin the same supply chain can be mutually
dependent in achieving good quality final product and the weakest link in the chain can constrain the
opportunities for others in the supply chain. For instance, the consistency and quality of raw materials
affects the possibility and profitability of adding value in the value chain. Conversely, if producers of

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final products are too weak for obtaining access to markets that demand quality and are prepared to pay
for it, they cannot provide price incentives for quality to raw material producers. Therefore, coordination
is necessary among producers in a given supply chain, such as paddy between rice growers and rice
millers or rubber producers and rubber processors. There is usually a need for chain leaders to coordinate.
These are often the producers at the end of the chain, such as the rice miller, the exporter, or sometimes
even the foreign buyer, or, in case of fresh produce, the supermarket itself.
Some issues of quality and technical standards are highlighted in the following paragraphs for main
exports targeted by RGC.
Milled Rice:As indicated in the previous SPS section, milled rice is a much differentiated product
characterized by different kinds of rice (white rice, aromatic rice, etc.), different varieties and qualities,
many markets with different tariffs, different preferences for quality, and different SPS requirements.
Rice mills with quality milling capacity are important for finding buyers in export markets and gaining
good prices. Exporting rice mills need supply of paddy characterizedby good and consistent quality of
unmixed rice varieties.
The international rice market has well-recognized systems of grading and quality. Cambodian national
standards for milled rice, to the extent needed, should follow closely international standards, especially
those adopted by Thailand and Vietnam which are leading international exporters. Although millers and
traders should have first responsibility for choice of varieties that are most attractive for exports, the
Government should facilitate their efforts through its seed policy. Increasingly, buyers in quality market
segments expect rice mills to meet basic standards of milling quality and safety. Therefore, adoption of
GMP and HACCP can be important and deserves to be promoted. Standards and certifiers are readily
available in the region.
Cassava:Concrete drying pads are essential for ensuring quality in the processing of dried cassava.
Concrete pads prevent that soil and other foreign materials mix with the product. Storage should meet
basic standards. Adoption of GMP-based standards such as those applied in the processing plants of
quality exporters in neighboring countries should be promoted in Cambodia. Standards and certifiers are
readily available in the region.
Rubber: Quality of natural rubber is the determining factor in setting the price received by producers.
Low quality results in low prices. Rubber quality is affected by the variety used, plantation management,
harvesting, collecting, etc. However, rubber is a diversified product. According to UNCTAD, differences
in types and grades are of major commercial significance. Indeed, the natural rubber market is highly
fragmented by types and, within each type, by grades, with sizeable variations in trade flows and price
movements.64International private standard and grading systems are generally used. By nature in this
type of market, the private sector has the leading role in quality management. This is obvious for large
rubber plantations. For small-holder rubber plantations, Government can assist in promoting the use of
good quality rubber tree varieties.

64

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Grading and quality control can be done by visual inspection by specialistsand backed up by laboratory
testing. Most large-scale producers in Cambodia seem to have their own quality control systems,
including testing facilities. The Rubber Research Institute of Cambodia (RRIC) offers testing of quality
for certification, mostly for producers and traders without testing capacity, but also for verification and
for conflict resolution. Its laboratory is accredited ISO 17025 and its testing service is increasing but still
small in volume. In 2012, 240 testswere conducted. To date little information is available in Cambodia
about quality performance of the sector. Government could monitor quality of rubber through adequate
registration of quantities and prices at export. Comparison with neighboring countries could identify
weaknesses and guide efforts to promote quality especially among smallholders.
Tourism:Quality is important for the competitiveness and reputation of the tourism sector. Quality is
based on many factors such as service, cleanliness, dcor, ambiance, taste and safety of food,
environment, and others. Information about quality of a resort area or a particular hotel or restaurant is not
always readily available to customers who plan to visit. Certified rating systems can provide such
information. Rating systems can include a range of quality aspects, or just target a particular aspect, such
as gourmet food rating.
Independent certification of food safety standards of restaurants can be of particular importance for
travelers who have no local information on reputation of restaurants, since they cannot observe safety
ahead of buying food. It provides also an incentive for investors who can advertise their efforts in
assuring safe food. Cambodia has a basic MoH regulation on safety standards in restaurants to which all
restaurants should comply. In addition a voluntary rating system with independent auditing will be
implemented by MoH for restaurants aiming at higher standards. Restaurants will be able to receive a
certificate with ranking (A, B, C) depending on their performance measured against a scorecard based on
GHP/GMP parameters.
Processed Food and Fish Products:The quality of processed food depends on raw materials used and
processing. Buyers in many export markets, but increasingly also in domestic quality segment
markets,tend to value GMP and HACCP standards obtainedby processing plants and, sometimes, may
even require those. Therefore, promoting the adoption of GMP and HACCP is desirable. Quality of raw
materials can also be a critical factor that is partly beyond the control of processors.
Silk:Products are made mostly from imported yarn but if yarn quality is poorly controlled quality of final
product is hard to control. The silk project under CEDEP I will focus on how to improve purchasing silk
yarn and ensure most silk yarn purchased comes in with a certificate of origin (CO).
Garment, Footwear,Light Manufacturing and Assembly Sectors: For garment, footwear, light
manufacturing and assembly sectors etc., standards are largely set by buyers.

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The TBT System in Cambodia


Box 4.3 describes Governments basic role in an effective TBT system. The achievements in the
development of the TBT system will be discussed against the elements described in this Box.
Box 4.3: An Effective Technical Standards System
The basic elements of an effective Technical Standards system include:
1. A legal framework for standardization, technical regulations, metrology, legal metrology, conformity
assessment, and mutual agreement that is compliant with principles of the WTO and other relevant
international bodies and adopts ASEAN recommendations.
2. A market-driven system for harmonized voluntary consensus standards for products, processes, and
services.
3. An established depository for standards and technical regulations.
4. Use of international standards as templates for developing technical regulations and ensuring that
technical regulations promote trade by removing unnecessary barriers to trade without compromising
public health and the safety of the citizens of their country.
5. Establishment of systems to maintain and disseminate the national measurement units, which must be
traceable to the International System (SI) of units.
6. Development and implementation of a weight and measure program that can ensure uniformity of
measurement and support quantity measurements within the legal framework of the country.
7. Mechanisms to ensure that conformity assessment bodies are competent, impartial and work with
integrity and that they are accredited in accordance with international standards and best practices.
8. Adoption of mutual recognition agreements in areas of metrology, accreditation, standardization, and
quality (MAS-Q) with trading partners and international accreditation bodies.
9. Adequate technical and financial resources to ensure implementation of a sound and internationally
compliant MAS-Q system.
Source: Adapted from USAID, http://pdf.usaid.gov/pdf_docs/PNADP635.pdf
Legal Framework: Some progress has been made in developing the legal framework for Cambodias
Technical Standards system. Basic laws and sub-decree (Anukrets) are:

The Law on Standards, promulgated in 2007


The Law on Metrology, promulgated in 2009
Sub-decree No. 183, December 31, 2010, establishing the National Metrology Center (NMC)

The Law on Standards has known deficiencies that were raised already in the TBT chapter of the
Cambodia Trade Integration Strategy 2007. Among those, the law does not make reference to the WTO
TBT Agreement and definitions of standards used in the law are different from the definitions in the TBT
Agreement. This has led to confusion about standards and technical regulations and, in particular, the
relation between technical regulations for SPS and TBT. Because of this, questions have been raised
about compliance of Cambodias mandatory standards with the WTO TBT Agreement. Most
importantly, the TBT Code of Good Practice (Annex 3 of the TBT Agreement, commonly referred to as
the Code) was not adopted, despite the fact that it is mandatory and also adopted by ASEAN.

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During the 2011 WTO-Trade Policy Review (TPR), RGC indicated that it would review the Law on
Standards and the adopted TBT standardsin 2012.65It also indicated that it had notified WTO in 2010
about adoption of the Code of Good Practice. The Code requires that, at least once every six months, the
standard-setting body publishes a work program listing the standards being prepared currently and the
standards that have been adopted in the preceding period. So far, however, the review and legislation to
adopt the Code formally are pending, and the standardization work does not comply with the Code.
A Prakas has been mentioned as the preferred legal instrument for adopting the Code, because laws and
Anukret (Decrees) take a long time and much effort before they can be promulgated. However, in this
case, the use of a higher level legal instrument, namely an Anukret, might be preferable because it has
more legal power.
Cambodia does not yet have a legal framework for accreditation and conformity assessment needed for
international recognition. This means that accreditation conducted by international accreditation bodies
has no legal recognition yet under Cambodian law. Similarly, there is no legal recognition of conformity
assessment conducted by an international accredited body. Countries with limited resources, such as
Cambodia do not need a national Accreditation Body because it is much cheaper to use a
foreignAccreditation Body. But Cambodia needs to define accreditation and procedures to be followed
through legislation. There is also need for legal recognition of conformity assessment and certification
bodies in Cambodia.66
Standards and Technical Regulations:The standard formulation and adoption process is very slow and
since 2007 just over 80 Cambodian national standards have been adopted, despite long-term support from
NORAD/UNIDO, and more recently also from ADB and World Bank. In 2012 despite donor support,
ISC could finish only 10 standards. The main reason for low output seems to be a cumbersome
standardization process.67
Although, under the WTO/TBT system priority should be given to adopting international standards and
technical regulations recommended by international standard setting bodies such as ISO, IEC, and ITU,
the Institute of Standards Cambodias (ISC) work is primarily focused ondeveloping Cambodian National
Standards. ISC does not have a shortcut procedure for adoption of international standards as national
standards and has to follow the full cumbersome procedure.68During the 2011 TPR the RCG indicated
that its target is to adopt 20 national standards per year. This target is included in the RGCs most recent
Work Program.69To achieve this target the standard setting process will need to be reformed.
65

WTO, Cambodia Trade Policy Review: Secretariat and Government Reports, Geneva: WTO Publications, November 2011.
https://docs.wto.org/dol2fe/Pages/FE_Search/FE_S_S006.aspx?Query=(%20@Symbol=%20wt/tpr*%20or%20press/tprb/*%20)
%20and%20(%20@Title=%20cambodia%20)&Language=ENGLISH&Context=FomerScriptedSearch&languageUIChanged=tru
e#
66
Article 48 of the Standards Act requiresgetting permission from ISC to advertise certification from whatever source. The
Articles reads No persons or organizations shall advertise the obtaining of any system certificate even though they have been
certified by any local or foreign certification body unless they have been registered and received a visa from the Institute Up to
now it seems that no persons or institutions in Cambodia have requested for a permission.
67
ISC is responsible for extensive scientific and documentary work. It has difficulty to call meetings of review and decision
making bodies since many of the members of the bodies show little ownership. ISC suffers regularly from problems of quorum.
68
In fact ISC procedures require it to prove that international standards meet scientific principles.
69
Office of the Council of Ministers,Work Program of the Royal Government Of Cambodia On WTO Requirements And Related
Issues (2012-2015). Phnom Penh: CoM, 2012.

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ISC considers that technical regulations for SPS (so-called SPS standards, for example Codex and
ASEAN MRL standards) should also go through the ISC process. As a result of cumbersome procedures
and confusion between SPS and TBT, Cambodia has hardly any national SPS standards. SPS line
ministries, dissatisfied with the slow national standardization process, are now following other routes.
MAFF has adopted product specific Maximum Residue Limits (MRLs) for 42 pesticides as an Annex to a
Prakas for GAP. MoH has adopted MRLs as an annex to the Prakas on hygiene in restaurants, and MoC,
as the chair of the National Codex Committee, is working on an Anukret to adopt Codex standards. In
short, the RGCs goals to comply with WTO principles and ASEAN recommendations and to promote
production for exports need a much improved enabling standard-setting process.
Metrology and Legal Metrology:The National Metrological Center (NMC) was established in 2011and is
housed in new buildings with a laboratory. Work is underway to obtain ISO 17025 accreditation for the
metrology laboratory for mass, temp, volume, and dimension.70
A legal metrology program is being extended progressively in the country. The program faces financial
and technical limitations, especially in consumer protection. To fund its field work, the program is
dependent on mandatory fees, which means that it can only test and calibrate among registered enterprises
and not among informal enterprises and in markets. The funding for legal metrology does not allow for
risk-based testing and calibration. In many areas, legal metrology still needs more trained staff and
standards.
Conformity Assessment: Thus far no national entities have been accredited as conformity assessment
bodies in Cambodia. ISC is working to become the firstconformity assessment body. It has lead auditors
for ISO 9001, 14001 and 22000, and trainers of trainers for 9001 and 14001.
Although, under international principles, standards should be voluntary as much as possible, so far ISC
focuses on setting mandatory standards. ISC not only has a role in standardization; it also inspects
conformity of its mandatory product standards at registered enterprises that produce the product.71ISC
also aims to develop product certification for consumer products. The combination of standardization and
conformity assessment in one organization raises questions of conflict of interest. In principle conformity
assessment can be carried out as one of the activities of the standard body, provided that activities are
well-separated and that impartiality of standardization is not affected. However, the implication is that in
such a case the standard body cannot be involved in consultancy, accreditation and recognition.72With the
revision of the standards law, and additional legislation on accreditation and conformity assessment, the
structure and responsibilities of ISC and its compliance with international recommendations deserve
careful attention as well.

70

Supported by NORAD/UNIDO
Control among informal enterprises and in markets is the responsibility of other departments in MIME and of Camcontrol.
Laboratory testing, if needed, is carried out by laboratories of ILCC, Camcontrol, Pasteur or institutions abroad. For inspections,
ISC charges official fees and the firms must pay for travel cost and food for the inspectors in addition.
72
According to international standards and guidelines issued by well recognized international bodies such as ISO, IEC, IAF and
ILAC, activities involving conformity assessment, accreditation, or recognition as well as that of consultancy services, should not
coexist within the same organization, in order to ensure impartiality.
71

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ISC has a register for establishments with GMP and HACCP. Enterprises are free to obtain technical and
benchmarking services from service providers of their own choice.
Laboratory accreditation ISO 17025 has been obtained from abroad by ILCC for 11 testing
parameters.The National Specifications Laboratory of the Cambodian Rubber Research Center has also
obtained a certificate of ISO/IEC 17025:2005 from a foreign accreditor for testing quality control of
rubber.
Mutual Recognition: Cambodia has no agreement for mutual recognition of metrology, accreditation,
standardization, and quality (MAS-Q) with trading partners and international accreditation bodies as of
yet. To meet objectives of regional harmonization and trade facilitation, priority should be given to
filling in this gap.
Progress and Current Limitations:Good progress has been made in building capacity for Technical
Standards, in particular in metrology and legal metrology. A number of deficiencies in the Cambodian
TBT system thwart further development in standardization and conformity assessment and, hence,
economic integration in the region. Current limitations include:

An inadequate standard setting process


Non-compliance issues with the international framework for TBT regarding definitions used for
standards and technical regulations as well as confusion about differences between SPS and TBT
Agreements
Gaps in the legal framework for conformity assessment and accreditation as well as missing mutual
recognition agreements with international accreditation bodies
The combination of standard setting and conformity assessment within ISC raises questions of
impartiality and conflicts of interest
A lack of sufficient funding for public goods in ISC and NMC causes a bias toward activities for
which fees can be charged

Recommended directions for resolving and mitigating deficiencies include:

Upgrading of the legal framework for TBT including a focus on compliance with WTO principles and
ASEAN recommendations and for solving gaps. In this contextalso, the mandates and organization
of ISC need to be revisited;
Giving priority in ISC to the adoption of international TBT standards and technical regulations as
Cambodian national standards and regulations to contribute to economic integration in the region;
Simplifying the standardization process and focusing ISCs mandate more on process, consistency,
compliance with international principles, and repository of standards;
Delegating the lead for developing SPS standards and technical regulations to the SPS agencies. ISC
could, where relevant, offer a repository role for SPS standards, such as Codex MRLs, and advise
about consistency within the system of standards and technical regulations; and,
Strengthening Government funding for public goods in consultation with MEF (see Table 4.3
above.)

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Conclusions and Recommended Actions


Since the late 2000s, Cambodia has experienced a boom in production and exports of rice, cassava,
natural rubber, and selected other agricultural commodities such as corn. This boom has been facilitated
by improved connectivity in the GMS region, relatively high prices, and availability of underutilized land
and labor. Further growth is clearly possible.
However, this boom has also revealed weaknesses and risks that need attention in order to realize its full
benefits. To date Cambodia faces significant internal bottlenecks in meeting quality and safety standards
demanded by foreign markets and in adding value to raw materials. As a result, large amounts of product
are traded unprocessed, at low prices, with informal markets in neighboring countries. Not only does
Cambodia loses opportunities for adding value and getting better prices, but present exports depend de
facto on waivers for SPS requirements by neighboring countries, which means such exports could be at
risk if requirements were enforced. Therefore, improving relatively weak public and private capacity to
ensure higher quality and safety standards is a major challenge for securing market access, for promoting
market diversification, and for consolidating access to more demanding and better paying market
segments.
The challenge of improving quality for the purpose of product and market diversification applies also to
the silk, fisheries, processed food, or even tourism sectors. Tourism is growing rapidly but its image is
vulnerable to food safety hazards. The fisheries sector can perform better if it can manage safety and
quality.
With increased trade, the risk of transfer of pests and diseases by countries importing from Cambodia has
increased also. This risk requires attention because it may result in loss of production and bans on
Cambodian exports. Likewise, Cambodia needs to mitigate risks associated with imports of sub-grade
and unsafe food, pesticides, and veterinary drugs.
Private sector firms are the first line of defense in meeting the quality and food safety requirements of
buyers and importing countries. They need to build capacity for managing quality and safety at the plant
and facility level. However, they need also an enabling environment and support from the public sector,
especially in the area of technical standards and sanitary and phytosanitary measures.
GMP and HACCP are important tools for enterprises to improve their quality and safety management and
their application is increasingly required by customers. This applies to rice millers, dried cassava
processors, corn processors, processed food, and fish product processors. For quality and safety
management in hotels and restaurants, GHP/GMP-based systems can be quite effective. Government can
support implementation of certification systems for each of these sectors.
Firms also face challenges in obtaining sufficient raw materials of consistent quality and safety. Although
this is a basic responsibility of private firms, Government can provide support in resolving bottlenecks,
such as controls in the use of pesticides on crops and antibiotics in aquaculture. Good policies for seed of

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crops and propagation material for rubber are important for the quality of farm products. In selected cases
Government can support the adoption of GAP (good agriculture practice and good aquaculture practice).
In many countries market access for plant products such as rice, dried cassava, and corn, can only be
obtained if Cambodia can provide adequate information about its pest and disease situation through
regular surveillance and assuring that agreed special risk-mitigation measures are performed such as
fumigation and drying. China requires registration of production areas, surveillance of pesticides used,
registration of firms involved in the post-harvest export chain, and adoption of GMP standards in
processing facilities. Many countries require HACCP-based certification for fisheries product exporters.
Export of fisheries products to the EU requires pre-approval of processing facilities, which is further
conditional to the capacity of the exporting countrys Competent Authority to control product safety from
catch to export. And, for each shipment of plant, animal, or fisheries products, importing countries can
require that a phytosanitary or sanitary certificate be issued to assure that the products meet defined safety
standards. Methods and protocols for surveillance, provision of information, risk mitigation, diagnostics,
conformity assessment, and certification are mostly defined in international standards.
For successful participation in international trade necessitating SPS and Technical Standards, countries
must build capacity: on the import side, to protect crops, animals, and consumers against risk of pests,
diseases, and unsafe food; and, on the export side, to facilitate trade that faces safety and quality
requirements from importing countries. Under the WTO, member states must comply with WTO SPS
and TBT principles. A main WTO recommendation is for countries to harmonize with international
standards. ASEAN uses these WTO principles and recommendations as a basis for economic integration.
Since the CTIS 2007, Cambodia has made good progress to improve compliance with WTO SPS and
TBT principles and recommendations and to strengthen its capacity for enhancing its export strategy and
controlling the safety of its imports. Yet, there remain bottlenecks and weaknesses that deserve being
addressed. Main recommendations are:
To Strengthen Private Sector Capacity
1. Promote certification based on international standards and systems (HACCP, GMP, GAP, GHP,
Codex, OIE) appropriate for safety and quality among export processors (for milled rice, dried
cassava, corn, fish products, processed food) and in hotels and restaurants.
2. Promote quality in silk, natural rubber, garments, footwear, and manufacturing assembly.
3. Promote consistent quality and safety of raw material through targeting weaknesses in supply
chains.
To Strengthen Public Sector Capacity73
1. Address WTO compliance of legislation in standardization, accreditation, and conformity
assessment.

73

Kees Van der Meer and Laura Ignacio, Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures and Border Management, in Gerard McLinden
et al., editors, Border Management Modernization, Washington, D.C.: World Bank, 2011

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2. Improve quality of legal texts and adopt further legislation or legal texts to address remaining
gaps, ensuring their compliance with SPS and TBT norms. Support effective implementation of
the major laws.
3. Establish effective surveillance systems and conduct regular surveillance of pests, diseases, and
pesticides used in production areas of export crops as requested by importing countries.
4. Establish risk-based inspection systems and ensure proper risk-based inspection of imports and
domestic markets to promote safety of food, pesticides, and veterinary drugs.
5. Modify procedures for formulation and approval of standards in order to solve backlog in
adoption of international standards.
6. Strengthen management, administration, funding methods of regulatory laboratories for SPS.
7. Strengthen the development of trained and experienced SPS technical personnel.
Detailed actions are shown in the Trade SWAp Roadmap under Outcome #4

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Box 4.4: Implications of Regional Integration


SPS Measures
ASEAN and GMS pursue regional integration through improved infrastructure and harmonization of
trade policies, technical standards, and SPS measures based on WTO principles and on standards from
international standard setting bodies. ASEAN members work together also to prioritize harmonization of
SPS standards, such as maximum residue limits (MRL), and SPS measures. Several ASEAN Ministerial
Meetings, especially the ASEAN Ministerial Meeting on Agriculture, have, under their purview, selected
relevant senior officials and subsidiary bodies to undertake their functions in harmonization of SPS
measures, especially (i) Maximum Residue Limits (MRLs) for pesticides, (ii) use of pesticides and
veterinary drugs, and (iii) animal health and plant and animal quarantine. These officials and bodies meet
periodically to discuss harmonization issues and to prepare proposals for ministerial meetings. ASEAN
recognizes that countries which joined last, including Cambodia, Lao PDR, Myanmar and Vietnam, are
less economically and institutionally developed and has asked the donor community to give special
support for building WTO compliant SPS and TBT systems in those. Several donors are providing such
support. More developed ASEAN and GMS members also provide bilateral support to less developed
members.
Unlike the EU, which has a mandatory requirement for its members to adopt the full Acquis
Communautaire, including SPS measures, ASEAN and GMS have only recommendations and
commitments. In addition, unlike the EU, ASEAN and GMS have no Executive Body with enforcement
power and resources. Hence, harmonization is slow. Although, in the long-run, ASEAN integration
should reduce intra-ASEAN border controls and focus on main risks only, such perspective remains in a
distant future. In the medium term, effective controls will first increase. Advanced ASEAN and GMS
countries see the lack of effective capacity in less developed member countries as a potential risk to their
agricultural systems and export. Uncontrolled cross-border pests and diseases and contaminated food
from neighboring countries can affect market access to demanding and SPS sensitive markets. Increasing
concerns about food safety among middle income urban consumers will likewise add to the pressure on
more stringent controls on intra-GMS and -ASEAN imports.
In sum, more advanced ASEAN and GMS countries expect the less advanced ones to establish more
effective control systems. At the same time there are also likely to be efforts to rationalize SPS controls
and to reduce measures that are costly to trade and have little effect on health protection. The ASEAN
Single Window (ASW) is an example of an ambitious plan for improved trade facilitation.
Technical Standards
The ASEAN Consultative Committee on Standards and Quality (ACCSQ) was established in 1992 and is
charged with promoting harmonization. Its scope of work includes:

Elimination of technical barriers to trade related to standards and conformity.


Information exchange on laws, rules, and regulatory regimes on standards and conformity
assessment procedures.
Harmonization of standards, technical regulations, and conformity assessment procedures.
Harmonization of standards for 20 priority products
Mutual Recognition Arrangements

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ACCSQ includes:

A Working Group on Standards & MRAs


A Working Group on Accreditation &Conformity Assessment
A Working Group on Legal Metrology
A Joint Sectoral Committee for ASEAN MRA for Electrical and Electronic Equipment
An ASEAN Cosmetic Committee
A Pharmaceutical Products Working Group
A Prepared Foodstuff Product Working Group
An Automotive Product Working Group
A Rubber-based Product Working Group
A Wood-based Product Working Group
A Medical Device Product Working Group
Traditional Medicine & Health Supplement Product Working Group

Typically, Cambodia adopts the ASEAN recommendations in meetings, but subsequent steps to adopt
those legally, let alone to implement them, are seldom taken. As a result of its slow, complex and
cumbersome process to establish standards, Cambodia has a backlog of international standards and
technical regulations that need to be adopted. Without shortcutting current procedures, this backlog is
near impossible to eliminate.
The TBT Code of Good Practice has also been adoptedby ASEAN as one of the principles for
harmonization, with some slight modification. Cambodia has yet to adopt it legally.

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Box 4.5: Human and Institutional Resources


SPS
There is a general shortage of skilled personnel in SPS agencies to perform the technically demanding
functions of SPS management, especially in surveillance, testing, diagnostics, risk analysis, and SPS
market access negotiations.
The SPS legal framework needs much further improvement. Special areas are (i) review of quality,
consistency, compliance, and gaps in the existing legal body for SPS; (ii) improving legislation in the area
of food safety (based on Inter-ministerial Prakas 868); (iii) strengthening coordination of SPS measures
by further elaborating on Prakas 868; (iv) sub-decrees and Prakas for implementation of laws and subdecrees.
Further development of regulatory laboratories for testing and diagnosis is needed. Priority should be
given to introduction of Good Laboratory Practice, improved funding mechanisms, improved
procurement of laboratory supplies for greater flexibility in responding to needs, and broadening the
range of basic capacities. Acquisition of advanced expensive equipment in the area of food safety will be
needed in the medium term, but should be preceded by an agreed plan that avoids duplication and
enhances shared use of such equipment across regulatory laboratories.
Funding of operational cost is very limited and fails to account for the public goods nature of many SPS
services. MEFs policy is to encourage user fees to recover operational costsand the inclination of SPS
agencies is to use regulatory powers to fund controls. This adds to regulatory burden for the formal sector
and does not provide sufficient scope for risk-based controls.
Technical Standards
Major further upgrading of the TBT legal system is needed. Special issues are (i) compliance of the Law
on Standards with TBT Agreement; (ii) the legal adoption of the TBT Code of Good Practice (or the
ASEAN version of it); (ii) modification of the procedures of standard setting; (iv) providing a legal
framework for conformity assessment compliant with international recommendations of ISO, IEC, IAF
and ILAC; and (v) clarifying difference between TBT and SPS technical regulations.
There is a need of modifying the mandate of ISC in standardization and strengthening the role of line
agencies.Increasing commercialization and increased economic growth ask for more staff for expanding
legal metrology programs. Funding of operational costs for TBT faces the same constraints as SPS does.

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Box 4.6: Progress Since 2007


SPS

Topic
Food safety
Legal framework
Coordination
Surveillance
Inspection MIH
Restaurants

Food safety policy


ILCC
Camcontrol laboratory
Pesticides
legal framework
Quality surveillance
Testing capacity MRL
GAP
Plant quarantine
Legal framework
Surveillance
Phyto certificates issued
Seed/propagation material
Animal health
Legal framework
Surveillance TAD
Feed and veterinary drugs
Surveillance feed and drugs
Surveillance residues in animal
product
Fisheries
Legal framework
GHP/GMP/HACCP
General SPS
Legal framework
Funding operational cost
Quality of inspection
Transparency
SPS coordination

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Progress since Cambodia Trade Integration Strategy 2007*

Responsibilities of Agencies clarified/defined under Prakas 868


Beyond Prakas 868, little progress
Little progress
Regulatory inspection of registered enterprises
Regulations for minimum standards for restaurants introduced
and a voluntary certification system for better performance
designed. Not yet implemented
Work on draft strategy at MoH
Accreditation for microbiology parameters; increased testing
Number of tests increased from 1240 in 2008 to 1950 in 2011
Law on the Management of Pesticides and Fertilizers
promulgated in 2012
No implementation because of funding constraints
Limited progress
Prakas and list of MRL promulgated
Anukret on plant quarantine. Draft Law on phytosanitary
measures is under preparation, promulgation targeted for 2013
limited progress
Increased from 640 in 2010 to 1679 in 2011 and 7000 in the
first 11 months of 2012
Pending post-entry quarantine
Draft Law on Animal Health and Production has been
submitted for CoM consideration
Mainly focused on Avian Flu with donor funding
Little to no progress
Little to no progress

Law on Fisheries promulgated in 2006; limited further progress


limited progress
Draft Law on Agricultural Product Quality and Safety, targeted
for submission to COM 2013
Funding issue yet to be addressed; very little increase in
amounts provided
little progress
Little to no progress
No progress

TBT

Standardization
Legal frame work
National standards
Metrology
Legal framework
NMC
Legal metrology
Conformity assessment
Legal framework
Capacity training for
certification
General TBT
Funding operational cost

No progress. Still not WTO compliant


Limited number of new standards. Serious backlog
Law on Metrology
Established with new building
Program developed and extended; staff and funding constraints
Still missing
Moderate progress

Funding issue yet to be addressed; very little increase in


amounts provided
* Not including expected results from on-going capacity building projects

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130 Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

Chapter 5
INVESTMENT AND INVESTMENT ENVIRONMENT IN CAMBODIA
Context
Private sector development and investment to enhance export-led, pro-poor growth is and has been a key
priority of the Royal Government of Cambodia (RGC) for many years. 2012 marks a turning point led by
FDI inflows of $1.5 billion, up from $900 million in 2011. The lower rate of FDI expansion during 20072012 compared to 2000-2007 reflects the effect of the global financial crisis. The low point in FDI was in
2009 when net inflows dropped down to $539 million. Still, FDI grew vigorously during the period
2007-2012 in all sectors, except in services.
To promote private sector investment, important private sector legal and regulatory reforms and measures
have been implemented already at the national level, many under the umbrella of meeting Cambodias
WTO obligations. More reforms are underway.74
In addition, to enhance growth through trade diversification, the RGC is committed to the Trade Sector
Wide Approach (Trade SWAp) which has been fully institutionalized. In particular, the RGC is
committed to strengthening selected export value chains in part by stimulating the requisite foreign and
domestic investment through investment promotion, facilitation, and improvements in the business
environment.
However, the Cambodian private sector today remains characterized by many, rather small and informal
SMEs, and a few large enterprises. And there remain constraints to private sector development in
Cambodia both at the national and provincial levels. The traditional challenges are: weakness in
infrastructure (cost of electricity, transport), weak governance, limited capacity in government agencies,
and access to and cost of finance.75 The emerging challenges include: skill shortages and mismatch,
logistics and trade facilitation, technology upgrading and innovation, the need to build fiscal space.76
Most of these traditional and emerging challenges are addressed in the various chapters of the report.
This chapter offers an analysis of recent trends in investment and the investment environment and
considers ways in which foreign investment, in particular, can be harnessed to address weaknesses in the
private sector structure (in both rural and urban areas) and support economic diversification.

The Global and National Contexts


Global, regional, and national investment trends combine to create a complex backdrop against which
Cambodias attempts to stimulate growth and diversification through increasing investment will play out.

74

See chapter 1
World Bank, Cambodia Investment Climate Assessment, Phnom Penh: World Bank, 2009
76
World Bank,Cambodia Investment Climate Assessment, Phnom Penh:World Bank, 2012; and recent issues of the ADB, Asian
Development Outlook, Manila: ADB.
75

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Global Trends and Challenges


According to the newly released UNCTADs 2013 World Investment Report, global FDI fell by 18
percent to $1.35 trillion in 2012, with the inflows to developed countries experiencing a significant
drop.77 The European Union alone accounted for two thirds of the global FDI decline. For the first time,
developing countries took the lead, attracting more FDI than developed economies. While developing
regions witnessed a small overall decline in FDI inflows, the least developed countries saw a 20 percent
increase in FDI flows in 2012. Cambodia, Myanmar, and Viet Nam are particularly bright spots for
labor-intensive FDI.
In terms of developing countries, China remains the most popular destination, attracting 18 percent of
total global FDI inflows in 2012 and 15 percent in the first quarter of 2013.78 But a growing number of
multinational corporations are pursuing the so-called "China Plus One" strategy, establishing or
expanding their business operation outside China, particularly in other Asian countries.
Concerns about doing business in China include rising wages, shortages of workers and energy, a
strengthening currency, changing investment policies, and even the possibility of widespread civil unrest
(e.g., due to dissatisfaction among population about the governments dealing with wealth gaps and other
social issues.) As a result, there are increasing pressures on foreign investors to mitigate the risks of
overdependence on factories in China by looking for other investment locations.
FDI inflows to ASEAN increased by 2 percent in 2012, with multinationals from Japan and elsewhere
increasing their FDI in the region. This is partly due to opportunities resulting from ongoing regional
integration, including the prospect of ASEAN Economic Community (AEC), in particular in emerging
frontier economies, such as Vietnam, Myanmar, Lao PDR, and Cambodia.
As foreign investors look for alternatives to Chinas rising labor cost, they do seek strong infrastructure
and suitable business climate. Vietnam has proved itself as one of the most attractive destinations for
multinationals China Plus One strategy. Recent data shows the country attracted over $12 billion in
FDI during the first seven months of 2013 a 19.6 percent year-on-year increase. Processing and
manufacturing industries attracted the most FDI in Vietnam, with 315 approved projects worth $10.44
billion, accounting for 87.7 percent of the total. With AEC approaching in 2015, the country is likely to
face increasing competition from other Southeast Asian countries, though its location, a large and
potential domestic market, the abundant size of working-age population, its low labor cost and relatively
high productivity, its better infrastructure, and its political stability and pro-investment policies will likely
continue to help Vietnam hold its position as a very attractive place for FDI inflows.
Since military rule came to an end in 2010, Myanmar has undergone significant political and economic
reforms under the reformist civilian government led by President Thein Sein, who took office in March
2011. Myanmars efforts to embrace reform have helped ease the decades-old economic sanctions
imposed by the West. This has led to renewed interest among foreign investors and multinationals from
both developed and emerging countries. Following a series of reforms and reports of rapid growth, some
large multinationals such as Coca Cola have re-established their presence in the country, attracting much
international media attention to the countrys re-emergence as an investment destination. Myanmar
released an updated foreign investment law in Jan 2013 and is in the process of reviewing and revising
other related laws and regulations

77

UNCTAD, World Investment Report, Geneva: UN Publications, 2013


Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, FDI in Figures, Paris: OECD, July 2013.
Seehttp://www.oecd.org/daf/inv/investment-policy/FDIinFiguresJuly2013.pdf
78

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Cambodia continues to attract a strong flow of foreign investment and witnessed a 73 percent gain in FDI
inflows from 2011 to 2012. Preferential market access, low wages, a beneficial geographic location, an
open investment and trade regime, political stability, and steady economic growth among other factors
have been cited as driving these investment decisions. Frequently, the investment is also driven by push
factors including issues these firms have encountered while operating in other countries including China
and Thailand such as rising wages, labor shortages, and unanticipated events like natural disasters and
political unrest.
The Macroeconomic Picture
Table 5.1: Selected Macroeconomic Indicators, 2010-2013 (projected)
Real GDP growth (%, constant prices)
Consumer price index (average year-on-year; % change)
Overall budget balance (% of GDP)
Merchandise trade balance (% of GDP)
Current account balance (excl. official transfers; % of GDP)
Broad Money (M2, excl. foreign currency outside banks; % change year-onyear)
Exchange Rate (KR/$, official midpoint year average)
Interest rate (12-months deposits in $; weighted average %)
Foreign aid, net (million $)
FDI, net (million $)
Gross foreign reserves ($ billion)
Gross foreign reserves (months of imports of goods & services)

2010
6.0
4.0
(8.1)
(14.1)
(10.4)
20.0

2011
7.1
5.5
(7.5)
(11.6)
(8.8)
21.5

2012
7.3
2.9
(5.2)
(14.6)
(11.6)
20.9

2013p
7.2
3.0
(5.0)
(14.0)
(11.1)
n.a.

4,189
4.4
1,130.8
762.0
2.65
4.9

4,066
4.3
958.0
872.5
3.03
4.5

4,034
4.4
n.a.
1,526.6
3.46
4.4

4,050
n.a.
n.a.
n.a.
3.85
4.4

Source:National Bank of Cambodia, Annual Supervision Report, Phnom Penh: 2012, IMF, Cambodia: 2012
Article IV Consultation Series: Country Report No. 13/2, Washington: 2013 and ADB, Asian Development Outlook
database, Manila; 1 April 2013
Notes:() = negative, n.a. = not available,FDI = foreign direct investment, GDP = Gross Domestic Product, KR =
Khmer riel, M2 = broad money, p = projections.

Cambodias economy has remained strong with real GDP growth at 7.3 percent in 2012 and projected at
7.2 percent for 2013. Growth is being driven by robust domestic demand, particularly household
consumption accounting for around 85 percent of real GDP. From the supply side, growth has been led
by services and industry, and supported by strong agriculture performance. While monetary and
exchange rate policies broadly pursue price stability and support sound macroeconomic management,
persistent high dollarization (over 90 percent of deposits at banks are in US dollars) limits the countrys
ability to use the monetary policy to effectively influence domestic financial conditions and mitigate
external shocks. Fiscal policy remains sound, and continues to support and maintain macroeconomic
stability. CPI inflation has decelerated and remains low, and good domestic harvest and relatively stable
global food prices suggest that inflation in 2013 will average 3.0 percent, similar to that in 2012.
Overall, the financial system has been resilient to shocks, and generally withstood the global economic
downturn. Private sector credit is adequate for the economys size and sophistication, with private sector
credit increasing from 34.1 percent of GDP in 2011 to 41.4 percent in 2012. Legal regulatory and
infrastructural frameworks of Cambodia's financial sector are broadly supportive of enhancing the
diversity of financial services required to meet the needs of domestic and foreign investors. Diversity of
financial services has been growing fast with the following developments recently noted: (a) trading at the
Cambodia Securities Exchange started in 2012; (b) three life insurance companies, in addition to general

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insurance businesses, were established in the past year; and, (c) one financial leasing company opened up
under the supervision of the National Bank of Cambodia.
Lastly, the RGC has been preparing actively to enhance the business environment for publicprivate
partnerships to meet the huge financial requirements of the infrastructure needed for the countrys
growing economy. With development partner support, the RGC has an ambitious range of initiatives
under way to strengthen the legal, regulatory, and institutional environment for publicprivate
partnerships.
The New Industrial Crossroads: Coping with the Open Global Economy
Cambodia's economy is one of the fastest growing in the region. However, it is still narrowly based. With
Cambodias moves to deepen its integration into the world economy as a member of WTO and ASEAN,
external economic shocks are likely to be more frequent and possibly more severe unless it broadens its
base.
For many years, export sectors have been the main drivers of growth. Particularly important have been
garment and tourism, though Cambodias export basket is diversifying.79 Growth of the garment sector
has been highly driven by FDI, as 87 percent of garment factories are wholly foreign-owned. After an
initial focus on the US under Most Favored Nation (MFN) market access, foreign investors have been
taking advantage of tariff exemption schemes in big markets such as EU or Canada. These preferences
led to higher profit margins and Chinese and other Asian investors responded by expanding production in
Cambodia.
With FDI inflows falling sharply in 2009 due to the global financial crisis, the garment and construction
sectors experienced severe downturns, causing job losses for many workers and indirectly causing
hardship to many more people. A total of 70,000 jobs in the garment sector and 60,000 jobs in the
construction sector were estimated to have been lost.
The Government has been aware of this challenge for quite some time and has been working on attracting
foreign investment in different sectors to help diversify the economy. In fact, there is evidence of
progress in recent years with noticeable development in relatively newer export sectors to contribute to
greater resilience of Cambodia to external shocks. First, agriculture has started to increase levels of
processing and exports have grown; second, sectors such as footwear and manufacturing assembly
(bicycles, electronics in particular) geared to exports have experienced very rapid growth; third, the
tourism sector is attracting increasing numbers of visitors from Asia; and fourth, the garment sector has
begun to move up the value-added chain with new entrants from China, Thailand, Europe, and Vietnam
producing increasingly sophisticated products. All these factors make the country less reliant on the
traditional markets of the United States and the EU. In addition, diversification into new sectors such as
electronics, bicycles, automotive parts, and agri-business products has been impressive, driven by
significant Japanese and other Asian interests and the exploitation of the economic attractions of the
Greater Mekong Sub-region Southern Economic Corridor. The arrival of Japanese corporations such as
Minebea (motor manufacturing see Box 5.1), Denso (automotive component manufacturing), Yazaki
Corporation (automobile wire harnesses), and AEON (retail) has sent a strong signal about Cambodias
attractiveness to many Japanese and other investors seeking to mitigate their risks of overdependence on
China.

79

See chapter 1 and chapters 7 through 16

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Box 5.1: Minebea. Taking Manufacturing beyond Garments


Minebea Co., Ltd. is a Japanese multinational corporation and a major producer of machinery
components and electronics devices. The company owns 32 production plants in eleven countries,
including Japan, Thailand, China, Singapore, as well as several countries in Europe and the Americas.
The decision to invest in Cambodia was driven mostly by issues encountered in China and Thailand such
as foreign exchange risk, rising wages, and labor shortage. These factors have encouraged Minebea to
diversify risks by expanding its production facilities to other countries. Minebea realized Cambodia
would be a suitable location not only because of its low labor cost and pro-investment government
supports, but also its proximity to the firms plants in Thailand. Support from the Japanese managed
Phnom Penh SEZ, and a specially brokered cross-border transport arrangement with the government also
favored the decision.
Minebea was granted an operating permit by the Cambodian Government in December 2010 and started
recruiting and providing training to workers thereafter. Training for technical and high level staff took
place in Thailand and Malaysia. The company has resident expatriate staff from Japan, Thailand,
Malaysia, and China to support and engage in transfer of experience to local staff.
The firm became the first motor manufacturer in Cambodia when it started small-scale production with its
newly recruited 300 workers at a leased facility located within the PPSEZ in April 2011. Today, it
employs 1,200 workers at its own production facilities built in a plot within PPSEZ. The plant focuses on
assembling small- and medium-sized motors such as Micro Actuator (PM Stepping Motors), Brush DC
Motors, or Vibration Motors, mainly for office-automation equipment, household electrical appliances
and digital equipment. It relies largely on parts imported from plants in Thailand and the assembled
finished products are exported back to Thailand.
According to the firms expansion plan for Cambodia, Minebea plans to hire up to 5,000 workers by 2014
and will start to introduce more advanced parts production as well as some of its R&D function in the
country. Workers at the plant have access to the companys staff canteen and can benefit from reading
and writing classes as well as other various training programsthat are provided to strengthen their
capacity. The company owns an additional 100,000 sqm plot adjacent to the current one, where it has
started building new production facilities. By 2014, the plant will help build stronger capacity among
Cambodians, particularly local electronics engineers.
Source: Kengo Katsuki Vice President & COO Minebea (Cambodia), Operations of Minebea in the
Kingdom of Cambodia, presentation at the Outbound Investment Mission of ASEAN 6 to Cambodia,
March 27, 2012.

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FDI Trends
Trends in FDI
FDI in Cambodia began in the mid-1990s and expanded sharply after the conclusion of a comprehensive
trade agreement with the United States that granted Most Favored Nation (MFN) treatment to Cambodian
exports. The introduction of the Qualified Investment Project (QIP) incentive scheme and the creation of
Special Economic Zones (SEZ), underpinned by political stability and rapid economic growth, have
boosted the FDI stock from an initial value of $149 million (four percent of GDP) in 2000 to $7 billion
(over 50 percent of GDP) in 2012. Between 2000and 2012, 29 percent of approved FDI projects were
realized. This FDI realization ratio would be much higher if mega-investment projects were excluded.

Figure 5.1:
5.1: FDI
FDI in
in Cambodia,
Cambodia, Cumulative
Cumulative from
from 2000,
2000, $$ billions
billions
Figure
25

25

20

20
Approvals (fixed assets)

15

15

10

10
Inflows

2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012

Source:Approvals from CDC, Inflows from NBC.


Source:
FDI by Country: China (excluding Macau, Hong Kong, and Taiwan), South Korea, Vietnam, Malaysia,
and Taiwan are the top five countries in terms of FDI inflows in Cambodia since 2005, accounting for 65
percent of the total $6.3 billion.80These countries are also the top five investors in terms of FDI approvals.
Given that their total FDI approvals were $11.2 billion during the same period, their realization rate of the
approved FDI projects was around 56 percent.

80

The 2005-2012 period is selected for analysis due to availability of detailed data

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Figuree 5.2: Top Ten


Ten
T FDI
FDI Countries,
Cou
untries, by
by Approvals
A
Approvals and
an
nd Inflows,
Inflows, 2005-2012
2005-2012
Inflowss
Approvvals*
Thhailand
4
4.1%

Australiaa
2.7%

Russsia
5.5%

Thaailand
5..4%
Others
13.9%

Sing
gapore
4.1%

Honng
Konng
4.4%

U
US
Viet Nam
m
8.2%
10.7%

Malaysia
3.8%

Others
17.6%

China
32.6%
Korrea
9.3%
%
Taiwan
3.5%

Singgapore
3.5%

H
Hong
K
Kong
3.4%

Malay
ysia
10.6
6%

China
19.6%

Viet N
Nam
12.88%

Korea
K
13.8%
Taiwaan
8.0%
%

US
2.7%

C data for R
Realized Inveestment
Source: CDC daata for Apprrovals; NBC
Source:
Note
for Approvals
Approovals (*):
(*):(1) Approvals offixed
o
asset pproposals onnly; (2) missiing data for November
N
Note for
7, Decemberr 2007, and November
N
20012; (3) Six mega
m
projectts excluded: constructionn ($988
2007
million in 2006; $967 millionn in 2008; $1.1 billion inn 2011), site development
d
t ($3.8 billio
on in 2008),
consstruction of S
Siem Reap aiirport ($973 million in 20010), and ferrtilizer plant ($2.2 billionn in 2011).
DI projects, thhe energy seectormostlyy hydro-elecctricity projeccts
In termss of approvedd Chinese FD
accounteed for almostt 50 percent of the total approved
a
fixeed asset propposals in Cam
mbodia durin
ng 20052012. The
T mining annd garment sectors
s
amou
unted to 17 ppercent and 14 percent, reespectively. AgroA
industryy - which inclludes plantattions and proocessing of ruubber, acaciaa trees, sugarrcane, cassav
va, rice
milling, tobacco andd cigarettes faactories, anim
mal feed, andd other plantations - repreesented 12 percent.
p
The
balance included othher sectors suuch as footweear and otherr garment-related activitiies, tourism (hotels
(
and
site deveelopment), teelecom, lightt manufacturring, assemblly, and consttruction.
f
asset FDI
F projects included
i
fouur main sectoors: tourism (25
( percent),
For Korean investorss, approved fixed
garmentts (22 percennt), agro-induustry (15 perccent), and bioo-energy (100 percent). Thhe agro-induustry
included
d plantations and processing of rubber, cassava, annd other planntations. Othher FDI projects
included
d construction, infrastructture, light manufacturingg, telecom, otther garmentt-related activvities,
beveragees, and electrronic assembbly.
Tourism repreesented 56
Approveed fixed asseet FDI projeccts from Malaaysia followed the Koreaan pattern. T
percent of
o total approoved fixed asset
a
proposaals, includingg two large reesort projectss. Agro-induustry
(includinng plantationns and processsing of rubbber, oil palm,, corn, and riice milling) aand garment sectors
accounteed for 15 perrcent and 9 percent,
p
respeectively. Infrrastructure annd energy (innvolving pow
wer
transmisssion lines) sectors
s
accouunted for 8 peercent and 7 percent of tootal fixed asssets. Other approvals
a
included
d telecom, ligght manufactturing and otther garmentt-related activvities.
m the three aforemention
a
ned countriess, Vietnam had the least ddiversified FDI portfolio
Unlike investors from
with aroound 86 perceent of the tottal approved fixed asset proposals
p
in agro-industryy, including plantations
and proccessing of ruubber as well as cashew nuts,
n
cassava,, acacia and rice
r milling. Most investtments

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involved economic land concessions (ELCs.) Telecom and tourism primarily a site development in
Tonsay Island in Kep province represented the balance of Vietnameseproposed investments.
Like Vietnam, Taiwans portfolio was very focused, but with 95 percent of the total approved fixed asset
FDI projects in garments (64 percent), footwear (27 percent), and other garment-related activities (5
percent). The remaining 5 percentincluded light manufacturing, infrastructure, construction, and agroindustry projects.
Sixty eight percent of total approved fixed asset projectsfrom Thailand (eighth country on the list of FDI
investors)were in agro-industry, mostly plantations and processing of sugarcane until 2012. Since 2012,
Thai FDI interests have diversified into rubber, cassava, and particularly rice milling due to the countrys
price support rice policy which has raised the price of paddy rice in Thailand. Approved fixed assets of
Thai projects in the rice milling sector were$76 million in 2012.
While Japan has yet to climb the Cambodia FDI rankings, the importance of the recent investments by
major Japanese investors in electronics, automotive parts, and retail activities cannot be over-emphasized.
This trend is driven by the gradual horizontal specialization of Japanese firms in the manufacturing sector
in the Asia region. In addition to creating signals that will be followed by other Japanese investors, these
newcomers have paved the way for significant diversification of the Cambodian export base. It is worth
noting that not only many of the companies are the same firms (Minebea, Sumitomo, Denso, etc.) that
expanded or set up new factories in Thailand in the late 1980s, but they are producing generally the same
products (micro-motors, wiring harnesses, other automotive parts.) Two major differences can be
identified, however: first, the factories being built today use much more sophisticated production and
quality control processes than those in Thailand 25 years ago creating a greater demand for various
types of higher-skilled labor; second, Cambodian operations must fit into a much more demanding supply
chain than those long ago in Thailand creating considerable pressure on Cambodia to take immediate
steps to strengthen transportation and logistics services.
FDI by Sector:The top five sectors receiving FDI inflows from 2005-2012 were commercial banking (28
percent), garments and footwear (25 percent), agro-industry (17 percent), telecom (6.3 percent), and
tourism (6 percent.)Light manufacturing and assemblyaccounted for only 1.5 percent of the total FDI
inflows during the period.81
High demand for banking services, generated by robust economic and export growth, along with
increasing maturity of the sector and growing public credibility for it, were attracting FDI in the
commercial banking sector. These FDI inflows have resulted in a marked improvement in the Cambodian
banking system in recent years.
The relaxation of the Rules of Origin of the Everything-But-Arms (EBA) policy of the European Union
(EU) and a relatively cost-effective labor force combined to sustain FDI inflows in Cambodias garment
and footwear sectors.
The huge potential for integrating Cambodia into agro-industry supply chains originating from such
countries as Thailand, Vietnam, and China, supported by the Government policy focus on the sector
(including through the July 2010 Rice Policy), were a main factor behind the significant increase in FDI
inflows into the Cambodian agro-sector.This inflow will likely further increase in the future. During

81
Under NBC classifications, agro-industry includes agriculture and tobacco/cigarettes; tourism, hotels and resort; light
manufacturing assembly covering assembly of electronic components, bicycles, motorbikes, as well as wood, paper & publishing,
and packaging.

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2005-2012, plantations and rubber processing represented 58 percent of FDI approvals in agro-industry.
Rice milling and cassava constituted 6 percent and 2 percent, respectively.
Meanwhile, site development projects accounted for 47.2 percent of FDI approvals in the tourism sector,
followed by hotel projects accounting for 36 percent.
Light manufacturing assemblyalso started to catch the attention of FDI investors mostly with a view
towards integrating Cambodian operations into regional value chains. Still, from 2005-2012, the share of
this sector was small -- 1.7 percent in terms of FDI approvals and 1.5 percent in terms of FDI inflows.
However, the first approved FDI project in assembly of electronic components dates back to only 2011.
These new projects come mostly from investors from Japan, Korea, and Hong Kong. Noticeably,
Cambodia can be said to have recently entered the semi-conductor industry with the proposed
establishment in Koh Kong of a subsidiary of Hana Microelectronics Group, a Bangkok-based
multinational.

Figure 5.3: Main FDI Sectors,


Sectors, by
by Approvals and
and Inflows,
Inflows, 2005-2012
2005-2012
Approvals*
Inflows
Light
manufactu
ring and
assembly
1.7%

Mining
5.6%

Telecom
7.5%
Garment
and
footwear
15.2%

Others
6.9%

Agroindustry
21.5%

$11.2
billion*

Others
16.3%

Telecom
6.3%
Energy
20.2%

Tourism
21.4%

Light
manufactu
ring and
assembly
1.5%

Garment
and
footwear
24.9%

Agroindustry
17.0%

$6.3
billion
Commerci
al banks
27.9%
Tourism
6.0%

Source: CDC data for Approvals; NBC data for Realized Investment
Source:
Note for
Approvals (*):
(*):(1) Approvals offixed asset proposals only; (2) missing data for November
Note
for Approvals
2007, December 2007, and November 2012; (3) Six mega projects excluded: construction ($988 million
in 2006; $967 million in 2008; $1.1 billion in 2011), site development ($3.8 billion in 2008),
construction of Siem Reap airport ($973 million in 2010), and fertilizer plant ($2.2 billion in 2011).

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139

Cambodias FDI Policy


Following the UN-sponsored national elections in 1993, Cambodia took an outward-looking approach
and focused on liberalizing its economy. Cambodia joined ASEANand the ASEAN Free Trade Area in
1999, allowing it to import and export goods and services within the region with lower duties and taxes.
In 2004, Cambodia acceded to the WTO, which expanded trading opportunities between Cambodia and
the rest of the world.
Together with these developments, Cambodia focused on updating its legal and regulatory framework and
adopting new laws and regulations to facilitate and promote investment, trade, and business. As noted in
chapter 1, considerable reform has already taken place.
1994 Law on Investment and 2003 Law on the Amendment to the Investment Law
The 1994 Law on Investment established the Council for the Development of Cambodia (CDC) the
major decision-making body for private and public sector investment. The CDC is chaired by the Prime
Minister and composed of senior ministers from various government departments.
The CDCs Cambodian Investment Board (CIB) plays a leading role in facilitating private sector
investment. It reviews investment applications and grants concessions to investors and investment
projects that meet the requirements laid out in the Investment Law. However, the CDC needs to consult
and obtain the approval of the Council of Ministers for investment projects with the following
characteristics:

A capital investment of $50 million or more


Politically sensitive investmentsuch as projects that have significant impacts on the public interest
or the environment
Exploration and exploitation of mineral and natural resources
Long-term development strategy
Build-own-transfer (BOT), build-own-operate-transfer (BOOT), build-own-operate (BOO), or
build-lease-transfer (BLT) schemes.

Projects with capital of under $2 million can be approved by Provincial Municipal Investment
Subcommittees.
In 2003, to simplify licensing schemes and make them more transparent, predictable, and
nondiscretionary, the original Law on Investment was amended substantially by the Law on the
Amendment to the Law on Investment.

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Figure 5.4: Investment Registration Flow

Investment Decided

SEZ Investors

Non-SEZ Investors
Register for
Investment Incentives

CSEZB or SEZ
administrative office

Conditional Registration
Certificates (3 working days)

Not register for


Investment Incentive

MoC

Register for QIP at CIB

Conditional Registration
Certificates
(3 working days)

Final Registration Certificate


(28 working days)

Business Registration

Factory Construction

Start of Production

Source:JETRO, 2012.
In general, the Law on Investment and its Law on theAmendment are fairly liberal toward foreign
investment. The Government follows a pro-business approach and is keen to encourage foreign
investment. The laws allow100 percent foreign ownership of businesses, full foreign exchange
convertibility, and unlimited repatriation of profits.
In late 2013, the government announced that it is revising the Law on Investment but no details on the
nature of the revisions have been formally issued. One factor believed to be driving the changes,
however, is the strong push to increase government revenues since the elections in July 2013, possibly
through reducing tax holidays in the Law on Investment. Private sector players have urged that the
process of revising the Law consider carefully present practices relating to the QIPs. The revised Law is
expected to be completed by around June 2014.
Furthermore, Cambodia has entered into bilateral agreements with various countries to promote and
protect trade and investment activities. Included in the list of countries are Australia, China, France,
Germany, Indonesia, Japan, Lao PDR, Malaysia, the Netherlands, the Philippines, ROK, Singapore,
Thailand, the US Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC), Vietnam, and OPEC countries.
Investment Incentives
Certain investment projects in Cambodia can register for Qualified Investment Project (QIP) status which
grants recipients a number of government-provided financial incentives. To obtain QIP registration, a
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project rather than a company must be registered. The CDC/CIB is responsible for implementing
strategy and regulating QIPs.
The main incentive offered to QIPs is profit tax exemption (profit tax is usually 20 percent) for a specific
number of years (typically six years plus a priority period.)82 Alternatively, QIPs can elect to use a
special depreciation allowance (more attractive for capital-intensive projects) which allows a deduction of
40 percent of the value of tangible assets used in production in their year of purchase or first year of use.83
In addition to the profit tax exemption or special depreciation allowance, QIPs are exempt from import
taxes on production equipment, construction materials, and production inputs (the latter only in cases
where used to produce exports.) Export tax exemptions also apply, except for certain products where
specific laws apply such a tax. QIPs still have to pay withholding tax, salary tax, VAT, and other specific
excise taxes. QIPs located inside Special Economic Zones (SEZs) (see below) are also exempted from
paying VAT on imports. With certain exceptions, any goods manufactured by the QIP are also exempted
from export taxes. With the recently established ASEAN and ASEAN-China Free Trade Areas, it is
possible that traded goods may be totally free of export and import duties.

Table 5.2: Duty-Free Import for QIPs


Type of QIP
Domestically-oriented QIPs
Export-oriented QIPs (except those that elect or
have elected to use the Customs Manufacturing
Bonded Warehouse mechanism)
Supporting industry QIPs

Commodities Imported Duty-Free


Production equipment, production input, and
construction materials
Production equipment, construction materials,
raw materials, intermediate goods, and
accessories
Production equipment, construction materials,
raw materials, intermediate goods, and
production input accessories

Source: CDC, Cambodia Investment Guide Book, 2012.


QIPs also receive an investment guarantee from the government ensuring:

equal treatment of all investors regardless of their nationality except for land ownership and
certain investment activities;
no nationalization adversely affecting investors properties;
no price control on investors products or services; and
no restriction on remitting foreign exchange abroad.

To register a QIP, a one-off fee of 7 million riels (around $1,750) must be paid. This covers the
administration fees for securing approvals, authorizations, licenses, and registrations from all relevant
ministries and government departments, including registration tax.
Not all investment projects are eligible for QIP status. Activities or entities not eligible for QIP incentives
include tourism services, gambling, finance companies, the media, professional services, and real estate
82

The priority period is determined by the Financial Management Law according to the type of project and investment capital.
The potential tax benefit is greater than one year because losses are carried forward for five years when calculating the profit
tax.
83

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development. There are also a number industries in which investment is banned or restricted, typically for
reasons of safety or national security. A QIP may be in the form of a joint venture. There is no limitation
as to the nationality or shareholding proportion of each shareholder, except in the case of a joint venture
owning land in Cambodia. In such a case, the maximum combined shareholding of all foreign parties
must not exceed 49 percent.84 Finally, even investments that do not qualify for QIP can register with
CDC and receive the investment guarantees.
Employment of Foreigners
The 1997 Labor Law limits the proportion of foreign employees on a payroll and requires employers to
give priority to hiring Cambodians. In general, local staff must comprise at least 90 percent of a
companys workforce. However, a foreign employer that demonstrates the unavailability of employees
with the needed special skills or training can apply to increase the number of nonlocal staff.
Under Article 18 of the Law on Amendment to the Law on Investment, foreign investors are entitled to
obtain visas and work permits for the employment in Cambodia of foreign citizens as managers,
technicians, and skilled workers. The work permit is valid for one year and may be extended.
Special Economic Zones
SEZs are defined areas within a country where certain business rules are different from those that prevail
in the rest of the country, including investment rules.
SEZs themselves are QIPs. Hence, zone developers are provided with the following incentives:

Profit tax exemption for nine years


Import duty exemption for equipment for constructing the zone
VAT exemption
No foreign exchange transfer restrictions
Guarantees against nationalization and price fixing.

Any tenant (investor) in a SEZ that obtains QIP status receives the same incentives as other QIPs in
addition to those obtained by being located in an SEZ. Tenants within a zone apply to the SEZ
administration which registers the project with the relevant authorities. Zone tenants receive the
following:

QIP incentives
VAT exemption (exporters receive VAT exemption on construction materials, production
materials, and production equipment; domestic-focused companies receive VAT exemption on
construction materials and production equipment)
No restrictions on foreign exchange transfers
Other incentives as offered by the zone administrator

A more detailed discussion of SEZs and their benefits can be found in Chapter 9.

84

CDC, Cambodia Investment Guide Book, Phnom Penh: CDC, 2012.

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Constraints to FDI in Cambodia


Five major constraints are perceived to affect negatively FDI in Cambodia: (1) ineffective legal
framework, (2) expensive and unreliable supply of electricity, (3) high cost and limited means of
transportation, (4) inefficient procedures related to custom and trade regulations, and (5) significant skill
shortages. These major constraints will require time and strong decision-making to address.
Ineffective Legal Framework: A weak legal framework including a weak judicial system, inadequate
laws or regulations, and absence of enforcement often leadsto corrupt practices and uncertainty in
enforcement of laws or regulations. This has a far-reaching negative externality, especially in so far as it
affects the efficiency of public services ranging from investment-related applications and taxation to
custom clearance and other services. The weak legal framework will likely remain a key challenge to
doing business in Cambodia as it requires systemicgovernance reforms.
The adoption of the 2010 Anti-Corruption Lawand the creation of the Governments Anti-Corruption Unit
have yet to produce significant reduction in corruption. The slow progress in addressing this particular
challenge has been quantitatively reflected by results of several well-recognized surveys including the
2012 Investment Climate Assessment (ICA) of the World Bank, the Executive Opinion Survey (EOS) of
the World Economic Forum, and the Corruption Perceptions Indexof Transparency
International.85Furthermore, uncertainty in enforcement of laws and regulations generates confusion
among business. Around 42 percent of firm respondents located in SEZs mostly involving
manufacturing and assembly considered regulatory policy uncertainty as a major or very severe
constraint.86
Energy Supply:Expensive and unreliable supply of electricity is also a bottleneck for businesses in
Cambodia. This issue is discussed in several of the Sector chapters of the report, including chapter 9
covering businesses based in SEZs.
Transport Logistics Bottlenecks:High cost and limited means of transportation affects negatively
Cambodias competiveness. This issue is reviewed in chapter 3 of the report which focuses on logistics.
Trade Facilitation: While Cambodia has made very significant progress in trade facilitation since 2007,
inefficienciesin procedures related to custom and trade regulations remain a constraint. Recent progress,
current constraints, and opportunities for further reforms are discussed in chapter 2 of the report.
Skill Shortages:Access to local skilled labor remains a major challenge for investors, especially those in
the SEZs. The issue is discussed in chapter 17 and several sector chapters in this report.
Box 5.2: Fair Manufacturing Company An Example of HR policies
The Fair Manufacturing Company (FMC) produces premium pet treats for export to the US market. Its
production facilities moved to Cambodia from China in 2009, when the company owner saw an early
opportunity for cost reduction due to lower labor wages in Cambodia. Currently the factory is entirely
operated and managed by Cambodian staff.

85
World Bank, Investment Climate Assessment Cambodia, Phnom Penh: 2012. Cambodia ranked 107 over 144 in terms of
irregular payments and bribes in World Economic Forum, The Global Competitiveness Report 2012-2013, Davos: WEF, 2013,
page 392. Cambodia scored 22 out of 100 in Transparency International, Corruption Perceptions Index, 2012. See
http://www.transparency.org/country#KHM.
86
World Bank,Investment Climate Assessment Cambodia, Phnom Penh: World Bank, 2012.

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FMC-Cambodia employs approximately 850 production line workers. They work one shift per day, from
7am to 4pm, with a lunch break from 11am to 12pm. The factory operates Monday to Saturday. The
company pays overtime bonuses in accordance with the Cambodian Labor Law, as well as additional
bonuses, to encourage workers to stay on during some public holidays rather than having to shut down
production entirely. For important long holidays, Khmer New Year and Pchum Ben day, FMC provides
extra days leave for workers that need to travel to the provinces.
In terms of other benefits, FMC employees are members of the obligatory insurance system provided by
the government-run National Social Security Fund (NSSF). This insurance scheme covers medical
expenses resulting from work-related accidents. In accordance with Cambodian labor law, FMC also has
a clinic on site to provide primary health care consultancy and give free basic medicine.
All employees, including management, are hired on a fixed term 2-way contract a contract that states
mutual responsibility and compensation of both parties the employers and its employees. Workers in the
production unit reportedly prefer short term (less than 1 year, commonly 6 months) contracts, given the
high demand for labor. Each new production line employee is trained for a few weeks during their one
month probation period. However, under-performing employees are rotated to work in different units
before any attempt is made to terminate the contract.
To minimize turnover and maximize productivity FMC has implemented a unique incentive scheme
based on individual and team performance in some key production units of the production line. This
scheme was developed internally through an incremental learning process and is only applied to specific
stages in the production process, where FMC feels the impact is highest. The performance is measured
both at an individual and at a production team level. Operationally, team output needs to be equal or
above the targeted output and the output of the previous week. For team leaders, if the production target
is met, performance based pay amounts to a fixed 12 percent of base monthly salary. They are also invited
twice per year on a company trip that enhances team building. Normal production workers receive a
higher incentive as proportion of their basic wage. This performance bonus is linked to the extra profit
generated by increased output and can vary between 16-32 percent of base monthly salary. The overall
aim is to maintain consistent performance.
Supervisors and team leaders also receive training in soft skills and management to value and respect
people. This is to instill the core value that working for the company is beneficial both to workers and
the company. FMC also hangs posters with proverbs on the fence of business premises, to publicly
encourage workers and other people to work together and follow the Labor Law. The company has not
experienced any strikes or problems with its workers during its 5 years of operations.
Though difficult to attribute to any specific factor, total staff turnover is relatively low at 10 percent
outside harvest season. Employees that have worked at FMC for less than 3 months contribute
approximately 8-15 percent to this total. Furthermore, FMC believes the performance based incentives
has improved overall staff productivity, although the precise effect is difficult to quantify.
Source: Interviews with General Manager and Founder of Fair Manufacturing Company (Cambodia)

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The Impact of FDI on Cambodias Development


Some Conventional Impacts
FDI contributes to the host country, not only by providing the much-needed capital for investment but
also by enhancing job creation and managerial skills and transferring new and superior technology. All of
these ultimately contribute to economic growth and development.
Augmenting Domestic Resources:FDI stimulates growth by increasing capital formation.This is the case
particularly in less developed countries where domestic resources may not be sufficient.87
Back in 2009, Cambodias National Institute of Statistics (NIS) used an econometric model to estimate
the total investment required to achieve the projected GDP growth rates over the five-year period covered
by the NSDP-III 2009-2013. NIS estimated that a total capital investment of over $15 billion was
required, of which 72 percentwould be private investment and the remaining 28 percent, public
investment. $8.4 billion or about 56 percent of this total was projected to come from domestic sources and
the remaining $6.6 billion or 44 percent from abroad including remittances from overseas Cambodians,
foreign aid, and FDI.88 Between 2009 and 2012, FDI inflows contributed almost $4 billion (see Figure
5.1.)
Relative to other forms of private foreign capital inflows, FDI tends to be less volatile than foreign
portfolio investment and foreign bank lending, which are more liquid and associated with a shorter time
horizon. Accordingly, FDI carries the seeds of more stable and sustainable economic growth.89For
Cambodia, with its low level of equity market development, FDI has been the dominant source of private
foreign capital inflows.
Box 5.3: Liwayway Pioneering Large-Scale Food Processing in Cambodia
Liwayway is a Filipino-owned, multinational producer of snack foods. It has production facilities
throughout South-East Asia, including the Philippines, Indonesia, Vietnam, Thailand, Myanmar,
Cambodia, and China.
The firm applied for a license in 2010 and started operations in December 2012. The production
machinery was imported from Vietnam and Philippines. As of July 2013, the factory employed around
100 workers, but it has the capacity for 200 more. It also has an option to expand the factory on an
adjacent plot.
The two main challenges facing Liwayway are finding staff skilled in the food industry and sourcing
locally produced raw materials. Because food processing is a new sector in Cambodia, Liwayway
experiences difficulties in recruiting skilled staff, particularly middle managers and quality control
positions. These are currently filled by Filipino expatriates, but the company is training local staff through
OTJ trainingwith the goal of becoming fully Cambodian staffed in the near future. The company also
provides seminars in the workplace focusing on food hygiene and safety including proper operation of
machinery to prevent accidents.
87

J. Vanek, Estimating Foreign Resources Needs for Economic Development, New York: McGraw-Hill, 1969.
Royal Government of Cambodia, National Strategic Development Plan Update 2009-2013, Phnom Penh: 2010.
89
R. E. Lipsey,The Role of Foreign Direct Investment in International Capital Flows, New York: NBER Working Paper No.
7094, 1999.
88

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Sourcing of locally produced raw materials has been a challenge because although Cambodia is rich in
agricultural products, the country lacks the technology and know-how for semi-processingto sell those as
end products. For example, Cambodia produces palm nuts but lacks refining technology to make edible
palm oil.
Liwayway is well known for its snack foods and is among the top three leading snack producers in the
Philippines, China, and Vietnam. This is due to the high quality of its snacks, its ability to adapt to local
taste, and its introduction of flavors for each specific market. This is also the case in Cambodia, where the
company currently produces eight different kinds of snack foods under the brand name Rinbee.
At this stage, the company is targeting the lower price segment of the Cambodian market sold through
wholesalers and wet markets. In the future, as marketing and brand awareness grow, the company plans
to produce higher priced products and distribute to supermarkets and mini-marts. The company prides
itself in its quality control processes and hopes that Rinbee can help raise the bar for higher quality and
sanitary locally produced food products.
Source:Interview with Operations Manager of Liwayway (Cambodia) Industries and First-mover
advantage Key Factor for Oishi Rise Overseas, Malaya, 27 March 2013.
FDI and Trade Promotion:FDI can also facilitate access to new and large foreign markets through
exports. Exporting is difficult because it requires detailed knowledge of foreign institutions, regulations,
distribution networks, and consumer preferences. Compared to domestic firms, foreign multinationals are
in a better position to enter foreign markets, given their experience operating across many countries.
Export-oriented FDI is believed to play a more positive role in the Cambodian economy because domestic
market-oriented FDI come with the risk of crowding out domestic investment and thus hamper domestic
growth. This may occur because of the higher wages foreign firms may be able to pay, their easier access
to credit, or the superior technology they employ which may reduce the competitiveness of domestic
firms. In addition, greater openness to trade can make a country more attractive to foreign investors.
Membership in WTO and ASEAN effectively signals the countrys commitment to foreign investors and
their assets, thus reassures them and encourages further investment. In short, FDI inflows and openness
to trade tend to complement each other.
Cambodias exports are in fact highly driven by FDI. This is illustrated by the FDI sector data shown
earlier in the chapter. GMAC data indicates that 87 percent of garment factories in the country are wholly
foreign owned, while just 6 percent are wholly owned by Cambodian nationals (the remainder are joint
ventures.)

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Employment and Poverty Alleviation


FDI contributes directly to employment when the investor sets up business in a host country and recruits
staff. It also has an indirect impact on employment through the multiplier effect.90 FDI also contributes to
a countrys income tax and, thus,contributes to government-led social programs that target the poor. In
Cambodia, however, the contribution of FDI to fiscal revenues is greatly reduced due to tax holidays and
relatively low income tax revenues from mostly low-paid labor employed by foreign investors. However,
a focus on attracting the FDI higher up in the value chain will result in the employment of higher paid
labor, generate higher fiscal revenues, lead to the obvious spillovers in skills and technology transfer, and
kick-start export sectors that would be otherwise non-existent due to lack of knowledge and technology.
Foreign investment in the garments industry, for example, plays a major role in poverty reduction by
providing employment and producing export products with a comparative advantage in the international
market. Entry barriers for those seeking employment in garment companies are not high. Employers do
not require factory-floor garment workers to have a high level of education. So far, according to data from
the Garment Manufacturers Association of Cambodia in 2013, foreign investment in the countrys
garments and footwear factories alone have created approximately 450,000 jobs and indirectly help feed
an estimated 1 million others. Ninety one percent of these workers are female, mainly poor women from
the rural provinces.91The development of the industry empowers women economically by providing them
with large-scale employment opportunities that also pay good high wages. The average wages are
significantly higher than those of garment workers in Bangladesh and often match those of garment
workers elsewhere in the sub-region (see chapter 17.)
Likewise, a growing number of FDI projects are in agricultural crops and agro-processing and they, too,
are playing a significant role in increasing local employment opportunities and livelihoods. A small
number of foreign companies have constructed school buildings and health centers in the areas where
they were granted land for agro-industrial investment. These facilities aim to serve the needs of farm
workers and, to some extent, local villagers living nearby.
Increasing FDI also contributes to establishing a more diverse job market through diversification, leading
to more sectors able to absorb workers and provide employment opportunities to Cambodian job seekers.
In addition, FDI may raise employment in other businesses through backward-linkage as it purchases raw
materials, spare parts, components, and local services. However, it may also have no effect or even
negative effects when it relies heavily on imported inputs. Similarly, in the case of forward-linkage, FDI
can indirectly create more jobs when using local distributors to distribute its goods or services.
Skills and Technology Development
FDI generally brings with it superior technology, including know-how and management skills,including
the introduction ofadvanced managerial skills and production processes, the use of better equipment and
machinery, etc. This is likely to benefit the local economy through skills and technology transfers or
spillover effects. While there are very few studies of technology diffusion by foreign firms in Cambodia,
FDI is perceived to contribute positively to the country by inducing a more efficient economy through
technology transfers and spillovers as described in several of the text boxes in the chapter.

90

UNCTAD,Transnational Corporations, Employment and Workplace, New York and Geneva: UN Publications, 1994and,
International Finance Corporation, Paths out of Poverty: The Role of Private Enterprise in Developing Countries, Washington:
IFC, 2000 http://www.ifc.org/publications/paths_out_of_poverty.pdf
91
GMAC, Annual Report2012, Phnom Penh: GMAC, 2013.

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Economists assume that foreign firms have higher productivity than others. Aitken and Harrison give the
following reasons:92

Superior and, possibly, newer production equipment can be transferred from the parent company
to its FDI affiliate;
The FDI affiliate may also receive an inflow of non-tangible assets from its parent company in
the form of technological know-how, management and marketing capabilities, trade contracts,
and coordinated networks with suppliers and customers;and,
Foreign companies may enjoy a lower cost of capital since they are not constrained to borrow
from the local financial system. The possible inability of domestic enterprises to borrow cheaply
from abroad is likely to reduce their ability to invest in superior technology.93

Technology transfers arise as a result of a multinationals attempt to boost the skills and capacity of the
local workforce. Such transfers not only occur in the form of machinery, equipment, expatriate managers,
and technicians, but are also realized through the training of local employees. Training may range from
OTJ training, to seminars, more formal schooling or even overseas education depending on the skills
needed.The technology spilloveroccurs, for example, when FDI operations induce domestic investors to
upgrade their human resources to remain at par with the multinationals or through turnover among
employees.
The literature on training and capacity building gives many reasons as to why foreign firms provide
workers with better learning opportunities than domestic firms. Foreign firms are less likely to face
resource constraints because they usually have wider access to foreign ones. In addition, they are more
likely to gain information on training techniques and organization because their range of information is
global.
Selected examples of corporate training programs offered by foreign multinationals in Cambodia, shown
in Box 5.4 beloware illustrative
Box 5.4: The Contribution of FDI to Skill Training and Technology Transfer in Cambodia.
Selected Examples

The $42 million VietnamCambodia joint Cho Ray-Phnom Penh Hospital project in Meanchey
district will employ 100 Cambodian doctors and 180 nurses to work alongside Vietnamese
counterparts. The hospital will send all doctors to the Cho Ray Hospital in Ho Chi Minh City for
a one-year training course prior to beginning their Phnom Penh operation in 2013. It will also
send Vietnamese doctors and health experts to Cambodia to train and transfer healthcare
technology to Cambodian doctors.
ANZ, which started in 2005 as a joint venture between the Australia and New Zealand Banking
Group Limited (ANZ) and Cambodias Royal Group, offers potential employees learning and
development opportunities through its Royal Young Bankers Program. Successful candidates
start within the banks different core areas of operation over a period of two years before
assuming a permanent role within the organization or moving elsewhere. The program helps
broaden career opportunities for Cambodians.
Minebea, a Japanese manufacturer of machinery components and electronic devices which started
its operations in 2011, provides technical training on small motors at Technical and Vocational

92

B. Aitken and A. Harrison, Do domestic firms benefit from foreign investment? Evidence from Venezuela, American
Economic Review, 89(3). 1999.
93
N. Oulton, Labor Productivity and Foreign Ownership in the UK, London: NIESR Working Paper No. 143, 1998.

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149

Education and Training (TVET) Institutes and Institute of Technology of Cambodia (ITC). It also
donated equipment to measure motor rotation and circuit boards needed to provide specialized
technical education.
British American Tobacco, with a strong presence in Cambodia since 1996, offers employees its
Global Management Trainees Program, which trains future managers by developing their
technical and management skills and general business expertise through on-the-job and off-thejob training.
Prudential Cambodia, which began operations in January 2013 in the countrys nascent life
insurance market, provides its staff in particular its sales representatives an intensive training
program on life insurance products so that all local employees who interact with prospective
customers are able to provide high-quality information and services. Some of its senior staff is
sent to Vietnam for further technical training something that the Cambodia country office cannot
adequately provide. Moreover, having entered a distribution partnership with Cambodias
ACLEDA Bank, Prudential also trains ACLEDA personnel in life insurance concept and
operations.
Bosch, which started operations in Cambodia in 2010, sponsors three vocational institutes in
Phnom Penh: Pour un Sourire dEnfant, the National Polytechnic Institute of Cambodia, and the
National Technical Training Institute. As part of the sponsorship, Bosch also offers training in
safe handling and correct application of professional power tools, targeting both teachers and
students. More than 3,000 young Cambodians are estimated to have attended this program so far.

Other relevant institutions in various sectors have also attempted to upgrade local skills and capacity. An
example in the garments and footwear industry is the planned Cambodia Garment Training Center,
supported by the Agence France de Development and to be operated by the Garment Manufacturers
Association of Cambodia. It is expected to conduct various training courses in production supervision,
quality control, sewing operation, and machine mechanics for Cambodians, responding to the need for
skilled workers and technicians and supervisors in the countrys rapidly growing garments industry.
Box 5.5: DENSO Emerging Skill Development Opportunities for Cambodians
DENSO Corporation, headquartered in Japan, is a leading supplier of advanced automotive technology,
systems and components for major automakers around the world. It operates production facilities in 35
countries and supplies engine parts to automotive factories throughout the Asia-Pacific region.
The company started its operations in Cambodia through expansion from neighboring Thailand, mainly
driven by the steep rise in wages there. DENSO wishes to diversify into more CLMV countries, and at the
moment Cambodia was chosen mainly due to its lower wages and beneficial geographic location. Those
factors were deemed to outweigh the higher logistics and electricity costs, which the company hopes will
improve in the near future.
DENSO occupies a leased factory since April 2013, where it started operations of one production line in
May. The product is a small automotive engine component. A semi-finished product is brought in from
Thailand, receives additional processing in Cambodia, and is shipped back to Thailand for final
processing and sales. Currently there are about two such shipments monthly between Thailand and.
DENSO is planning to build its own factory on a reserved a 100,000sqm plot in PPSEZ so it can ramp up
the number of production lines and capacity significantly. This will require significantly more workers.
Around 90 percent of assembly line workers are women.
So far DENSO has found it challenging to find enough assembly line workers. The company actively

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goes out to the provinces in order to hire. Frequently workers are found to be illiterate and low skilled.
DENSO provide Khmer reading and writing classes in addition to job specific training. Before a worker
can start on a production typically five days of training are required. They are taught not only technical
skills and safety awareness, but also soft skills and proper worker attitude to adjust from farm to
factory. Higher-skilled staff, such as production supervisors, quality control officers, and maintenance
personnel,is sent to Thailand for about two and a half months of training at DENSOs facilities there. The
company takes a long term perspective on staff training and skill development and plans to introduce its
Human Development Plan, from Thailand after it has been tailored to Cambodian needs. This plan
covers career development for staff in both technical and managerial areas with a training period ranging
from two to four years before individuals reach those positions.
Source: Interview with DENSO (Cambodia) General Manager and DENSO website
Community Development
Foreign multinationals are increasingly engaged in corporate social responsibility (CSR) activities
associated with codes of conduct, improved health and safety standards, company reporting on social and
environmental policy and performance, and increase in corporate social investment through community
development projects for example. In that regard, a number of social enterprises or inclusive businesses
have begun to emerge in Cambodia, largely driven by foreign enterprises.
For example, ANZ Royal Banks community program, in partnership with various development
organizations, provides both financial and in-kind support to the community. Some of its initiatives
include the following:

Childrens Surgical Centre: ANZ Royal Bank helped purchase an ambulance and launched a burn
prevention campaign for this NGO which provides free rehabilitation surgery to children in rural
Cambodia.
Helmets for Kids: In collaboration with the Asia Injury Prevention Foundation, ANZ Royal Bank
supports the distribution of motorcycle helmets for primary school children. Each year, around
500 helmets are donated to children. The bank has also provided its staff with motorcycle
helmets.
Friends International/Mith Samlanh: ANZ Royal Bank has a formal partnership with Friends
International/Mith Samlanh since 2007. ANZ staff volunteer every weekend at Mith Samlanhs
shelters and the company provides financial assistance to their fundraising programs, including
the Friends Flea Market and the Child-safe Fundraiser.
National Library of Cambodia: ANZ Royal Bank finances the librarys Information Literacy
Program, which teaches library users and researchers basic information literacy and library
catalogue search skills.

Some additional community programs sponsored by foreign investors include the following:

Manulife (Cambodia) has made donations to the Kantha Bopha Childrens Hospital in Siem Reap
and Phnom Penh. It also sponsors the Youth Stars program, which recruits and trains
Cambodian university student volunteers for 1218 months service in underserved rural
communities, where they work in health education, rural livelihoods and income generation, and
good governance.
Unilever, a supplier of consumer goods, has supported government initiatives to teach the public
about environmentally friendly practices, with a focus on reducing water waste.

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151

AEON, a Japanese investor in Cambodia involved in microfinance and retail, has contributed to
the construction of the Preah Norodom Sihanouk-Angkor Museum, which opened to the public in
2008. The company has also worked with UNICEF, sponsoring the construction of more than 100
schools to help provide education in provinces such as Kampong Speu, Prey Veng, and Kampong
Thom. Additionally, the AEON UNICEF Safe Water Campaign aims to improve water access in
the country.

Other foreign investors also see potential linkages between the long-term growth and profitability of their
companies and the sustainability and wellbeing of local communities. For example the American
Cambodian Chamber of Commerce formed a CSR Committee in 2012 to improve communication and
engagement between American businesses in the country and the NGO community.
Despite these wide-ranging initiatives and activities, the level of CSR in Cambodia among foreign firms
remains nascent at best. It is still a new concept and this may be, in part, the result of the multitude of
NGOs in Cambodia that appear to make it unnecessary for private foreign firms to undertake significant
CSR projects.

Conclusions and Recommendations


To support continued private sector investment in Cambodia and based on the foregoing analysis, a
number of factors call for the rapid development and implementation of an innovative investment
promotion strategy focusing on:
(a)

(b)

(c)

(d)

(e)

The need to ensure that investors become more aware of the investment opportunities offered by
Cambodia, especially in view of recent developments in investment conditions in other Asian
economies and developments in regional and global value chains;
Innovative ways to position Cambodia as an attractive investment location for foreign investors
from neighboring countries and those further afield including how best to take advantage of the
international division of labor and the resources available in Cambodia;
Strengthened capacity for Cambodia to become a hub for growth of the GMS Southern Economic
Corridor and, more broadly, the Greater Mekong Sub-region. The specific ways in which
Cambodia can leverage its position in the GMS Southern Economic Corridor need to be very
carefully examined and incorporated into the strategy, especially emphasizing the role of
Sihanoukville as a major spur off the Corridor;
Careful examination of the ways in which to convince potential infrastructure developers of the
benefits of investing in infrastructure in the country and, particularly, in the area of Sihanoukville.
A comprehensive investment promotion strategy can be a critical element of building this
credibility accompanied by reforms in the framework for public-private partnerships; and,
The need for Cambodia to benchmark itself clearly against competitors both inside and outside
the Greater Mekong Sub-region.

To address the critical need for improvements in the investment environment, the following measures will
need to be addressed:

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Building a National Investment Promotion Strategy


The first major step is to develop a comprehensive national investment promotion strategy as an integral
component of an overall policy to develop the investment potential of the country and reduce
poverty.94Such a policy could include the following elements:
(a)

(b)
(c)

(d)

(e)
(f)

(g)

A clear idea of where Cambodia is and where it is going from a business point of view. Lessons
learned from recent experiences of foreign investment in Cambodia and the Greater Mekong Subregion should be carefully considered as they provide invaluable insights into the likely issues to
be faced in the future from both positive and negative viewpoints;
A practical strategy to drive business developments in the right direction, with accompanying
measures to address remaining impediments to investment;
A strategic targeting and promotion of FDI. As competition increases and global value chains
become more fragmented, it becomes increasingly important to adopt a more targeted and
strategic approach to FDI. Thus far, Cambodia has had little by way of strategic programs to
target and attract FDI into priority industries. Cambodia needs to learn from regional competitors
ranging from Singapore to Malaysia and Thailand. There is a need for a more proactive role of
Government in facilitating joint activities with foreign investors and to stimulate the growth of
competitiveness-enhancing networks and services;
Concrete measures/actions to strengthen key targeted sectors (see the individual chapters focusing
on the ten sectors) or retain existing investments that are vulnerable to relocation (such as lowlabor cost investments);
Practical measures incorporating regional cooperation and integration considerations to position
Cambodia as a hub for the neighboring countries of the Greater Mekong Sub-region;
A demand-driven, human resource development strategy to build the skills required,
incorporating close industry-education sector linkages as a key element of this HRD strategy.
This strategy needs to involve all key players the private sector, Government agencies, and
educational institutions (see skill gap chapter.) A critical element of the overall strategy will
include ensuring that human resources in the Cambodian Investment Board and any other
involved institutions are well prepared and well resourced;
Careful understanding of the various steps in the investment promotion cycle from the initial
research phase to ongoing operations, in particular ensuring adequate attention to investors
following project start-up the after-care function. A key element of this will be an effective
firm tracking system.

94

The National Investment Promotion Strategy should build on the Rectangular Strategy Phase III, the National Strategic
Development Plan, the Industrial Development Policy, the Cambodia Vision 2030, and findings from this very study, Cambodia
Trade Integration Strategy, 2014-2018. It should be harmonized with the Laws on Investment and SEZs currently being
prepared.

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Figure 5.5.: The Investment Promotion Cycle


Figure 5.5.: Th
he Investmen
nt Promotioon Cycle

From Initial Research to Ongoing Operations






Information provision
Assistance with contacts
One-stop-shop services
Assessment of manpower,
infrastructure, service needs
Follow-up
Continued account executive
attention
Follow-up on manpower,
infra structure, service needs
Ombudsman role and
trouble-shooting function

Investment Project
Development
Project Start-Up

Project Operation

Ongoing contact to track needs for


infrastructure, manpower, services

Investment Decision

Information preparation
Niche market identification
Company targeting
Company visits
Follow-up

Account Executive/Investor Tracking System

Investor Targeting
and Promotion

hening Inveestment Prom


motion and Facilitation
n Capacity of
o Provinciall Governments
Strength
omic hubs
Currentlly, most inveestment in Caambodia is taargeted at urbban areas in Cambodiass main econo
(Phnom Penh, Siem Reap, and Sihanoukvillee) while the iinvestment potential in ruural areas and
d in other
provincees remains siignificant buut largely untapped. This is due partlyy to weak or nnon-existent investment
promotioon and faciliitation capaciity in the othher provincess and rural arreas. The devvelopment off a greater
understaanding of privvate business and the abiility to targett and servicee investors inn provinces will
w
contribuute to improvving the provvincial busineess climate aand stimulatinng greater prro-poor invesstment.
In the innvestment proomotion areaa, in line withh the Governnments Deceentralizationn and Deconccentration
(D&D) reforms
r
and to provide more
m
efficientt services to private sectoor investors, a February 2005
2
Anukrett to the Cambbodian investment law esstablished proovincial inveestment sub-committees (PISC.)95
The purp
pose of the PISC
P
is to maake it possiblle for provinnces to registeer investmennt proposals and
a provide
investmeent incentivees for investm
ments with caapital of lesss than $ 2,000,000. Howeever, virtually all
investmeent promotioon and facilittation activityy still remainns centered at
a the nationaal level in thee Cambodia
Investment Board (C
CIB.) PISCs require
r
stronnger, more cooherent guideelines, as weell as strongeer support
from thee CIB, and neeed to develoop their capaacity to servicce private innvestors at thee provincial level.
t three pilllars of the Trrade SWAp mechanism
m
- Pillar 1 andd Pillar 3 -- aaddress vario
-ous aspects
Two of the
of trade promotion aand investmeent facilitation. However, all the intervventions to date
d have beeen targeted
AS), JICA, UNCTAD
U
or UNIDO
essentiallly at the nattional level. Past supportt by the Worlld Bank (FIA
have also focused onn the CIB. Only
O
USAID started workking at the prrovincial leveel, with prodduction of
provinciial investmennt brochures for 12 provinces and cappacity-buildinng activities in two proviinces.
B presently has
h no clear specific
s
unit or
o division ddealing with provincial
p
innvestment
The CIB
issues.B
Building the capacity
c
of thhe CIB to suppport the PIS
SCs and enabbling the PIS
SCs to functio
on as more
effectivee provincial Investment
I
P
Promotion
Agencies
A
(IPA
As) in provinnces will enabble provinciaal authoritiess
95

Royal Government
G
of C
Cambodia, Anuukret on the Esta
ablishment of thhe Sub-Committtee on Investmeent of the ProviincesMunicipallities of the Kinngdom of Camboodia, 2005

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to provide better services to private investors. Initial efforts should focus on trade-related investments,
thus attracting more investment and increasing retention of existing investment in the provinces. Over the
longer term, the focus should be on strengthening provincial business climates and attracting quality
investments that create jobs, that stimulate backward linkages into the MSME sector, and that contribute
to the development objectives of the provinces. This applies to investment in agro-processing,
manufacturing or services (especially tourism which can have significant spillover effect through
backward linkages.)
Promoting FDI Linkages and Spillovers
Efforts to enhance spillover benefits from FDI should be an intrinsic part of government strategies to
enhance competitiveness and restructure industry. Industrial deepening enhancing the levels of valueadded created in the production of goods and services is the key to Cambodia's continued
competitiveness and economic dynamism. There is a strong case for government intervention because of
the widespread externalities and information problems involved in building local linkages. Such programs
are absent in Cambodia, and are becoming more urgent in view of greater inflows of foreign investment
and increasing competition in global markets.
In 2004, MoCdeveloped a comprehensive action plan for Cambodias garment industry.96 A key element
of this action plan was to develop backward linkages in the sector, including: (a) promoting investments
in backward linkage development, possibly through the formation of a Garment Industry Investment
Fund; (b) integrating SMEs into the garment industry cluster through reforms in tax policies, investment
rules, and removal of other SME impediments; and, (c) strengthening supply chains through closer
regional integration. A practical follow-up program in 2005-6 called Planting Industrial Roots in
Cambodia developed an investment program for the industry and worked to stimulate the interest of
Cambodian investors in the sector. While somewhat dated, many of the actions and recommendations are
likely still relevant.
In other countries, such as Taiwan, Singapore, and Ireland, programs to develop an internationally
competitive small and medium enterprise (SME) supplier sector have been shown to have been key to
those countries abilities to attract and retain investment by multinationals. The experiences of these
countries as well as Japan demonstrate clearly that top level support and commitment to building a strong
SME supplier sector can pay handsome dividends. It is vital for Cambodia to draw on the experience of
other countries in this area, adapt it to local needs, and set up a national supplier development program
(NSDP) with commitment from government and the allocation of sufficient resources. In order to
succeed, such program must bring together all agencies and players involved in SME development and
related areas. Existing resources must be deployed more effectively and additional resources must be
allocated within a consistent framework to avoid duplication and wastage. The involvement of the private
sector is a key element of the whole program. Private sector institutions and associations must be included
in all aspects of the program from the setting of goals and targetsto the implementation and monitoring of
the specific activities.
Established export industries are a natural starting point for such industrial deepening. Cambodias
garment, bicycle, and footwear sectors have all reached levels of production that create attractive markets
to businesses able to supply these industries with inputs. Though the scale of these sectors make it
possible to develop clusters of domestic suppliers, for this to succeed Government may need to address
some of the current bottlenecks that seem to make it difficult for export-oriented operations to purchase
goods or services from domestic suppliers.

96

ADB, Cambodias Garment Industry: Meeting the Challenges of the Post-Quota Environment, Phnom Penh: ADB, 2004.

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155

A critical dimension of such program will be to link it closely to opportunities offered by Rules of Origin
under various trade preferential programs. As shown in Chapter 1, much of the increase in manufactured
exports since 2007 has been driven by favorable ROs (from EU under EBA, Canada under DFQF, etc.)
Currently in most sectors, including Cambodias major export industries, locally produced inputs and
materials are simply not available. Investors have to either import them directly or purchase previously
imported materials from an intermediary trader in the local marketplace. Other sectors, such as those
relying on agricultural inputs, have some domestically produced inputs which may be sourced. In both
cases however there are some issues facing investors.
On the most fundamental level, product quality is a major concern especially regarding agricultural
products (see Box 5.3 as well as chapter 4 and several of the sector-specific chapters in the report.) Lack
of reliability of local suppliers has also been raised as an issue by firms, particularly those with timesensitive supply chains of products destined for export.
Additionally, issues have been raised regarding tax incentives provided to QIPs, especially inside the
countrys SEZs. Currently, export-oriented QIPs located inside SEZs enjoy complete VAT exemption on
imports as well as materials purchased inside the SEZ. When purchasing inputs from the domestic
market, outside of the SEZ however, they have to pay VAT at time of purchase but are eligible for a
rebate at the time of export.97 This can be a cumbersome process for some firms, which is additionally
complicated when domestic suppliers are not registered for VAT. These firms therefore opt to import
materials, in order to avoid tax administration issues.
In addition to enhancing the ability of Cambodian SMEs to increasingly play this role, efforts need to be
made to promote either or both FDI and domestic suppliers in areas such as production of yarn and fabric,
production of bicycle parts, and of inputs to footwear production.
The key elements of the NSDP can be classified into four main groups of activities:98
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)

Building awareness and lobbying for support


Supplier capability improvement
Promotion to fill the gaps in the supplier sectors
Incentives to promote the growth of the supplier sector.

The following graphic sums up the important of linkages throughout the industrial technology
development system, and indicates where supplier linkages fit into the broader picture.

97

An exception to this is the garment industry, which receives a full exemption under Prakas Zero Rate VAT for local supply of
goods and services to Garment Export Oriented Companies (2005- Prakas No 298 MEF.TD).
98
UNCTAD,World Investment Report 2001, Geneva and New York: Un Publications, 2001 shows the range of policies and
programs available to countries to promote backward linkage development. One is matching grants for activities that are
demonstrated to create networks or linkages.

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Figure 5.6: Technology Development and Supplier Linkages

EXAMINING FIRM INTERFACES WITHIN THE


THE INDUSTRIAL TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT SYSTEM
CUSTOMERS

LINKAGES/
INTERFACES

ENTERPRISES
Large TNC

Large
Domestic

SME

Supplier Linkages

Linkages

Domestic

Buyer

Export

Knowledge
Linkage,
Transfer and
Development
Organisations

Metrology and
Standards

Start-Ups

Policy and Incentive Systems


Legal Frameworks

OTHER KNOWLEDGE
SOURCES
Research
Institutes

Universities

Vocational
Training
Foreign Technology
Sources and
Input Suppliers

Financial and Funding Systems


Organisational Structures

INSTITUTIONAL CONTEXT

Experience shows that the activities of the NSDP should be focused on the industry level to enable
opportunities to be well-specified and documented. Industries should be selected for specific NSDP
attention on the basis of:
(a)

(b)
(c)

The potential for local suppliers to become global suppliers of components, parts, services to
principals in the industry. This is especially important in the increasingly global markets in which
multinationals are operating.
The potential for extensive "linkage" effects. There must exist realistic opportunities for locallybased suppliers to access a significant share of parts, components, and other inputs.
The potential for major incremental export earnings.

Possible Actions to achieve some of these results are presented in the Trade SWAp Roadmap 2013-2017
under Outcome #5.

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Box 5.6: The Impact of ASEAN on FDI in Cambodia


Cambodia joined ASEAN in 1999, committing itself to undertaking the necessary reforms to integrate its
economy further into the region. Broadly speaking, Cambodias ASEAN membership helps to draw
more foreign investors through greater and more secure market access abroad and improvement of the
countrys business environment and image abroad.
As an ASEAN member, Cambodia is part of the evolving ASEAN Economic Community (AEC), the
main component of which is to liberalize its regional trade under the ASEAN Free Trade Agreement
(AFTA.) AFTA aims to bring about the reduction and elimination of import tariffs on trade in goods
within ASEAN by the end of 2015. This reduction of import tariffs will influence the pattern of foreign
investment. However, the impact will largely depend on the structure or motive of FDI.99
In the case of vertical FDI, when a firm locates its production process and facilities abroad to take
advantage of the international differences in factor prices, the link between regionalization and FDI are
more complementary. Almost all FDI inflows in manufacturing in Cambodia fall into this category where
foreign investors can enjoy Cambodias comparative advantage of low labor cost. A reduction of trade
barriers among ASEAN, as well as other countries that have adopted FTAs with the ASEAN block, is
likely to lead to increased FDI inflows in Cambodia as it becomes easier to import the necessary inputs,
put them into production process, and export the finished product from Cambodia back to the home
country or elsewhere in the region.
In addition to the reduction or elimination of tariffs, the AEC mandates additional reforms in investment
and trade facilitation policy, such as limits to foreign ownership and free flow of goods and services.
With regard to investment mandates, the ASEAN Comprehensive Investment Agreement (ACIA) was
signed in 2009 and entered into force in 2012, with pillars of investment protection, liberalization, and
facilitation, and dispute settlement mechanisms. Cambodias investment regime is currently liberal and
meets or exceeds most requirements, such as allowing 100 percent foreign ownership in most sectors. So
the impact is likely to be limited. On the other hand, it should be noted that other emerging markets
within the region, such as Myanmar, will enjoy the same benefits and may introduce reforms to become
more competitive destinations for FDI inflows.
In terms of free flow of goods and services, challenges for Cambodia remain such as the establishment of
an ASEAN Single Window. According to ERIA (2012), five original members already have
implementation of their National Single Window (NSW) with clear plans to expand the service to all
major ports and airports by 2015.100 The development of NSW in Cambodia is still in the early stage.
This will likely affect the countrys effort in promoting integration into regional production networks with
other member countries.
Foreign investors have demonstrated recently a positive view on Cambodia as an investment destination
within ASEAN. For example, , Japanese firms such as DENSO and Minebea (see boxes 5.1 and 5.5),
while considering to diversify their operation into CLMV countries, decided to place their investment in
Cambodia due to the countrys comparative advantages including lower wages and beneficial
geographical location. While these advantages currently outweigh higher logistic and electricity costs,
these issues will need to be improved in the near future in order for Cambodia to remain competitive.
99

M. Blomstrmand A. Kokko, Regional Integration and Foreign Direct Investment, Working Paper Series in Economics and
Finance No. 172, 1997.
100
Economic Research Institute for ASEAN and East Asia, 2012, Mid-Term Review of the Implementation of AEC Blueprint:
Executive Summary, ERIA, 2012.

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159

Korea
161
0
25
71
17
107
0
0
45
35
4
0
32
262
231
6
31
13
1,040

China

439
14
4
11
0
1,952
0
0
0
21
610
2
45
57
525
79
36
36
3,834

2
0
0
2
0
0
0
0
4
9
0
0
0
0
248
106
18
0
390

Taiwan
1,037
0
7
5
0
3
2
9
0
3
3
0
101
31
0
0
2
4
1,206

Vietnam
89
0
0
1
0
49
0
0
0
6
1
0
92
671
15
3
0
0
926

US
62
0
0
0
0
29
0
0
36
3
0
0
12
241
37
0
5
1
426

Malaysia
0
0
0
0
0
8
0
0
0
4
0
0
26
225
188
8
37
1
496

Hong
Kong
135
0
4
170
0
16
0
0
0
6
1
0
0
81
36
6
3
0
460

317
0
11
45
0
3
0
45
0
6
1
0
0
19
9
6
0
2
463

Singapore Thailand
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
287
328
0
0
0
0
615

Russia

170
2
0
2
2
98
7
5
59
60
14
2
250
495
185
25
12
0
1,388

Others

2,412
16
51
307
19
2,266
9
59
144
153
633
4
845
2,410
1,473
239
145
58
11,244

TOTAL

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Source: CDC monthly data


Note (*): (1) Approvals of fixed asset proposals only; (2) missing data for November 2007, December 2007, and November 2012; (3) Six mega projects
excluded: construction ($988 million in 2006; $967 million in 2008; $1.1 billion in 2011), site development ($3.8 billion in 2008), construction of Siem Reap
airport ($973 million in 2010), and fertilizer plant ($2.2 billion in 2011).

(Fixed assets,
$ million)
Agro-industry
Assembly (excl. electronic)
Beverages
Construction
Electronic assembly
Energy
Foods
Hospital
Infrastructure
Light manufacturing
Mining
Pharmaceutical
Telecom
Tourism
Garment
Footwear
Other garment
Others
TOTAL

Annex Table 5.1: FDI Approvals by Major Country by Sector Classification, 2005-2012*

160 Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

Chapter 6
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS
Introduction
Cambodia has made great strides since the mid-2000s in establishing a modern Intellectual Property
Rights (IPRs) infrastructure by focusing on the adoption of a WTO-compatible legal framework, its
implementation, and its enforcement. Overall, the Cambodian IP laws developed thus far are largely
consistent with international standards even if, in a few cases, some punctual revisions might be helpful to
ensure a closer alignment with the TRIPS requirements and/or best practices.
On June 11, 2013, the TRIPS Council postponed the date for Least Developed Countries to comply with
the TRIPS Agreement toJuly 1, 2021, with the exception of the provisions inArticles 3, 4, and 5 of the
Agreement.101 This postponement replaces the 2002 and 2005 WTO decisions whereby LDCs enjoyed a
transitional period to comply with all TRIPS provisions expiring in July of 2013 or in 2016 for
pharmaceutical products.102
An interesting question for Cambodian policy-makers might be how to make optimal use of this extended
transition period to build an IPR regime that is supportive of the countrys development objectives, as an
LDC, knowing that, by the end of the transition period, the regime will need to be compliant with the
WTO. In that regard, while the long term goal should be WTO compliance, in the short term Cambodia
might be able to use selectively non-compliant provisions that are helpful to its development needs. The
sequencing of actions should also be an important question for review by Cambodian policy-makers to as
to make most effective use of limited financial, institutional, and human resources during the transition
period. To be most effective, the order in which various tasks are approached should be influenced by
current capacity and the needs for capacity building in various areas.
A complete answer to these complex questions is beyond what can be addressed in this short chapter.
Nevertheless, the chapter seeks to identify possible areas of needs and, in the conclusion, suggests a
possible sequencing in the deployment of efforts and resources needed.

101
Articles 3, 4, and 5 deal with national treatment and most-favored-nation treatment. WTO Council for Trade-Related Aspects
of Intellectual Property Rights, WTO Document IP/C/64, Extension of the Transition Period under Article 66.1 for Least
Developed Country Members, Decision of the Council for TRIPS of 11 June 2013, Geneva: WTO, June 12, 2013.
102
WTO Council for Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights, Extension of the Transition Period under Article 66.1
for Least Developed Country Members for Certain Obligations with respect to Pharmaceutical Products, Decision of the Council
for TRIPS of 27 June 2002, WTO Document IP/C/25, Geneva: WTO, June 28, 2002, and WTO Council for Trade-Related
Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights, Extension of the Transition Period under Article 66.1 for Least Developed Country
Members, Decision of the Council for TRIPS of 29 November 2005, WTO Document IP/C/40, Geneva: WTO, November 30,
2005.

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To do so, the chapter reviews four areas:


1.
2.
3.
4.

The current state of Cambodias IPR legal and institutional framework


Ongoing developments in the domestic legal framework
Cambodias international IPR environment
The deepening use of IP protections by Cambodian businesses and creating an awareness of the
importance and value of IPR in the Cambodian public at large

Cambodias Current IPR Legal and Institutional Framework


Current responsibilities for Intellectual Property Rights protection in Cambodia is distributed across
several Ministries. The Ministry of Commerce (MoC) is responsible for Trademarks, Geographical
Indications, and Trade Secrets; The Ministry of Industry and Handicrafts (MIH) (formerly, Ministry of
Industry, Mines and Energy - MIH), for Patents, Industrial Designs, Utility Models, Integrated Circuits,
as well as Seeds Varieties and Plant Breeder Rights; The Ministry of Culture and Fine Arts (MoCFA), for
Copyright and related rights; The Ministry of Information, for Broadcasting; The Ministry of Posts and
Telecommunication (MoPT), for Internet Domain Names. There are currently three main IP Offices: the
Department of IPRs (within the MoC), the Department of Industrial Property (within MIH) and the
Department of Copyright and Related Rights (within the MoCFA).

Ministry of Commerce
Trademarks: Producers attach trademarks to their goods, so that consumers can distinguish their
products or services from those of others. A Trademark provides consumers information as to the origins
of the product or service, hence information about expected quality. There are trademarks for goods and
services, also collective/certification marks. Registration and protection of trademarks can be extended
indefinitely, as long as the respective product or service is being sold under that trademark.
Cambodias Law Concerning Marks, Trade Marks and Acts of Unfair Competition dates back to 2002.
Until now, Cambodian companies have made limited use of trademarks. Cambodia exports very few
products under a Cambodian trademark. Registration of Trademarks by MoC has grown rapidly in recent
years growing from 1,650 applications in 2002 to 5,140 in 2012, including 906 filed by local firms, with a
cumulative total of 43,240by the end of 2012. On average, over the period 2007-2012, 80 percent of
registered trademarks were by foreign firms.
Geographical Indications (or GIs):Protected geographical indications (GIs) are distinctive labels
indicating that a product comes from a certain geographical area and that it is produced according to
certain standards, using prescribed methods. GIs are mostly applied to agro-food products with the goal of
distinguishing them from equivalent products produced elsewhere or without using a prescribed process
or method. In some countries, GIs are purely geographical, in the sense that they only refer to the place of
production, and no production method need to be described (Australia, for instance.)
Protection of GIs is internationally recognized, but countries apply very different frameworks. The USA
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prefers to facilitate the protection of GIs through the collective trademark system (as allowed by TRIPS),
while other countries have developed a sui-generis (dedicated) legal framework to protect GIs, notably
the European Union.
Cambodias GI system is currently governed by a Prakas. Cambodian GIs follow the European approach
and therefore include a certified quality management structure, not only for the topographical origin, but
also for growing/production methods (use of fertilizer and pesticideinputs) and post-harvest processing.
Quality management is expensive. In addition, agricultural commodities benefiting from a GI will also
need to meet SPS requirements of importing countries. However, compliance with international SPS
standards as part of the quality management system of a GI maybe a beneficial by-product of establishing
a GI. Maintaining a GI is expensive and requires a high level of compliance for building and maintaining
its reputation.
Two Cambodian GIs have been established thus far: Kampot black pepper and Kampong Speu palm
sugar. When establishing a GI, MoC works closely with MAFF to identify the geographical boundaries
of the GI, the production method of the good, and the quality management structure in place or to be
established. Two additional GIs are under consideration for possible future registration: Silk Phnom Sroc
and Thmoh Kaul Rice.
Ministry of Culture and Fine Arts
Copyright: Copyright relates to the protection of literary and artistic expressions of creativity, such as
writing in books and textbooks, paintings, sculptures, architectural design, music creation and songwriting, movies and video games creation, etc. Copyright encourages creativity by providing authors,
artists, and other creators with the exclusive rights to reproduce, publish, and otherwise use their work
typically for 50 years (from the death of the author.) Cambodias Law on Copyright and Related Rights
was promulgated in 2003.
There are many musicians, painters, (architectural) designers, and other artists in Cambodia that can
benefit from exclusive rights for their works. Therefore, copyright can help to stimulate and protect
creativity in Cambodia. Non mandatory registration of copyrights has grown to about 50 in 2010.
Cambodia is not a member of the Berne Convention. Most of Bernes substantive provisions are
incorporated into the TRIPS Agreementto which Cambodia is a signatory.103 This implies that copyright
recognized in countries that are WTO members should be protected up to its statutory limit of 50 years.
However, under the extended transition period granted by the TRIPS Council in June 2013, theBernes
substantive provisions incorporated in TRIPS do not apply to Cambodia as of yet. They will apply only
starting in 2021.
Under its Law on Copyright Cambodia also provides for the protection of related rights. Performers are
granted the exclusive right to authorize the broadcasting, fixation and distribution to the public of their

103

. The WTO TRIPS Agreement includes most of the rules included in the Berne Convention, with the main exception of the
moral rights provision.

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performances, for 50 years following the first fixation of the performance. Phonogram and video
producers, as well as broadcasting organizations, also have their rights protected under the law.
Ministry of Industry and Handicrafts
Industrial Design: Cambodias Law on Patents, Utility Models and Industrial Designs dates back to
2003. Industrial Design (ID) provides designers with an exclusive right to the non-technical, nonfunctional external appearance of their design for up to 15 years upon registration. Protected ID can cover
shape, drawing, patterns, prints, colors, or any other characteristic of products that are visible and identify
the product from the outside. Technical and functional design features are explicitly excluded from ID
protection. However, the product to which the ID protection isgranted must have a specific functionality.
Hence, paintings and sculptures are normally not eligible for design protection.
Cambodia has a number of designers and a large amount of traditional and modern designs in fabric,
traditional fashion, traditional handicrafts, decoration, or temple and buildingornaments.There are
important opportunities to support Cambodian designers with the protection of their design. ID protection
may also encourage copiers to become creators,hence, contribute to developing the entire sector.
As of 2012, MIH had received 232 applications for registration of Industrial Designs, including 32
applications from local firms. Of the 232 applications, 192 registrations had been granted, of which 25 to
local firms.
Patents and Utility Model:A patent is a 20-year exclusive right granted to an inventor to use and exploit
his/her invention. Patents are granted by registration after examination of an application. The examination
assesses whether the invention is new, the result of an inventive step, and applicable to commerce or
industry. If so, a patent can be granted to the inventor. Patents provide an important incentive for
innovation and can contribute to transfer of technology since the technology covered by patents is made
public.
In the medium term, Cambodian companies are unlikely to have the capacity required to develop complex
technology. All patentapplications from 2003 to 2012 came from foreigners. Still, while Cambodian
firms do not work on development of patented technology and do not export any patented technology,
Cambodia is importing patented products, including rawmaterials for its emerging manufacturing
industry. A good patent system can play an important role in attracting foreign investors. However, it is
also important to manage the Cambodian patentsystemwisely, so that it does not lead to unnecessary high
prices for rawmaterials or production technology.
The way in which the Cambodian patent system is designed and managed may, not onlyimpact
Cambodian producers but, also lead to higher prices for the Cambodian government and Cambodian
consumers. Medicine is an important example. If a particular medicine were patented in Cambodia, the
premium price charged by the originator of the medicine might make it unaffordable to patients. Though
Government might issue a compulsory license, the administrative procedure to allow a government to
purchase a generic equivalenttends to be tedious. For the time being, pharmaceutical patents need not be

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granted under the Cambodian patent law, based on the WTO extension of transitional period for
TRIPSimplementation until the year 2021.
Applications for patents registration had grown from 13 in 2007 and to 196 by the end of 2012. Thus far,
no patent has been granted. MIH is still working on putting in place a registration process with some
assistance from WIPO.
Similar issues mayexist with the utilitymodel (UM) protection. UMs are designed to protect minor
inventions that do not meet the inventive step requirement. UM protection is shorter as compared to
patents. The only requirement for UMs is that the technology (or functionality) is new and industrially
applicable.
Plant Variety Protection (Plant Breeders Rights): Plant variety protection (PVP) relates to the rights of
breeders to exploit new plantvarieties that they bred as long as they are markedly different from existing
varieties and can be propagated in a stable manner. "Stable" means that successive generations of the
newly created variety are consistent in their characteristics. The TRIPS Agreement allows WTO
members to protect plant varieties either through the patent system or by developing a sui generis system
for the protection of PVP. Cambodia has followed the second path and meets this requirement with
itsLaw on Seed Management and Plant Breeders Rights (2008). Cambodia is exploring the costs and
benefits of acceding to the International Convention for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants (UPOV,
1991 version.)
Current Implementation and Enforcement Capacity
Initially, each ministry tended to focus on developing capacity and implementation in the areas it covers.
In 2008, the Government adopted a sub-decree creating a National Committee for Intellectual Property
Rights (NCIPR) to coordinate all agencies involved in IP protection. The NCIPR replaces an earlier
Committee (the Inter-Ministerial Committee Governing the Three Areas of Intellectual Property.) Over
the last few years, the NCIPR has been quite active in promoting a holistic and comprehensive approach
to the development of IP resources in Cambodia.
As far as implementation is concerned, typically the main IP offices tend to be short on institutional,
human, IT, and financial resources if only to implement their mandates under the respective Laws. At
some point in the future, Cambodia might also want to review the costs and benefits of a fragmented IPR
implementation system and the possibility of bringing the main IP offices under a single institutional
umbrella, as done in other countries.
As far as enforcement is concerned, mechanisms for the resolution of disputes vary depending on the
nature of the rights but are in place or being put in place in most of the current key IP areas. Typically,
rights holder can use a number of channels to protect their rights including cease or desist letters or
other out-of-court mechanisms, such as mediation through the Ministry concerned (for instance, MoC
mediated and resolved 32 out of 35 trade mark disputes in 2010), or by calling upon the assistance of the
Economic Police (the Economic Police has the authority to cease counterfeits for instance, some
250,000 CD/VCD were impounded in 2010, up from some 27,000 in 2009). Alternatively, IP holders
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whose rights have been infringed can go to Court to seek restoration of their rights (including civil and
criminal measures, injunctions, etc.)
Early experience with dispute resolution points to the need for increased coordination among the many
actors responsible for implementing and enforcing rights. This applies not only to the line ministries
mentioned earlier but also to the Economic Police of the Ministry of Interior (MoI), the General
Directorate of Customs and Excise (GDCE,) Cambodia Import-Export Inspection and Fraud Repression
Directorate General (Camcontrol) of MoC, the Ministry of Justice, to the judicial system and others.
In addition to focusing on technical assistance needs and coordinating access to AfT resources, the
National Committee for Intellectual Property Rights (NCIPR)is in the process of establishing two subcommittees: one focusing on enforcement; the other focusing on education. However the required
Anukrets to set up the two sub-committees have yet to be issued.
The Sub-Committee on IP Law Enforcement aims at strengthening coordination among enforcement
bodies, clarifying responsibilities, developing consistent guidelines, and developing enforcement data
bases.
The Sub-Committee on Educationaims at developing curriculum materials and human capacity to train
university students at undergraduate and postgraduate levels as well as active professionals including
private and public sector lawyers, government officials, academics, SME representatives, judges, and
other enforcement agents, such a custom and police officials. In particular, capacity development
initiatives should be designed to enhance the practical knowledge and skills of judges to handle IP cases
in an expeditious and effective manner. Cambodian judges, in fact, have not benefited from large and
comprehensive programs specifically covering IP. Their capacity to solve IP cases remains inadequate.
Hence, preliminary injunctions and criminal measures are very seldom granted. Likewise, the technical
skills and expertise of enforcement officials should be enhanced in the field of border measure and in
particular on how to distinguish genuine and counterfeited or pirated products.
The Sub-Committee on Educationis also responsible for designing programs and carrying out activities
with a view to raising public awareness on IP matters and promoting a culture of innovation. In this
regard, as pointed out in the recent Cambodia National Strategy on IPR, it would be useful to develop the
capacity of other government officials to encourage and enforce the use of IPRs, particularly in the field
of agriculture, traditional cultural expressions and traditional knowledge (against third parties
counterfeiting of Cambodian products), and tourism.

Ongoing Developments in the IP Legal Framework in Cambodia

Domestic IP Legislation
Table 6.1 provides an overview of the current legal framework for IP in Cambodia. In addition to
existing domestic legislation, Cambodia is working on five new key legislations including a Law on
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Geographical Indications (to supersede the current Prakas) and a Law on Trade Secrets and Undisclosed
Information under MoCs responsibility, a Law on Layout Designs of Integrated Circuits (also to
supersede an existing Prakas) under MIHs responsibility, a Law on Traditional Knowledge, Genetic
Resources, and Traditional Cultural Expressions under MoCFAs responsibility,and a Law on
Compulsory Licensing for Public Health under the responsibility of the Ministry of Health (MoH.) The
first three laws are all included in the Work Program of the Royal Government of Cambodia on WTO
Requirements and Related Issues 2012-2015 adopted following the November 2011 WTO Trade Policy
Review.
Cambodia is also looking very carefully at the costs and benefits of joining additional international
conventions, such as the Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT), the Madrid Protocol on international
registration of Trademarks, the WIPO Copyright Treaty (WCT), and the WIPO Performance and
Phonogram Treaty (WPPT.) These new efforts are also guided by the need to ensure Cambodia meets its
WTO obligations and ASEAN commitments while making best use of provisions beneficial to LDCs
(more on this in this chapters next major section.)
Law on Geographical Indications: As noted earlier the law will supersede the Prakas that, currently,
regulates this area. As explained in the previous section, the draft law follows largely the European
model of GIs. Cambodia is rich in products that could benefit from enhanced protection through GIs.
However, it is worth recalling that a registration system may not be sufficient to ensure the commercial
success of such products. A GI label should be accompanied by a number of strategic marketing and
brand-raising measures.
Law on the Protection of Layout Designs of Integrated Circuits: Protected LayoutDesigns(LDs) of
Integrated Circuits are the three-dimensional arrangements (topographies) of individual elements in an
integrated circuit (IC.) ICs are complex components that are intended to perform an electronic function.
The TRIPS Agreement requires WTOmembers to provide owners of LDs with ten years of exclusive
rights to their ICdesign in line with selected provisions of theTreaty on Intellectual Property in Respect of
Integrated Circuits (IPIC Treaty) as long as their design is original.104
This means that layoutdesigns that are commonplace among creators of layoutdesigns and manufacturers
of ICs at the time of their creation cannot be protected, except if there is a combination of known designs
that is sufficiently original.105Protection can be made dependent on registration of the design within two
years of its first commercialization. Only willful acts relating to ICs that infringe on an LD are considered
unlawful.106 Exclusive rights of LDowners are subject to government use, public non-commercial use,
compulsory licenses and other public interest safeguards that also apply to patents.107

104
. Treaty on Intellectual Property in Respect of Integrated Circuits of 1989(IPIC Treaty)as referred in Article 35 of the TRIPS
Agreement
105
.Article 3(2) (a) and (b) of the IPIC Treaty.
106
. Article 37(1) TRIPS.
107
. Article 37(2) TRIPS.

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If Cambodia chooses not to make LD protection dependent on prior registration, all newly created LDs
would be protected in Cambodia for ten years from the date of their first commercial exploitation,
wherever in the world it occurred.108
Law on Trade Secrets and Undisclosed Information: To prevent acts of unfair competition, the TRIPS
Agreement requires that undisclosed information is protected against unauthorized disclosure and
transfer, as far as such information is not generally known among or accessible to persons that normally
deal with such information. To be eligible for protection, the undisclosedinformation should also have
commercial value precisely in light of its secrecy and those, who lawfully hold the information, should
have taken reasonable measures to keep it secret.
In this context, a particular issue that may be of direct relevance to Cambodia is the protection of
(undisclosed) data necessary to obtain marketing approval for pharmaceutical or agricultural chemical
products from the relevant government authority. WTO members must ensure that such undisclosed test
or other data are duly protected against unfair commercial use and against disclosure. This obligation
applies to data that can only be created through considerable effort and when it relates to products that
make use of new chemical entities.
Law on Traditional Knowledge, Genetic Resources, and Traditional Cultural Expressions: Cambodia
possesses abundant genetic resources and traditional knowledge that could be used for the benefit of the
country in numerous sector of the economy, such as in the health, culture, agriculture, and nutrition
sectors. A draft Law on Traditional Knowledge, Genetic Resources, and Traditional Cultural Expressions
is being prepared under MoCFAs responsibility.
International standards on the protection of genetic resources and related traditional knowledge have been
agreed upon in the United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) of 1992 to which
Cambodia is a party. The CBD protects genetic resources for the purpose of maintaining biological
diversity and productivity of ecological systems. This is done by facilitating access to and utilization of
biological resources in a manner aimed at preserving them for future generations. The CBD requires that
communities holding genetic resources or traditional knowledge provide their prior informed consent to
their use and be entitled to a fair share of the economic benefits deriving from their exploitation.
While the CBD does not provide forstandard IPRs for communities holding genetic resources, it has
important implications for IPRs that are derived from such genetic resources. The 2002 National
Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan for Cambodiarecognize that Cambodian lacks legislation in the
area of biodiversity and mentions the need for such law to be enacted in the future.109

108

. Article 38(2) TRIPS.


See National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan for Cambodia, Theme 16 (Legislation and Institutional Structure),
Ministry of Environment of the Royal Government of Cambodia, Phnom Penh: MoE, April 2002, pp. 70 and 72
109

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169

Anukret on IP Border measures

Drafting underway

Adopted 2008
Draft ready to send to CoM
Draft ready to send to CoM

Drafting underway

Promulgated 2003
Adopted March 18, 2003
Adopted July 26, 2007
Drafting underway

Adopted November 2011


Drafting underway
Drafting in 2015
Promulgated January 22, 2003
Adopted June 29, 2006
Adopted June 29, 2006
Promulgated May 20, 2008
Drafting underway

Promulgated February 7, 2002


Adopted July 12, 2006
Adopted February 1, 2011
Prakas governs GIs at present
Draft submitted to CoM in 2013
Drafting in 2014
Draft submitted to CoM in 2013

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Source: MoC, Department of Intellectual Property; RGC, Work Program of the RGC on WTO Requirements and Related Issues, 2012-2015

Others

Anukret on Establishment of National Committee for Intellectual Property Rights (NCIPR)


Anukret on Establishment of National Sub-Committee for Enforcement of IP under NCIPR
Anukret on Establishment of National Sub-Committee for IP Education and Public Awareness under NCIPR

National Committee for Intellectual Property Rights

Law on Compulsory Licensing for Public Health

Ministry of Health

Law on Copyright and Related Rights


Prakas on Control and Suppression of Activities Violating Copyrights
Prakas on Procedures for Granting Rights to Manage Literature, Artistic and Music Rights without Heirs
Law on Traditional Knowledge, Genetic Resources, and Traditional Cultural Expressions

Ministry of Culture and Fine Arts

Prakas on the Protection of Layout Design of Integrated Circuits


Law on Layout Designs of Integrated Circuits
Anukret on the implementation of the Law on Layout Designs of Integrated Circuits
Law on Patents, Utility Models and Industrial Designs
Prakas on the Implementation of the Law on Patents Registering Industrial Design
Prakas on the Implementation of the Law on Patents Registering Patents and Utility Models
Law on Seed Management and Plant Breeder Rights
Anukret on the Law on Seed Management

Ministry of Industry and Handicrafts

Law Concerning Marks, Trade Names and Acts of Unfair Competition


Anukret on the Implementation of the Law on Marks
Prakas on Trade Mark Agents
Prakas on Geographical Indications
Law on Geographical Indications
Anukret on the implementation of Law on GIs
Law on Trade Secrets and Undisclosed Information

Ministry of Commerce

Table 6.1 : Cambodias Core Domestic IPR Legal Framework Existing and Forthcoming

Cambodia has sent samples of more than 2,000 of its traditional indigenous ricevarieties to the genebank
of the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) in the Philippines.110 Most consumers prefer traditional
varieties of rice over new varietiesand some of the Cambodian traditional varieties stand out in the
international arena.111 This might make it commercially attractive to cross-breed a sought-after traditional
Cambodian variety with a foreign variety, in order to develop a new rice variety that contains the most
desired characteristics from the traditional Cambodian variety coupled with other desirable
characteristics, such as drought and flooding resistance, etc.In certain jurisdictions, the result may be
regarded as a new variety and could be awarded an exclusive breeders right (possibly under UPOV) and
in some cases even a patent (under US patent law.)
While the CBD would require a prior informed consent and a benefitsharing schemefrom those who hold
the traditional ricevariety, current international IPR agreements for plantvariety protection, such as
UPOV, and most national patent laws of countries where patenting of plantvarieties is not prohibited do
not require applicants to disclose the origin of the plantgenetic material that maybe used in a new
ricevariety, let alone to provide evidence that permission was obtained from the community where the
genetic material originates or proof that the benefits of exploitation will be shared with that community.
As noted earlier, Cambodia has not acceded to the UPOVtreaty. In addition, plant varieties cannot be
patented under Cambodian patentlaw. In addition, Cambodia has yet to formulate a legal text addressing
this area of IPRs as suggested in the 2002 National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan. Without
sufficient protection, the possibility that a cross-bred version of a sought-after traditional Cambodian
ricevariety is awarded with a foreign IPR and commercialized does exist.112
An example of the implications of the lack of protection of indigenous varieties can be found in the
breeding of basmati-like rice varieties for farming in Texas patented in 1997 by American firm RiceTec,
Inc. in the USA and marketed as "Kasmati" and "Texmati." While the Indian farming community has
been the custodian of basmati rice variety for thousands of years, it could not prevent the genetic material
from being used in the US without its permission, let alone payment of royalties. This is partly because
the US has not acceded to the 1992 Convention on Biological Diversity that mandates consent and benefit
sharing by communities relating to the commercialization of genetic material. The only thing that the
Indian Basmati Development Fund and Agricultural and Processed Foods Export Development Authority
could do was to oppose the use of the word "Texmati" or other indications that would create confusion
with "Basmati." After a court battle of several years, interested parties also succeeded to have RiceTec
Inc. surrender most of its patent-claims relating to the genetic material of Basmati.

110

See Third National Report on the Convention on Biological Diversity, National Biodiversity Steering Committee of the
Ministry of Environment of the Royal Government of Cambodia,Phnom Penh: MoE, July 2006,page 56.
111
Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), Study on Improvement of Marketing System and Post-Harvest Quality
Control of Rice in Cambodia, Phnom Penh, 2001.Cambodian premier Jasmine rice won the 2012 "World's Best Rice" award at
the global rice tasting competition during the World Rice Conference in Bali, Indonesia, September 26-28, 2012, organized by
The Rice Trader of the International Commodity Institute (www.trtworldrice.com .)
112
See Thitapha Wattanapruttipaisan, Trademarks and Geographical Indications: Policy Issues and Options in Trade
Negotiations and Implementation in Asian Development Review, Volume 20, No. 1, 2009,pp 166-205. The author describes the
Basmati case and provides other examples to explain the importance of ASEAN Business Development Services (BDS) in
defending IPR abroad.

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Note that, based on recent cases, developing countries have begunrequestingdeveloped countries to
acknowledge and reward the contribution of the custodians of traditional varieties and related knowledge
to modern innovative initiativesin a manner that is rewarded with valuable IPR.113 In addition, there
seems to be an emerging consensus towards preventing the patenting of plant varieties that are the result
of insignificant innovations and the award of breeders rights for "new" plant varieties that are largely
derived from traditional varieties. In this context, some countries have started to set up comprehensive
databases with information on traditional varieties that patentexaminers can use to better assess inventive
step when analysis the validity of patent applications for new plant varieties. However it should be
recalled that no inventive step requirement exists to acquire a breeders right under the UPOVsystem and,
therefore, any stable variety with distinct new features is eligible for exclusive rights.114
Law on Compulsory Licensing for Public Health: Cambodia is drafting a Law on Compulsory Licensing
for Public Health under the responsibility of MoHto ensure and promote access to pharmaceutical
products. Compulsory licensing was addressed initially in TRIPS under Article 31. The Article was later
amended by adding Article 31bis (the Amendment to Article 31), and the Annex to Article 31bis to
ensure that poorer countries, especially LDCs have access to medicine they can afford.
Specifically, paragraphs (f) and (h) in the original Article 31 were modified by decision of the General
Council on December 6, 2005 by inserting Article 31bis, as an amendment to Article 31, as follows:115
1. The obligations of an exporting Member under Article 31(f) shall not apply with respect to the grant by
it of a compulsory license to the extent necessary for the purposes of production of a pharmaceutical
product(s) and its export to an eligible importing Member(s) in accordance with the terms set out in
paragraph 2 of the Annex to this Agreement.
2. Where a compulsory license is granted by an exporting Member under the system set out in this Article
and the Annex to this Agreement, adequate remuneration pursuant to Article 31(h) shall be paid in that
Member taking into account the economic value to the importing Member of the use that has been
authorized in the exporting Member. Where a compulsory license is granted for the same products in the
eligible importing Member, the obligation of that Member under Article 31(h) shall not apply in respect
of those products for which remuneration in accordance with the first sentence of this paragraph is paid
in the exporting Member
[.]
With the Annex to Article 31bis defining pharmaceutical products and eligible importing Members as
follows:
1. Forthe purposes of Article 31bis and this Annex:

113

For a brief discussion of the position of developed and developing countries on protection of genetic resources in the context
of IPR and the need for international standards in this area, see Ms. Catherine Saez, "Draft Text on Protection of Genetic
Resources on its Way to WIPO Assembly", Intellectual Property Watch (International IPR News Service), Geneva: WIPO,
February 8, 2013(www.ip-watch.org/2013/02/08/draft-text-on-protection-of-genetic-resources-on-its-way-to-wipo-assembly )
114
For a comprehensive overview of the interaction between IPR, indigenous knowledge on genetic resources and traditional
cultural expressions, Indigenous Peoples Innovation: Intellectual Property Pathways to Development, Peter Drahos and Susy
Frankel, editors, Canberra: The Australian National University Press, 2012 (online athttp://epress.anu.edu.au).
115
http://www.wto.org/english/tratop_e/trips_e/wtl641_e.htm

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(a) pharmaceutical product means any patented product, or product manufactured through a
patented process, of the pharmaceutical sector needed to address the public health problems as
recognized in paragraph 1 of the Declaration on the TRIPS Agreement and Public Health
(WT/MIN(01)/DEC/2). It is understood that active ingredients necessary for its manufacture and
diagnostic kits needed for its use would be included;
(b) eligible importing Member means any least-developed country Member, and any other Member
that has made a notificationto the Council for TRIPS of its intention to use the system set out in Article
31bis and this Annex (system) as an importer, it being understood that a Member may notify at any
time that it will use the system in whole or in a limited way, for example only in the case of a national
emergency or other circumstances of extreme urgency or in cases of public non-commercial use. It is
noted that some Members will not use the system as importing Members3 and that some other Members
have stated that, if they use the system, it would be in no more than situations of national emergency or
other circumstances of extreme urgency;
(c) exporting Member means a Member using the system to produce pharmaceutical products for,
and export them to, an eligible importing Member.
[]
Adoption of Article 31bis made permanent an earlier decision on patents and public health, adopted in
August 2003 in the form of a waiver, in order to consolidate access of LDCs to cheaper generic versions
of patented medicine.

The IPR International Environment


Extension of the Transitional Period for Implementation of TRIPS for Least Developed Countries
As noted earlier, on June 11, 2013, the TRIPS Council postponed the date for Least Developed Countries
to comply with the TRIPS Agreement toJuly 1, 2021, with the exception of the provisions contained in
articles 3, 4, and 5 of the Agreement.The new deadline for LDCs will be reviewed in due time and can be
extended again, and successive extensions may be necessary. Some developed WTO members did not
agree to link the deadline for the implementation of TRIPS obligations to the moment the respective
WTOMember State is no longer classified as LDC.116
The major difference between this and previous waivers is that the current 2021 waiver does not have a
so-called "no-roll-back"clause. Under the current waiver, LDCs, Cambodia included, are free to make
adjustments to their IPR regime, even if it leads to a lower level of TRIPS compliance. Though, in
general, it might be less than desirable to make changes to legislation that would result in lesser
compliance with international standards, it is now possible for LDCs to make some aspects of their IPR
legislation more responsive to national development needs.
116

Ms. Catherine Saez, Intellectual Property Watch (International IPR News Service), LDCs Obtain New Waiver On IP
Obligations At WTO, Take It As A Limited Victory, Geneva: IP-Watch, June 12, 2013, (www.ip-watch.org/2013/06/12/ldcsobtain-new-waiver-on-ip-obligations-at-wto-take-it-as-a-limited-victory/ )

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Note that the extension period granted LDCs by the TRIPS Council may, in itself, address some of those
countries pertinent concerns. For instance, as mentioned earlier, Cambodia needs not be concerned
about the duplication of textbooks created outside the country at present, since copyright does not apply
to those before 2021.
More broadly, the greater flexibility in complying with the requirements of the TRIPSagreement under
the new waiver can help countries like Cambodia adapt the speed at which the IPR standards and
protection are raised to match developmental considerations. Specifically, given the limited financial and
organizational capacity of the Government, it may be helpful to set targets for strengthening IPRs at
levels that are realistic and achievable by prioritizing legal reform and institutional capacity building
accordingly. If benchmarks for strengthening the IPR system are set too high from the outset, there may
be very limited progress towards compliance.
The Harmonization of Intellectual Property Rights under ASEAN
ASEAN is aiming at a Single Market or ASEAN Economic Community (AEC) by 2015. Given that IP
legal and institutional frameworks are being developed at the national level and are based, primarily, on
national needs, this dimension needs to be taken into account in the process of integrating national
economies into a single regional ASEAN market.
There are large differences in the level of development among ASEAN member states. Accordingly,
there are substantial differences in the capacity, priorities and innovation needs of ASEAN member states.
This means that uniform, ASEAN-wide IPR standards are unlikely to fit all, at least as long as such large
differences remain.Another critical factor in the functioning of IPR is that knowledge and technology are
transferred through language. For instance, the publication of patentinformation to facilitate technology
transfer can only work if it is done in a language that the recipients of the technology can understand.
Differences inthe main languages and written scripts, not to mention the hundreds of minoritylanguages,
that are spoken and written within ASEAN, with still low levels of proficiency in many states in a
common language such as English, can be a significant obstacle to the effective functioning of an IPR
system at the regional level.
Earlier Harmonization Approaches: Based on the above, the principles adopted under the 1995 ASEAN
Framework Agreement on Intellectual Property Cooperationto promote a coherent regional IPframework
took into account the variety of developmentneeds of its members.117

117
See article 2, Principles, of the ASEAN Framework Agreement on Intellectual Property Cooperation, done at Bangkok on 15
December 1995: (1) principle of mutual benefits for ASEAN-members; (2) mindful of the international conventions on IPR; (3)
implement IPR-arrangements that are beneficial to creators, producers and users of intellectual property and in a manner
conducive to social and economic welfare; (4) recognize and respect the protection and enforcement of intellectual property
rights in each member and the adoption of measures necessary for the protection of public health and nutrition and the promotion
of the public interests in sectors of vital importance to members' socio economic and technological development; (5) conscious of
and understand the necessity for each member to adopt appropriate measures to prevent the abuse of intellectual property rights
by right holders or the resort to practices which unreasonably restrain-trade or adversely affect the international transfer of
technology.

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In 2007, in order to facilitate the development of a consistent internal IPRframework, ASEAN member
states committed to follow the coherence approachadopted towards external economic relations in the
2007 AEC Blueprint. The approach includes"(i) Review FTA/CEP commitments vis--vis ASEAN internal
integration commitments; and, (ii) Establish a system for enhanced coordination, and possibly arriving at
common approaches and/or positions in ASEAN's external economic relations and in regional and
multilateral forums.118The coherence approach described in the 2007 AEC Blueprint would seem to
deviate from the earlier 1995 ASEAN Framework Agreement on Intellectual Property Cooperation,
where commitments to harmonize were subject to existing and future international agreements adopted by
individual ASEAN member states.119
Current Harmonization Efforts:The ASEAN IPR Action Plan 2011-2015 seems to return to an approach
closer to that in the 1995 Framework. Strategic Goal 2 of the 2011-2015 ASEAN IPR Action Plan
stipulates that:
"ASEAN has attempted to formulate regional IP protection mechanisms. But given the diversity of their
respective national laws, the growing demand for international, rather than regional, protection
mechanisms from IP owners and creators worldwide, and the need for the region to participate in global
IP systems in order to be more competitive, the ASEAN Working Group on Intellectual Property
Cooperation (AWGIPC) agreed on an alternative to the establishment of a regional IP System that will
enable ASEAN Member States to move at their own pace."120
This statement seems to recognize that it may not be appropriate, at this stage,for ASEAN members to
develop regional protection mechanisms for IPRs or other harmonization mechanisms of substantive
norms. Hence,the Action Plan suggests that Member States should revert to international (global) IP
protection mechanisms in a coordinated manner. In this context, the introduction to the Action Plan
states, again, the need to accommodate the different levels of developmentof the various Member States:
Given the rapid expansion of international norms and cross-cutting concerns in IP, ASEAN needs to
craft an approach that takes into account the diverse needs and varying levels of capacity of its Members
States, in the context of broader societal interests and especially development-oriented concerns to
contribute to the promotion of knowledge creation, technological innovation and transfer, business
generation in a manner conducive to the welfare of the region, among others.121
The initiatives proposed under Strategic Goal 2 focus on the possibility for Member States to join three
international agreements for the filing of applications for trademarks (Madrid Protocol), industrial designs
(The Hague Agreement), and patents (Patent Cooperation Treaty). It should be noted that these treaties
are essentially procedural treaties that assist in the management of filing IPR applications in other
jurisdictions; in other words, they are filing mechanismsrather than IPR substantive protection

118
Actions i and ii are listed under Section 65 of D1, "Coherent Approach towards External Economic Relations", Part II ,
"Characteristics and Elements of AEC", of the ASEAN Economic Community (AEC) Blueprint adopted in the Declaration on the
AEC Blueprint, Singapore: ASEAN, November 20, 2007.
119
See article 6, General Provisions, of the 1995 ASEAN Framework Agreement on Intellectual Property Cooperation: "Nothing
in this Agreement shall prejudice any existing or future bilateral or multilateral agreement entered into by any Member State or
the national laws of each Member State relating to the protection and enforcement of intellectual property rights."
120
ASEAN IPR Action Plan 2011-2015, Section 3.2, Developed national or regional legal and policy infrastructures that address
evolving demands of the IP landscape and allow AMSs to participate in global IP systems at the appropriate time. Page 10.
121
ASEAN Intellectual Property Rights Action Plan 2011-2015, page 1

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mechanisms (such as the EU CTM system). (Cambodias current membership in international IP


agreements is summarized in table 6.2)
Table 6.2: Cambodia Current Membership in International IPR Agreements,
Conventions and Other Arrangements
WIPO Convention
ASEAN Framework Agreement on IP Cooperation
Convention on Biological Diversity
Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property
WTO (hence the TRIPS Agreement)

1995
1995
1995
1998
2004

Source: relevant websites


Still, the preamble to Strategic Goal 2 is quite clear in stating that:
Together, the ASEAN Member States (AMSs) will determine whether it will be in the best interests of the
region to participate in multilateral agreements on IP, what agreements they will join, and when each
AMSs will start using these systems.122
And, in the preamble to Strategic Goal 1:
"A balanced IP system that takes into account the varying levels of development of Member States and
differences in institutional capacity of national IP Offices to enable them to deliver timely, quality, and
accessible IP services to promote the region as being conducive to the needs of users and generators of
IP."123
In short, Cambodias commitment to the 2011-2015 Action Planis not, at this stage, a commitment to
accede to the aforementioned conventions in the near or medium term, only a willingness to study the
possible implications of such actions. Indeed, given Cambodias and other less developed ASEAN
Member States current level of development (CLMV - Cambodia, Lao PDR, Myanmar, and Vietnam),
these countries may determine that accession to some of those additional multilateral agreements may not
be easily manageable for them and/or in their best development interests in the short or medium term.
Surely this short chapter cannot go into a detailed analysis of the costs and benefits of any one of the three
treaties and conventions suggested in Strategic Goal 2 or other international conventions for that matter.
One can assume there might be disagreement even among experts. However, there is one area that might
influence any short term decision by Cambodian policy-makers. Accession to any new treaty, in the short
term, is likely to put new financial, institutional and human resources demands in an environment of
scarce resources. So, at some point the short term question may not be so much as to whether such
treaties of conventions are likely to serve or not the longer term interests of Cambodia as it might be
about the sequencing of such accession.
At this stage, it might be equally if not more important for Cambodian IPR policy-makers to focus on
completing the domestic legislative agenda and for IPR administrators todevelop the urgently needed
Business Development Services to SMEs to promote the development of an IPR culture in Cambodia
which, for that matter, is precisely the objective of Strategic Goal 1of the 2011-2015 ASEAN IPR.

122
123

ASEAN Intellectual Property Rights Action Plan 2011-2015, Section 3.2, Strategic Goal 2, page 10
ASEAN Intellectual Property Rights Action Plan 2011-2015, Section 3.1, Strategic Goal 1, page 4

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Exhaustion of Intellectual Property Rights: ASEAN and the First Sale Doctrine
The principle of "exhaustion" limits how far IPRprotection can go. Article 6 of the TRIPS Agreement
provides that subject to the provisions of Articles 3 and 4, nothing in this Agreement shall be used to
address the issue of the exhaustion of intellectual property rights. The effect of this provision in the
TRIPS Agreement is to leave each Member free to establish its own regime for such exhaustion, subject
to the MFN and national treatment provisions of Articles 3 and 4. In other words, countries can decide
whether to adopt a national exhaustion approach or an international exhaustion approach (also known
as "first sale doctrine" in some common law countries).
Exhaustion means that a product with an intellectual property right (IPR), such as a copyright, a
trademark or a patent, can be traded and resold freely after it has been sold legitimately (i.e. the product is
not a pirated copy) by the owner of the IPR or with his consent. In Common Law jurisdictions (such as
the United Kingdom and the USA), this is called the "first sale doctrine" meaning that the IPRholder loses
his rights after the first sale of the product.
Application of the "first sale doctrine" in the USA is illustrated by a recent Supreme Court decision on a
Thai individual who resold copyrighted textbooks in the USA that he had imported into the USA from
Thailand without permission from the publisher.On March 19, 2013 the Supreme Court reversed an
earlier judgment of a New York Court against Thai student Supap Kirtsaeng by which he was originally
ordered to pay John Wiley & Sons Inc $600,000 in damages for allegedly importing infringing copies of
university textbooks.124
Both the Trademark and Patent Laws of Cambodia include a legal fiction that the trademark or
patentright, if already in place in Cambodia, is revived when a product crosses bordersand enters
Cambodia.125This fiction is technically referred to as "local exhaustion" or "national exhaustion" of IP
rights. A national exhaustion approach is essentially different from the "first sale doctrine" (also
referred to as international or universal exhaustion), which allows free trade in goods subject to IPR, as
long as they have been legitimately produced by the owner of the respective IPright or with his/her
consent.
If a national exhaustion approach is strictly applied,legitimateproducts may be prevented from entering
the country if imported by companiesother than the IP owner.In the case of Cambodia's patent law, the
combination of the national exhaustion approach in the law, together with the general principle that patent
protection also covers the mere use of a patented invention by any individual (including for not-forprofit/non-commercial use) leads to an undesirable legal situation: Individuals (tourists and other
international travelers) cannot legally bring legitimate, genuine personal effects with patented
technology (such as laptop computers or smart phones) into Cambodia without the permission of the
patentholder assuming that there are numerous patents in any mobile phone and an equivalent patent has
been granted in Cambodia. The Cambodian patent law also does not include a "de-minimis exception"
124

Supreme Court of the United States No. 11-697, Kirsaeng, DBA Bluechristine99 v. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. - Decided on 19
March 2013; as reported by the Bangkok Post: "Thai academic wins US copyright case", Bangkok - 20 March 2013.
125
A legal fiction is a fact assumed or created, to which a legal rule is then applied, leading to a result that was not intended by
the respective rule and therefore often inconsistent with its goal.

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for passenger's personal luggage or personal effects shipments. There is only an exception for technology
incorporated in aircraft or ships temporarily on Cambodian territory.
Today, the effect of local exhaustion in Cambodia's patent protection remains limited since no patents
have been granted in Cambodia yet. Laptop and mobile-phone technology patents are not in effect in
Cambodia, so travelers with legitimate computers and phones do not violate Cambodian patent law, and
therefore they dont need to surrender such equipment at the customs when entering the country.
On a different note, MoCFA currently interprets the Cambodian Copyright Law (2003) in such a way that
someone who imports textbooks into Cambodia would need permission from the foreign publisher of
those books. While this is not explicitly mandated by the Cambodian Copyright law itself, it is a possible
interpretation of its wording.
Once the ASEAN common market is established, it would seem that the "first sale doctrine" (as a regional
exhaustion approach)might have to be followed. It would be harmful for Cambodian consumers and
contrary to the spirit of the ASEAN integration, if businesses would be allowed to use IPR as a pretext for
separating markets, in order to charge artificially high prices. With this in mind, WTO members are not
obliged to apply the IPR enforcementmeasures at the border under Section 4 of the TRIPS Agreement in
relation to genuine goods that may be traded without the permission of the respective IPRholder126.
IPR Legal Framework and Competition Law
The main purpose of IPRs is the promotion of creativity, innovation, and transfer of technology for the
benefit of the public at large. The rationale of IPRs is that the development and transfer of knowledge
and technology can be facilitated by rewarding creators and inventors with temporarily exclusive rights to
their creative expressions and inventions. When developing IPR policy and legislation and when setting
up systems for the acquisition, administration, and enforcement of IPRs, there is always a basic tension
between the risk of a loss of public welfare that is incurred by limiting competition (due to possible higher
prices through the granting of exclusive rights), on the one hand, and the societal benefits that may result
from the extra creativity and innovation encouraged by those exclusive rights, on the other hand.
WTO members agree that some licensing practices or conditions pertaining to IPRs may restrict
competition,and therefore have adverse effects on trade and impede the transfer and dissemination of
technology.127The most appropriate place to address such issue is likely to be the Cambodian Competition
Law currently being drafted and scheduled to be enacted by or before 2015.
Experience from advanced economies is that abuse of market-power can be facilitated by an abuse of
legitimate IPRs. Examples include anti-competitive contractual or licensingarrangements, the refusal of
an IPRholder to license at reasonable terms, possible tie-in clauses, or the complete refusal to provide a
license for patented technology that is essential for a third party to apply another technology.
126

See TRIPS Agreement Note No. 13 under Article 51 (Suspension of Release by Customs Authorities) of Section 4 (Special
Requirements Related to Border Measures) in Part III: "It is understood that there shall be no obligation to apply such procedures
to imports of goods put on the market in another country by or with the consent of the right holder, or to goods in transit."
127
Article 40 of Section 8, Control of Anti-Competitive Practices in Contractual Licenses, in Part II of the TRIPS Agreement

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Sometimes such behavior involves strategies for acquiring multiple IPRs for the same or very similar
products. Even though this may be legitimate in itself, it is being done to create disproportionate obstacles
for competing companies. This is illustrated by the findings of a 2008 investigation of the European
Commission that found that the pharmaceutical industry had developed patentingstrategies for the
purpose of hindering or delaying the entry of competing products into the market, after expiry of the
patent protection.128
The pharmaceutical sector is one of the main users of the patent system in Europe or elsewhere for that
matter.The number of pharmaceutical-related patent applications at the European Patent Office (EPO)
nearly doubled between the start and the end of the 2000-2007 period covered by the
investigation.Pharmaceutical patentholders were found to use a large amount of patents for one medicine,
sometimes up to 100 patent families for a single medicine, amounting to 1,300 patents andpending
applications across the EU. This practice of "patent clusters" or "patent thickets" led to uncertainty among
competitors, affecting their ability to enter the market.
Besides submitting increasing numbers of patent-applications relating to variations of the same chemical
compound towards the expiry of the first patent for instance, relating to different dosage forms,
productionprocesses, or particular formulations, the originator companies also make use of voluntary
"divisional" patentapplications. While divisional patentapplications are foreseen in patent law as
a legitimate way to split an initial patent application that was withdrawn or revoked (not extending the
content of the original application nor the term of protection), they also serve to maintain uncertainty
relating to the validity of patents by extending the examination-period. The risk of litigation about
multiple, divisional patents would make potential competitors hesitate to enter the market.
Following completion of the Pharmaceutical Sector Inquiry, the EPO took measures to restrictcases in
which voluntary divisional patent applications may be filed and time periods during which they may be
filed.129
In food production, large agribusiness companies sometimes take control of the whole supply chain from
seed producers to consumers.130Even though farmers and others in the production chain provide labor and
take economic risk by investing their capital, biotechnology firms may control almost the whole supplychain through their IPRs on seeds, pesticides, or other necessary inputs.
The example of a food chain cluster given by Heffernan et al. consists of joint ventures, partnerships and
other forms of close cooperation among Monsanto, Cargill, and other companies, in which Monsanto
owns the IPR to the seeds (breeders rights) and Cargill holds the IPR covering the fertilizer that farmers
need to grow the seeds. Based on breeders-rights to the seeds, Cargill collects the corn from the farmers to
128
European Commission, Executive Summary of the Pharmaceutical Sector Inquiry Report, Communication on the
Pharmaceutical Sector Inquiry Preliminary Report by Competition DG, Brussels: November 28, 2008.
129
Decision of the Administrative Council of the European Patent Organization, amending the Implementing Regulations to the
European Patent Convention, Document CA/D 2/09, Munich: EPO, March 2009 (www.epo.org/patents/law/legaltexts/decisions/archive/20090325.html).
130
W. Heffernan, M. Hendrickson and R. Gronski, Consolidation in the Food and Agriculture System, Columbia, Ms: University
of Missouri, 1999.

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produce wheat and oilseed. These are then provided by Cargill to farmers to use as animal feed. The
chicken, pigs and cows that are raised by the farmers are then again bought by Cargill to process them
into meat-products.The close cooperation and coordinated use of IPR by a few parties in order to gain
control over a whole supply chainmay leadto abuse of market powerin certain cases.
While both Europe and the USA have established competition law practice to deal with anti-competitive
behavior of IPRholders, a common global approach to competition law is still lacking, as is the
implementation of TRIPS competition law policy provisions in newer WTO members.131
Some early work is under way on a Law on Competition for Cambodia. The drafters of the text will need
to address some issues related to the possible abuse of market power by IPR holders.

Cambodian Public Awareness for IPR and Deepening


Use of IP Protections by Cambodian Businesses
Perhaps one of the most interesting short and medium term challenges for Cambodian IP professionals
and policy-makers is to increase broad public awareness about the value of IPRs and deepen the use of
IPRs by Cambodian businesses, particularly SMEs.
The National IP Strategy for Cambodia 2013-2018 offers an interesting review of current limited use of
IP protections in Cambodia across key sectors of its economy and opportunities for deepening their use.132
Agriculture and Agro-processing
There is very limited use of IP protection and IP tools in the agricultural and food sector. In the milled
rice export sectors, very few large millers use registered trademarks. There is some Technical Assistance
work underway to establish a collective mark. Limited use of registered trademarks is also the case in
other agricultural and agro-processing sectors. Branding and labeling are important to future market
developments of Cambodian exports of agricultural and agro-processing products.
GIs represent an important development but they require producers to comply with quality management
principles that are likely to be very demanding for local producers. GIs will need to be protected outside
Cambodia through appropriate registrations.
131
A comprehensive overview of the interaction between IPR and Competition and Anti-trust Law can be found in the Research
Handbook on Intellectual Property and Competition, including a discussion of available space for WTO members to implement
the competition-related provisions of the TRIPS Agreement. See Josef Drexl editor, Research Handbook on Intellectual Property
and Competition Law, Cheltenham, UK: 2008. Likewise, a very interesting discussion of Competition and Intellectual Property
in the ASEAN context can be found in Ashish Lall and R. Ian McEwin, Competition and Intellectual Property Laws in the
ASEAN Single Market, Chapter 5 in The ASEAN Economic Community: A Work in Progress, Sanchita Basu Das et al., editors,
Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 2013.
132
This section draws heavily from the examples provided in the National IP Strategy for Cambodia 2014-2018, Cambodia:
March 2013

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The use of plant variety and breeders right protection, and possibly patent, is likely to play a key role
rather soon as new seed varieties are developed in maturing agricultural sectors, not simply in rice but in
other sectors as well, to prevent misuse in the domestic market and misappropriation outside
Cambodia.133 See the earlier discussion of Indias basmati rice.
In general, MAFF has little capacity to promote and encourage the use of IP protection in the sector.
MoC has limited resources beyond dealing with the backlog of trademark applications. And MIH, which
is responsible for patents and plant variety registration is still struggling to get systems up and running.
Beyond educating the public and business community about the value of IP, there will be a need for
stronger enforcement of IPRs and the awareness of the value of IP enforcement. Field work during the
preparation of this chapter suggests that, in the food processing sector, mislabeling of products by
processors claiming to hold international certifications that they do not have is not uncommon.
The Cultural Sector
As noted earlier, Cambodia still lacks a comprehensive piece of legislation covering Traditional
Knowledge, Genetic Resources, and Traditional Cultural Expressions though drafting by MoCFA is
underway. To some extent some of cultural heritage creations can be partially protected through the
existing IP framework including Copyrights, Industrial Design or even Collective Marks. However,
experience shows that a sui generis protection may be preferable.
As noted earlier in the chapter, use of Copyright or Industrial Design protection by Cambodian producers
remains very limited however. As noted by the authors of the National IPR Strategy, even a firm such as
Artisans dAngkor that produces some of the most sophisticated handicraft exported by Cambodia does
not have a well-rounded strategy to protect its own designs and products.134
Education
Intellectual Property plays several roles in education. The educational sector is a place to train IP
professionals. It is a place to increase awareness about linkages between IP protection and the
development of Commerce and Industry. It is a sector that itself can benefit from IP protection.
There has been significant progress in recent years to develop an IP training curriculum for future law
professionals in a number of universities, including with the help of the NCIPR. However, the lack of
legal practice experience in this area by most teachers remains a limitation. In addition, there is still
extremely limited exposure of business school or engineering students to the possible use of IP protection
tools in their future professional life.

133
134

See Chapters 12 and 13 for some limited discussion of the need for seeds development in rice and cassava
National IP Strategy for Cambodia 2014-2018, Phnom Penh: MoC, March 2013, page 30.

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The Health Sector


IP plays a critical role in the Health sector, especially but not exclusively in the area of pharmaceuticals
and traditional medicines. The authors of the National IPR Strategy identify five areas where good
management of the IP sector can have a positive impact on the health sector:
1. Fostering the growth of a generic pharmaceutical industry;
2. Controlling and reducing the price of medicines by taking advantage of the flexibility accorded
LDCs under the TRIPS Agreement;
3. Providing tools to assist with enforcement actions against providers of counterfeit medicines;
4. Facilitating collaboration with outside health organizations to share technologies, methods of
treatments, pharmaceuticals otherwise not available without adequate IP protection; and,
5. Protecting traditional medicines and traditional medical practices and innovation in those areas.
Industry and Commerce
While Cambodia may still be at a stage where it lacks resources to become a significant innovator there
are many ways in which domestic Commerce and Industry may take advantage of the IPR regime either
to protect themselves or to gain access to international intellectual property assets.
As suggested at the beginning of the chapter, Cambodian businesses that make use of IPR protections
remain the exception.135 One can reasonably assume that businesses that access information available
from international databases are even more limited. To a significant extent, Cambodia lacks the Business
Development Service structure required to educate and develop awareness and use of IP protection and
information in the business community. Surely, much more should be done by way of outreach to
increase the business community awareness of the value of IPRs through seminars and workshops,
publications, IP events organized at trade fairs, dissemination of success stories, etc.
Tourism
Tourism is a sector that can also benefit greatly from an enhanced use of the IP system to strengthen its
image and value. However, it is also the case that its use remains extremely limited.
As noted in the earlier discussion of the Cultural Sector, there is very limited IP protection of Cambodias
cultural heritage in place as of yet. In term of use of collective or certification marks for branding
purposes, the authors of the National IPR Strategy note that even the highly successful campaign catch
phrase Cambodia Kingdom of Wonder does not appear to be protected anywhere, opening it to
misuse or misappropriation. According to the same report, the Angkor Handicraft Association appears to
be one of the very few organizations in the sector with an IP approach. It has registered its name and
logo. It has developed a Seal of Authenticity, also registered, and makes the Seal available to its
members if they agree to guarantee certain conditions of quality and authenticity.

135

Note that such a large export sector as Garments as yet to develop something as simple as a Collective Mark

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Conclusion
This chapter has taken a brief look at the current state of Cambodias IPR framework and needed work to
further develop such framework in a manner that serves the trade and development interests of the
country. A number of conclusions emerge from this short review:

There is a significant need to strengthen implementation, coordination, and enforcement capacity


to make the existing system more effective. The NCIPR has established two sub-committees to
address some of the key requirements for strengthened implementation, coordination, and
enforcement, including a sub-committee on enforcement and a sub-committee on education.
Efforts should be made to formalize the existence of those two sub-committees through
Government adoption of their respective Anukret as soon as possible. Together with that, there
should be a clear capacity development plan in the aforementioned area funded and implemented;
Some five key national laws remain to be completed, approved, and promulgated. These should
be among some of the key Cambodian priorities in the IP area over the next few years;
When completing new laws, Cambodia should make best use of some of the provisions granted
by the Council on TRIPS under the new 2021 waiver granted LDCs regarding full compliance
with the TRIPS Agreement. While the overall medium and long term objectives of Cambodia
should be full compliance with the TRIPS Agreement, the new waiver makes room for LDCs to
include, in their current IPR laws, measures that might not be fully compliant but take account of
their developmental needs;
In new and existing laws, Cambodia may need to review and harmonize the language of the
provisions relating to the exhaustion of IPRs. A number ofsuch provisionsin current laws may
be contrary to the objectives of the single market being promoted under AEC 2015;
Development of Cambodias IPR framework and infrastructure should be developmentcentered. In that regard, there is a need to increase awareness of IPR in the public at large and,
equally importantly, to increase the use of IPR protection by Cambodian firms and creators.There
is an urgent need to begin promoting more aggressively the use of IP protection among
Cambodian businesses, including SMEs. A significant effort and deployment of resources I
needed in this area;
The Law on Competition, currently under preparation, willneed to address, to some degree, the
issue of possible abuse of market power linked to the existence of IPRs;
Cambodian policy-makers and officials should continue to assess very carefully pros and cons,
costs and benefits of any possible accession, taking into account national interests, institutional
and financial capacity limitations, and trade integration consideration;
Many of the actions required to achieve some of the aforementioned results are identified in the
National Intellectual Property Strategy for Cambodia developed in March 2013. A challenge in
the years ahead will be to implement successfully many of the actions and activities identified in
the Strategy.
Last but not least, Cambodian policy-makers and officials should also make use of the new
transition period granted LDCs by the WTO TRIPS Council and sequence carefully actions and
priorities so that the Governments scarce resources are put to the most effective use. In that
regard, it would seem the short and medium term focus should be first and foremost on
strengthening domestic IP implementation and enforcement capacity, focusing on developing a
culture of IP among Cambodian businesses, and completing the domestic legal agenda.

Selected Actions in support of those conclusions are identified in Outcome #6 of the Trade SWAp
Roadmap.
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Chapter 7
GARMENTS
Background
Cambodias strong economic record in recent decades owes much to the performance of its garment
sector. The sector is one of four economic pillars, alongside agriculture, tourism and construction, that
have driven Cambodias growth and continues to be the single largest contributor to its exports and
formal employment. In 2011, the garment sector represented approximately 48 percent of Cambodias
total formal and informal goods and services exports (see Table 1.9 in chapter 1) and employed more than
370,000 workers.136Similarly, the contribution of the garment sector to GDP has risen from around 1
percent in the early 1990s to about 10 percenttoday.137While the US remains the top export market for
Cambodias garment sector, there has been significant diversification in recent years with export volumes
to the EU, Canada and Japan increasing very rapidly. December 2012 was the first time when shipments
to the EU were larger than shipment to the US.
Overall, the growth in the garment sector has been a significant success story for Cambodias economic
development and trade integration effortsover the past 20 years. While the development of the sector may
have been largely opportunistic, the future of the sector will require close public-private sector
collaboration and a more strategic approach to industrial development. Strong linkages will also need to
be formed with other parts of the economy, including the vocational education and training sector and a
domestic support industry (such as textiles and fabric production) that, while slowly emerging, is still
very much in its infancy.

Export Performance
Export Value
Beginning in the early 2000s, the value of Cambodias garment exports grew at a relatively uniform
rate,until the 2008-2009 global financial crisisthat caused a sharp but temporary contraction. As shown in
Table 7.1, Cambodias garment exports have recovered well since the impact of the global financial crisis
led to an 18.9 percent contraction in export value.Cambodian garment exports were worth $4.4 billion in
2012.

136

Better Factories Cambodia, Twenty Ninth Synthesis Report on Working Conditions in Cambodias Garment Sector, Phnom
Penh: ILO, 2013.
137
UNCTAD, Cambodia Sector-Specific Investment Strategy And Action Plan, Geneva: UNCTAD, February 2013

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Table 7.1: Cambodian Garment Exports,$ billion, 20072012


2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

Value
$ billion

$ 2.9

$ 3.0

$ 2.4

$ 3.0

$ 4.0

$ 4.4

% Change

+ 4.0 %

- 18.9 %

+ 24.4 %

+ 34.5 %

+ 9.8 %

Source:GMAC, 2013
Overall, total garment exports have increased by more than 51 percent over the 2007 to 2012 period
driven by strong growth in basic apparel production volumes.138Cambodias contribution to global
garment trade, however, remains small, growing to about 1.2% in 2012 from a very low base.
Type of Exports
Cambodias garment supply chain is geared toward manufacturing relatively simple low value cut-maketrim (CMT) products. Consequently, garment exports are predominantly large shipments of low-tomedium priced cotton itemsfor theNorth American and European markets.Familiar brand names dominate
the list of buyers sourcing garments from Cambodia, including sportswear brands Nike, Reebok, and
Adidas and major chains or brands like Abercrombie& Fitch, Marks & Spencer, Walmart, and Columbia
Sportswear.139
The majority of Cambodias garment exports are in just four product categories: sweaters/pullovers,
mens and womens trousers, and t-shirts/singlets. The global garment trade is typically distinguished
between knitted and woven garments. Cambodias knitted exports include t-shirts, sweaters, and polo
shirts. Exports of woven garments include trousers, shirts, and jackets.140 The exact contribution of each
of these categories fluctuates year-on-year in line with overseas orders. Overall, the mix of garment
products Cambodia manufactures and exports is essentially the same as those of the mid-1990s when the
industry first established its presence. Scope for product diversification should therefore be considered as
part of a wider export development strategy, including the potential to produce higher-value garment
products.
Current Export Destinations
The main destinations for Cambodias garment exports are high-income North American and EU markets.
The US has been the principal export destination for garment exports since the industry first developed in
Cambodia in the 1990s. Initially, this was due to the lack of quota restrictions for Cambodia garment
exports to the US market at a time when other garment exporters in Asia (particularly China) began to
face high quota restrictions.141MFA quota restrictions to the US market were introduced in 1999, but the
138

GMAC,Consolidated Data for Garment and Textile Exports, Phnom Penh: GMAC, 2013.
USAID, Measuring Competitiveness and Labor Productivity in Cambodias Garment Industry,Phnom Penh: USAID, 2005.
140
TradeMap data.
141
Bargawi, O., Cambodias Garment Industry Origins and Future Prospects,Economic and Statistics Analysis Unit, Overseas
Development Institute, London: ODI, 2005.
139

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bilateral USCambodia Textiles Agreement provided for relatively generous annual quota increases on
the condition Cambodia met established labor standards.142
The prominent role of the US as the major buyer of Cambodian garments has started to diminish in recent
years as exports to the EU and other markets have grown rapidly. Changes to the rules of origin (ROO)
requirements to access the EU market under the Everything-But-Arms scheme in January 2011 have
proven a catalyst for Cambodias increased sales to that market. Table 7.2 below shows the changing
dynamics of Cambodias garment exports and the increasing importance of both the EU and other
markets. In a noteworthy development, in the month of December 2012 garment exports to the EU were
larger than exports to the US for the first time.143
Table 7.2: Top Export Markets for Cambodian Garments
Percentage Share of Total Exports, 2007- 2012
US
EU-27
Canada
Japan
Others

Destination

2007 Share
69.8 %
22.0 %
5.3 %
<1%
2.7 %

2012 Share
44.9 %
32.7 %
9.1 %
3.2 %
10.1 %

Value of Total Exports

$2.9 billion

$4.4 billion

Source:GMAC,Consolidated Data for Garment and Textile


Exports, Phnom Penh: 2013.
Potential Export Destinations
The largest importers of clothing apparel in the world are the EU, the US, Japan, and Hong Kong.144
Table 7.3 lists the top ten global garment importers by value in 2012. Cambodias growing exports to the
EU reflect this markets position as the top importer and, most importantly, the EC decision in 2011 to
relax rules of origin for EBA treatment. Other markets, such as Canada and Japan, have also grown in
importance and offer further growth opportunities, aided by favorable tariff preferences under various
GSP programs. While Cambodia is already a significant exporter of garments to many of the top global
importers and there has been export market diversification in recent years, there remains scope to
diversify further to other markets including emerging economies such as Russia, China, Brazil, and
Turkey.

142

A 2001 study of global textiles and garment producers found the availability of quotas was the single most important factor in
influencing production and sourcing decisions. This underscored the importance of the bilateral USCambodia Textiles
Agreement both in terms of setting expectations and creating incentives for Cambodia to meet internationally recognized labor
standards, as well as the lure for foreign investors of Cambodias increasing annual quota access to the US market for garments.
143
GMAC,Consolidated Data for Garment and Textile Exports, Phnom Penh: GMAC, 2013. See also discussion in Chapter 1.
144
TradeMap data.

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Table 7.3: Top 10 Global Garment Importers, $ billion, 2012


EU-27
US
Japan
Hong Kong
Canada

$ 155.2
$ 80.7
$ 32.0
$ 15.2
$ 8.5

Russia
South Korea
Australia
Switzerland
China

$
$
$
$
$

8.2
5.9
5.6
5.3
3.9

Source:Comtrade (HS Chapters 61 + 62).

Trade Balance
Cambodia is overwhelmingly a net exporter of garments, with imports totaling just $108 million in 2012
compared with exports in excess of $4.4 billion. However, Cambodia imports virtually all of the fabrics,
yarn, threads, trim, and related inputs used in the local production of garments, resulting in lost value for
the wider economy. For example, in 2012, imports of textile yarns and fabrics were $2.5 billion, while
imports of textile fibers (such as cotton, wool and silk) were $68 million.145
Of course, Cambodia is not alone in relying on imported materials for garment production. Other major
garment producers such as Bangladesh and Vietnam also have limited domestic textile industries and
import large quantities of textiles to supply their respective export-oriented garment manufacturing
sectors.146Nevertheless, given the size reached today by the garment sector, there should be greater scope
to produce, in Cambodia, at least in part, some of its yarn and fabric inputs. Government and industry
need to investigate the potential for Cambodia to move down the value chain and begin to produce
some of the sectors inputs domestically in order to maximize the level of local value adding derived from
the garment industry.
Dynamism of Exports
The pace of the Cambodian garment sectors growth mirrors the pace at which the sector could decline.
This was witnessed in the contraction in Cambodias garment exports in 2009 when export revenue
declined by almost 19 percent year-on-year, whereas global garment trade declined by less than half that
rate at 9.2 percent (see Tables 7.1 for Cambodia and 7.4 for world market.) With more than 85 percent of
exported garments destined for North American and European markets, Cambodias garment sector is
highly exposed to downturns. That exports have been concentrated toward such a narrow range of
markets may explain why Cambodias garment sector felt the impacts of the global financial crisis so
acutely. While reliance on these markets has been driven by significant quota advantages or tariff
preferences, further diversification should be encouraged, especially toward emerging markets that may
be able to provide a possible buffer to downturns in the global economy.

145

Comtrade data using SITC Rev. 4 Classification (Code 84 Clothing and Apparel Products.)
Bargawi, O., Cambodias Garment Industry Origins and Future Prospects,Economic and Statistics Analysis Unit, Overseas
Development Institute, London: ODI, 2005.
146

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A benefit of Cambodias supply chain being oriented toward basic (low-priced) garment production is
that, as the global economy has slowly recovered from the 2008-09 downturn, cautious consumers have
reduced discretionary spending. Table 7.4 below and Table 7.1 above show that, while global garment
trade contracted as much as 13 percent in 2012, Cambodias garment exports increased by almost 10
percent, suggesting consumers may be showing a preference toward purchasing lower cost and more
basic garments that Cambodia specializes in producing. In this context, focusing on basic apparel
production partly shields the Cambodian garment sector from contractions in global economy vis--vis
the more volatile high-value garment trade.
Export Prospect
Notwithstanding the impact of the global financial crisis, Cambodias garment sector has emerged as a
dependable growth sector and the largest source of export revenue for the national economy. However,
the sector remains vulnerable to external shocks and the dynamics of the global garment supply chain.
Local production volumes are effectively determined by the needs of foreign investors and parent
companies that control the supply chain. This makes it difficult for Cambodia to influence both the
quantity and direction of its garment exports.
Internationally, Cambodia is regarded relatively well in terms of factory operations and ethics. The latter
has become a particularly important attribute in light of increasing consumer awareness and concerns
regarding the work conditions and safety of garment and footwear factories around the world. It is
important that Cambodias reputation is protected and safeguarded by continual and transparent
monitoring of local factory conditions, as currently takes place under the Better Factories Cambodia
program.147

World Market Conditions


Global imports of clothing were $384 billion in 2012, with the EU and US importingmore than halfof this
trade.148 Table 7.4 illustrates the volatility of global garment trade experienced in recent years. The value
of global garment trade is closely correlated with global economic conditions, population growth and
disposable incomes. It is therefore highly susceptible to changes in consumer confidence, as seen in the
large fluctuations over the 2007 to 2012 period.

147
The Better Factories Cambodia program is implemented by the International Labor Organization (ILO) and was launched in
the 1990s as a requirement for Cambodia to gain preferential market access into the US for its garment exports.
148
Comtrade.HS Chapters 61+62

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Table 7.4: Global Garment Trade, $ billion, 20072012


2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

Value
$ billion

$ 293

$ 338

$ 307

$ 347

$ 405

$ 351

% Change

+ 15.3 %

- 9.2 %

+ 13.8 %

+ 16.7 %

- 13.3 %

Source:Comtrade (SITC Rev. 4 Code 85: Articles of Apparel and Clothing Accessories)
Market Access Conditions
Market access conditions have been a driving force behind the development of Cambodias garment
industry and export profile. Preferential tariff arrangements have influenced particularly Cambodias
garment exports to the US and EU markets. For instance, the US-Cambodia Textiles Agreement (1999)
provided relatively significant quota increases for certain garment exports to the US market. In return
Cambodia committed to achieving agreed labor standards and the lowering (and binding) of tariffs on
textiles and clothing imports.
In 2001, the EU introduced the Everything But Arms (EBA) scheme, which allows duty-free quota-free
access for all of Cambodias garment exports. However, because the Cambodian garment industry
sources fabrics, yarns, and other input components from abroad, particularly China, it was difficult for it
to meet the EUs rules of origin requirements and gain duty-free access. As a result, benefits from the
EUs EBA scheme remained, at first, relatively limited, with annual exports to the EU averaging around
$400-500 million over the 20072010 period.149 However, in January 2011, the EU relaxed its rules of
origin for EBA treatment. New rules were introduced allowing duty free entry of a garment sewn from
two or more pieces using fabric produced elsewhere. This has enabled Cambodia to enjoy duty-free
export treatment, even when using imported fabrics.150 As a result, in the two years since the changes in
ROOs have been in place, Cambodias garment exports to the EU have grown by 110 per cent.151
As an LDC and FTA partner, Cambodia also enjoys tariff preferences (often with zero duties and/or
ROOs restrictions) to a number of important markets, such as Canada, Japan, Australia, South Korea, and
China. See Chapter 1 for more detailed analysis on the role of ROs in the growth of Cambodian exports,
including a summary of a number of preferential schemes available to Cambodias garment producers.
Major Competitors
Cambodia traditionally faces strong competition from larger basic apparel exporters such as Vietnam,
Bangladesh, China, and India. Each of these competitors can offer better economies of scale, while
Bangladesh, as an LDC, also enjoys the same duty-free quota-free access to the EU market. Looking
149

Natsuda,Kaoru.,Challenges to the Cambodian Garment Industry in the Global Garment Value Chain, RCAPS Working Paper
No. 09, Ritsumeikan Center for Asia Pacific Studies (RCAPS), Ritsumeikan, Japan: RCAPS, 2009.
150
Fukunishi ed., Dynamics of the Garment Industry in Low-Income Countries: Experience of Asia and Africa (Interim Report),
IDE-JETRO, Japan: JETRO, 2012.
151
GMAC,Consolidated Data for Garment and Textile Exports, Phnom Penh: GMAC, 2013.

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ahead, it is anticipated that, as Myanmar reforms and further opens up its economy, it could emerge as a
lower-cost garment production center in the next five years. Cambodias garment sector is also conscious
of the emerging garment sectors in Africa that could expand and become a significant competitor over the
medium term.
World Market Prospect
The outlook for the global garment sector is encouraging, with the demand for apparel likely to grow on
the back of recovering economies in the US and EU as well as the growing number of middle class
consumers in Asia (especially China and India.) However, global competition for garment trade is
intensifying with manufacturers experiencing narrowing operating margins against a backdrop of
increased consumer interest in the industrys ethics.
Given that most of the quota restrictions on global garment trade from the past have now been removed,
one of Cambodias main competitive advantages is the reputation it has built around labor compliance. It
is therefore pivotal that Cambodias reputation as a relatively safe and ethical source country be
protected and safeguarded. This will require continued investment by Government and industry in
improving and maintaining working conditions in the sector, as it continues to be monitored under the
Better Factories Cambodia program.

Domestic Supply Conditions


Producers
There were 375 garment factories operating in Cambodia in 2012, a significant recovery from the 243
operating in 2009 at the height of the global financial crisis. As seen in Figure 7.1, the number of
operating factories (and corresponding employment levels) can change quickly year-on-year, reflecting
the dynamics of the global garment value chain where purchase orders can rapidly decline (and increase)
to suit prevailing global market conditions.
The dynamics of the global garment value chain is directly relevant to the economic impact and welfare
benefits that Cambodia derives from the garment sector. In this context, nearly 95 percent of all garment
factories in Cambodia are foreign owned with very few local investors operating in the sector.152
Consequently, while foreign investors provide the industry know-how and expertise in international trade,
the main economic and income-generating benefit to Cambodias economy is from direct employment.153
In terms of where the local sector sits within the global garment value chain, as noted earlier the
Cambodian garment sector specializes primarily in finished garment products, the cut-make-trim (CMT)
stage of production. This means factories typically perform only the final stages of production: the
152

World Bank, Value Chain Study Cambodia Garment Sector, Phnom Penh: World Bank, 2012.
370,000 workers in 2012 according to Better Factories Cambodia, Twenty Ninth Synthesis Report on Working Conditions in
Cambodias Garment Sector, Phnom Penh: ILO, 2013.
153

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cutting, sewing, finishing, and packaging of garments. These garments are then sent to an intermediary
buyer (usually in East Asia) who then negotiates with and coordinates the onward distribution of the
goods to buyers largely in the US and EU.

400,000

400

350,000

350

300,000

300

250,000

250

200,000

200

150,000

150

100,000

100

50,000

50

NUMBER
NUMBER OF
OF GARMENT
GARMENT FACTORIES
FACTORIES

NUMBER OF FACTORY EMPLOYEES

Figure
Number of
of Garment
Garment Factories
Factories &
& Employees,
Employees, 2007-2012
2007-2012
Figure 7.1:
7.1: Number

2007

2008

2009
Factories

2010

2011

2012

Employees

Source:
Source: Data from bi-annual Better Factories Cambodia Synthesis Reports, 2007-2012.
Further, mostgarment factories in Cambodia are either vendor factories or contract manufacturers and are
therefore tightly controlled by offshore owners. Consequently, the industry structure offers very little
scope for local initiative or entrepreneurship.
In vendor factories, typically a parent company distributes orders among factories that it owns in several
countries including Cambodia according to available capacity, unit production costs, and required
skill level. The parent company will then often arrange delivery of the inputs and components to the
factory in Cambodia according to the buyers specifications.
While the local factory arranges domestic movements of inputs and production, the parent company or
buyers nominated forwarder arranges the international movement of the finished product. Therefore,
despite being such a large export oriented industry, very few operators are engaged directly in
international trade and havethe ability to attract orders or identify markets into which it could expand.
Among contract manufacturers in Cambodia, mostare foreign-owned but operate as independent
enterprises providing CMT services. Some take orders from buyers who provide the designs and specify
the inputs, while others assume responsibility for sourcing inputs and preparing samples for approval by
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the buyer. Contract manufacturers that do procure inputs do so in accordance with the buyers
specifications and, in many cases, receive a list of authorized suppliers from the buyer. Again, this limits
the scope for local garment factories to source inputs from local suppliers.
Vendor factories have the advantage of scale through their relationship with the parent company, which
provides access to regional suppliers and global markets. The parent relationship also provides access to
low-cost capital borrowed internationally against the parent companys balance sheet. In contrast, contract
manufacturers export to a limited number of markets and have difficulties in obtaining inputs of
consistent quality at a competitive price. Furthermore, they often lack access to low-cost finance, making
it difficult to evolve from the CMT/Assembly business model to a more sophisticated model capable of
producing more complex and higher-valued garments.
Around a quarter of garment factories in Cambodia cover the full operations, which include purchasing
the fabric, packaging and shipping the orders to wholesalers or retailers.154These activities capture a larger
part of the financial benefits in the value chain but also entail significantly higher risks. This includes the
financial risk if an order is not completed as planned.
Overall, the overwhelming majority of garment factories in Cambodia essentially operate as subsidiaries
or affiliates of a regional operator (often headquartered in Hong Kong, Taiwan, Korea, or mainland
China). It is those regional enterprises that act as an intermediary controlling marketing arrangements,
distribution networks, and relations with the international buyers and capture significant value from the
global garment value chain. Given the narrow range of value chain activities actually conducted in
Cambodia, the prices received are often quite low, subjecting the local sector to very thin profit
margins.The challenge for Cambodia is how to integrate more closely with the global value chain and
participate in more value-added activities. Figure 7.2 shows a schematic of the evolution of the garment
global value chain and Box 7.1 provides further analysis.

154

World Bank, Value Chain Study ANNEX: Cambodia Garment Sector, Phnom Penh: World Bank, 2012.

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Production
Countries

Segments of Apparel Value Chain

Japan

Garments

Textiles

Fibers

Machinery
(spinning, weaving
cutting, sewing)

Level of Development

1950s &
early 1960s

Hong Kong
South Korea
Taiwan

Garments
late 1960s, 1970s
& early 1980s

1960s onward

Textiles

1970s onward

Fibers

late 1980s onward

China
Indonesia
Thailand
India
Pakistan

Garments

Textiles

late 1980s

1990s

Bangladesh
Cambodia
Vietnam

Garments
mid-1990s
to late 2000s
Low

High
VALUE-ADDED
Source:Gereffi et al., The Global Apparel Value Chain, Trade and the Crisis Challenges and Opportunities for
Developing Countries, Policy Working Paper 5281, Washington D.C.: The World Bank Development Research
Group, 2010

Box 7.1: Global Garment Value Chain


Figure 7.2 outlines how countries at different levels of development have progressed down the value
chain.The main segments of the garment value chain garments, textiles, fibers, and machinery are
arranged along the horizontal axis, and reflect low to high levels of relative value-added as capital
intensity increases. Countries are grouped on the vertical axis by relative level of development, with
Japan at the top, China and India in the middle tier, and the least-developed exporters like Bangladesh,
Vietnam, andCambodia at the bottom.
Individual countries tend to progress from low to high value-added segments of the chain in a sequential
fashion over time. This illustrateswhy it is important for Government and industry in Cambodia to
recognize its role in the value chain and, rather than simply looking to produce higher-value garment
products, look at opportunities to participate in more value added steps in the production process.

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It is also apparent that there is a regional division of labor in the garment value chain, where countries at
very different levels of economic development form a production hierarchy with a variety of export roles.
For example, the US generates the product designs and large orders, Japan provides the sewing machines,
the newly industrializing economies of East Asia such as Hong Kong and Taiwan supply fabric, and lowwage Asian economies like Cambodia, Indonesia, or Vietnam sew the garment. Importantly, economies
like Japan, Taiwan, or even China do not exit the garment industry as lower-cost competitors emerge.
Rather these countries move along the value chain and up the export hierarchy.
Production Capacity
Cambodias liberal FDI regime enables new garment factories to be established relatively quickly,
especially as such factories require little in the way of fixed capital assets to operate. As seen in Figure
7.1, garment factories have closed and opened quickly in response to the changing needs of international
buyers. Production capacity in the sector at least in terms of factory output is therefore quite dynamic
and easily adjusted.
However, production capacity is also reliant on the sectors productivity. Despite recent advances, labor
productivity is lower in Cambodia than most of its neighbors. At its current level, Cambodias labor
productivity levels are comparable to those of Vietnam in 1993.155 In the garment sector this has been
partially offset by low wages, which together with reputable labor compliance standards have kept the
country relatively competitive.156 Both the RGC and industrys support for the long-standing Better
Factories Cambodia program gives international investors and buyers the confidence to do business with
Cambodias garment sector. Given most garment factories have minimal investments in fixed assets and
can easily relocate if local operating costs are no longer competitive, it is imperative that Cambodias
garment sector safeguards and enhances its reputation as a reliable, trusted and ethical supplier.
However, improving labor productivity still remains important and the sectors challenges are in many
ways linked toCambodias wider challenges in training and skills development discussed in Chapter 17.
Given its current stage of development and economic structure, strengthening the provision of technical
vocational education and training (TVET) should be an immediate priority for Cambodia. This should
include new and ongoing efforts and reforms aimed at developing a national TVET framework, adopting
competency based skills standards, and strengthening the capacity of training providers to deliver quality
training that responds to actual labor market needs.157 In view of the recent growing number of illegal
strikes there is clearly a need to find a better balance among workers rights, enforcement of labor laws,
regulations and agreements in force, and labor productivity and improve overall labor relations. See
chapter 17 for a more detailed discussion.

155

ILO, Decent Work Country Program Cambodia (2011-2015), Phnom Penh: ILO, 2011.
With over 20 years of experience, Cambodia garment manufacturing has developed a reputation as relatively ethical as a
result of its Better Factories Cambodia program.
157
Williams, D. et al., From Downturn to Recovery: Cambodias Garment Sector in Transition, Phnom Penh: ILO, 2011.
156

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Quality of Product
The principal customers for Cambodias garment exports are brand marketers and retail chains. The
largest customers including famous brand names such as H&M, Levi Strauss, Nike, Adidas, and Target
account for the majority of Cambodias garment exports. US store chain GAP alone is estimated to
account for 30 percent of total apparel exports.158 These are major international labels that impose
stringent quality control measures on respective supply chains. That these labels continue to trust and
rely on Cambodias garment sector as a major supplier reflects well on the sectors capacity to meet
stringent quality specifications.
The challenge for Cambodia is to diversify from mainly producing basic CMT items to more
sophisticated apparel. This will require significant public and private sector investment in training and
productivity enhancing initiatives in order to demonstrate to buyers that it can provide the necessary
skilled workforce to meet these technical standards. Should Cambodia be able to position itself to
produce more technically demanding production methods, the sector will be able to link that development
to its relatively good labor laws and practices. The development of an industry-wide Made in
Cambodia brand may help solidify this link as a competitive advantage.Since the sector will be the main
beneficiary of effective national branding, the private sector needs to drive such an initiative.
Availability & Quality of Labor Force
Cambodias garment sector employed 372, 988 workers in 2012, 90 percent of which were women.159 A
significant portion of wages in the sector is remitted to support rural families. Consequently, while most
garment factories are located close to Phnom Penh, the sectors prosperity and growth impacts positively
on rural livelihoods and economic development. Similarly, external shocks such as the global financial
crisis can have profound effects on poverty reduction efforts. More than 75,000 jobs were lost in the
sector during 2008-09, the impact of which would have been acutely felt by women and rural
communities.
Despite Cambodias garment sector being characterized by low labor productivity compared to its
competitors, many factory operators are discouraged to invest in vocational training programs due to the
highly mobile nature of the workforce and other factors (see also discussion in Appendix to Chapter 17.)
A joint public-private sector approach to training and vocational education is needed in Cambodia that, at
least in part, reduces the burden on private factory operators from high staff turnover. Similarly, factory
operators may find the practice of employing staff on short-term rolling contracts only exacerbates the
problem of high attrition rates in the garment sector workforce.
Further, the reliance of garment factories on foreign labor in key technical and management positions
weakens the local sectors future the local industry know-how and expertise is as temporary as the
presence of each skilled migrant worker. This risk to the sectors future only adds to the need for the

158

World Bank, Value Chain Study Cambodia Garment Sector, Phnom Penh: World Bank, 2012.
Better Factories Cambodia, Twenty Ninth Synthesis Report on Working Conditions in Cambodias Garment Sector, Phnom
Penh: ILO, 2013.

159

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implementation of a national TVET framework thatreflects Cambodias actual labor market needs,
including at the technical and management levels.
While efforts should continue to improve the garment sectors workforce productivity levels and skill
attributes, another aspect to the global garment value chain is consumer concern relating to labor
conditions and workplace safety. In this context, the development of Cambodias garment sector and
associated labor practices are subject to monitoring against international standards. The continuation of
the Better Factories Cambodia program is important and its role in keeping Cambodia competitive in the
global value chain should not be underestimated. International buyers are paying increasing attention to
the labor practices and factory conditions of suppliers. It will therefore be vital that both RGC and
industry make good on Cambodias commitment to decent work.160
Level of Processing Technology
Developing countries such as Cambodia usually first integrate into the global garment value chain
through labor intensive functions of relatively low knowledge intensity, such as cutting, making (sewing),
and trimming (CMT). Cambodiatherefore plays little role in the more knowledge-intensive functions,
such as product design, sourcing decisions of input materials, distribution arrangements, and marketing.
As such, the level of processing technology in Cambodias garment sector reflects its current role as,
predominantly, a supplier of relatively basic CMT apparel. Further, as most of the garment sector in
Cambodia has been established with foreign investment, most factories are equipped with the
manufacturing and processing technology needed to conduct CMT assembly.
Cost and Quality of Infrastructure
If the local garment sector wishes to pursue product diversification and participate in more value-added
activities, Cambodia will need to improve its base economic services and infrastructure, especially in
relation to transport, communications, and energy supply. These are regularly cited concerns of
businesses in Cambodia. Improvements in infrastructure would help to significantly lower Cambodias
overall production costs and strengthen the garments sectors position and integration with the global
value chain. For example, improvements in the transit corridor linking Phnom Penh andports in Vietnam
would shorten timeframes for importing fabrics and exporting garments, potentially attracting orders for
higher value garments that necessitate faster turnarounds.
Efficiency of Domestic Support Industries
Customs procedures are important for trade facilitation and impact directly on the cost of doing business
in Cambodia. Despite recent improvements, additional savings in transit time can be achieved through
reducing clearance times for imported fabrics and exported garments. This would add to the garment
sectors competitiveness and encourage further investment and development of the local production
chain.

160

Better Factories Cambodia Thirtieth Synthesis Report on Working Conditions in Cambodias Garment Sector, Phnom Penh:
ILO, April 2013

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Domestic Demand
Cambodias garment industry is almost entirely export-oriented and foreign-owned. The sectors focus is
on servicing global value chains in filling international purchase orders. A small number of locally
owned garment factories do service the local market. However, these are small in scale and generally set
outside the global garment value chain. As Cambodias economy develops and national income rises,
consumer preferences for international brands are likely to increase.
Prospect for Domestic Supply Conditions
Cambodias garment sector is largely dependent on imported inputs and components. Most fabrics,
threads, accessories, and trim used in production of apparel exports are imported while only packaging is
produced locally. About 70 percent of the fabric is imported from China, Taiwan, and Hong Kong and
another 16 percent from South East Asia.161 This is largely a reflection of the structure of the global
garment value chain where parent companies control production orders and specify where and how
suppliers such as Cambodia source inputs and components for CMT assembly. This practice restricts the
ability of Cambodian factory operators to purchase even basic local inputs.
However, there have been a number of recent investments in garment support industries in Cambodia. A
recent MoC survey concluded there were six local production units as detailed in Table 7.5 below.
Table 7.5: Local Producers Textiles & Fabrics, 2013
Product
Yarn / Thread
Knitted fabrics
Woven fabrics*

No. of Producers
0
4
2

Source: Ministry of Commerce, Phnom Penh.


Note:* One producer manufactures both knitted & woven fabrics.

Policy and Regulatory Framework


Government Initiatives and Sector Policy
The garment sector in Cambodia has developed in a business and policy environment that encourages
foreign investment. While Cambodia has no formal industrial development policy, the liberal FDI policy
adopted by the RGC early on has contributed to the sectors growth beginning in the 1990s, driven by
foreign investors from countries with extensive experience in garment production. Thus, a key role
played by RGC has been to provide economic stability combined with a favorable investment and
161

World Bank, Value Chain Study Cambodias Garment Sector, Phnom Penh: World Bank, 2012.

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regulatory environment. In addition, Cambodias pursuit of international trade and market access
opportunities, membership into ASEAN, accession to the WTO, and access to various GSP schemes, has
provided a catalyst for rapid investment by foreign investors in search of preferences.As a member of
ASEAN, Cambodia has also secured improved market access conditions through ASEAN Free Trade
Agreements with Dialogue Partners namely, Australia and New Zealand, China, India, Japan, and South
Korea.
Looking ahead, if the garment sector in Cambodia is to follow in the footsteps of past major garment
manufacturers, a concerted public-private sector effort will be needed to broaden the scope of productive
and value-added activities. This should include moving away from simple CMT assembly operations and
assuming greater involvement in the management of supply chains at the production stage. This will
require significant improvements toCambodias supply-chain efficiency and strategic investments by
RGC in modern infrastructure and economic services.
In addition, RGC will need to work with industry to help develop a domestic supply chain to link with the
garment sector. Signs of an emerging fabric production industry are encouraging and further investments
in supply chain integration are possible and will be needed. The benefits to the local economy will be
substantial even if domestic input suppliers could only meet a relatively small fraction of overall demand
from the garment sector.
To encourage these links a number of policy approaches could be adopted by RGC. These include new
incentives to encourage joint ventures between Cambodian enterprises and foreign investors as well as
targeted industrial development policies to increase the number of localcomponent manufacturers able to
supply the garment sector.162 Efforts to support such development are discussed in Chapter 5. Other
possible initiatives include policies aimed at boosting the efficiency of supply chains (including
upgrading infrastructure) and lowering(non-wage) production costs (see Chapters 2 and 3.) In terms of
boosting labor productivity, significant public-private sector collaboration will be required to develop and
implement a national TVET framework, introduceminimum competency standards for vocational
qualifications, and strengthenthe capacity of training providers to deliver quality training that meets labor
market needs (see Chapter 17.)
Business Associations
The sectors growth also owes much to the presence of an effective employers organization in the
Garment Manufactures Association of Cambodia (GMAC) the oldest and arguably most important
employers organization in the country.163Following the establishment of GMAC in 1999, the industry
organization has earned a strong reputationas a capable representative of garment manufacturers in
Cambodia. GMACs position has been aided by strong support and engagement from the Ministry of
Commerce (MoC.)All garment exports from Cambodia require a certificate of origin, whether or not they
are destined to a preferential market. MoC issues all certificate of origins and issues them only to
producers that are GMAC members and are monitored under the ILOs Better Factories Cambodia
program.
162
163

Williams, D. et al., From Downturn to Recovery: Cambodias Garment Sector in Transition, Phnom Penh: ILO, 2011.
See www.gmac-cambodia.org.

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The value of a strong industry association cannot be underestimated particularly as so many of


Cambodias emerging export sectors are currently looking to establish an effective representative
organization that can speak with a strong united voice. GMAC has been rather effective across a number
of key development areas for the sector including: helping investors in the sector to speak with a single
voice and coordinate actions; lobbying for the sectors interests; reaching negotiated settlements on
industrial relations issues; and, dialoguing with Government to influence relevant trade and business
policies.164In this context, GMAC provides a range of advisory services and training to its members,
covering areas such as trade facilitation, taxation, labor law and other regulations, and dispute resolution.
Where GMAC supports primarily employers interests, an emerging trade union movement is maturing in
Cambodia albeit lacking in skills and experience in management, negotiation, and collective bargaining
on behalf of employees. The ILO has identified fragmentation and proliferation (some garment factories
have more than ten unions present), as well as low human capacity and weak financial viability, as major
challenges facing Cambodias trade unions in the garment sector. According to the ILOs Decent Work
Country Program Cambodia, despite those challenges there have been some successes not least with
regard to the increasing recent role unions have played both in facilitating social dialogue and in
influencing key legal processes (such as drafting the new Trade Union Law.)165 Still, going forward, and
in view of the rise in illegal strikes, there is a need for a maturing of the industrial labor relations
environment process with a deeper use of alternative tools such as mediation and arbitration together with
strengthened enforcement of labor laws, regulations, and agreements in force.
Overall, securing a viable future will require significant industry transformation over the medium term.
In particular, GMAC will need to work closely with RGC to safeguard the sectors reputation as an
ethical supplier including through continued transparent monitoring of local factory and work
conditions under the Better Factories Cambodia program. In addition, current efforts to establish a
national TVET framework will also require close engagement between GMAC and RGC in order to
ensure future training initiatives are able to meet both the current and future needs of the garment sector.

Socio-Economic and Environmental Impacts


Current Employment and Job-Creation Prospect
Cambodias garment sector employed 372,988 workers in 2012, 90 percent of which were women.166 As
the garment sector is export dependent, employment levels, job security and future employment prospects
are subject to external shocks as witnessed during the global financial crisis when more than 75,000 job
losses occurred in the garment sector during 2008-2009. These job losses accounted for more than 21
percent of sectors total workforce.
164

Williams et al., From Downturn to Recovery: Cambodias Garment Sector in Transition, Phnom Penh: ILO, 2011.
ILO, Decent Work Country Program Cambodia 2011-2015, Phnom Penh: ILO, 2010.
166
Better Factories Cambodia, Twenty Ninth Synthesis Report on Working Conditions in Cambodias Garment Sector, Phnom
Penh: ILO, 2013.
165

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However, employment growth has averaged 10 percent per year since 2009 reflecting the sectors ability
to recover and expand production and employment relatively quickly.
Impact on Development of Disadvantaged Regions
Given the garment sectors need to access urban infrastructure, trade linkages and large population
centers for its workforce most factories are located around Phnom Penh or in Kandal Province.167Most
women workers employed in garment factories come from rural provinces and a significant portion of
their wages are remitted to support their families, hence distributing far beyond Phnom Penh and Kandal
Province the benefits of income generated in the sector.
Contribution to Skill Development
Many garment factories are reluctant to invest heavily in skills and training due to concerns about high
staff attrition rates and the cost associated with work time lost during training in the face of the unusually
short Cambodian average work week (see Appendix to Chapter 17.) Nevertheless, the industry
association GMAC does support efforts to promote skills development and assess workers against
recognized criteria. For example, GMAC in collaboration with the ASEAN Federation of Textile
Industries, has been supporting the development of an ASEAN Common Competency Standard and
facilitating the certification of workers against the standard. The ASEAN Common Competency
Standard covers five positions relevant to the garment sector: Sewing Machine Operator, Sewing Machine
Supervisor, Sewing Machine Mechanic, Pattern Maker andMerchandiser.168
In addition, GMAC has taken a large loan to build and develop a training center to serve employers in the
sector. This will include more advanced training programs such as pattern-making, industrial engineering
and fashion. Cambodia has already had some success in developing the first ASEAN-standard training
and certification program for pattern-makers with the aim of enhancing the capacity of the local sector to
offer value-added services. The training program is administered jointly by GMAC and ASEAN
Federation of Textile Industries, with the Garment Industry Productivity Center (GIPC) delivering the
training with the support of the Cambodia Skills Development Center.
Pattern-making includes designing and producing sample garments for large-scale production an
activity that falls outside the basic CMT manufacturing model that is prevalent in Cambodia. An increase
in the number of certified pattern-makers in Cambodia offers scope to reduce the overall production costs
to local garment factories (which spend time and money relying on outside and head office directions
relating to patterns), as well as enabling the sector to offer more services to the global garment value
chain. Such an approach to industry-led training backed by regional competency standards serves as a
useful model for similar initiatives to address the chronic shortage of skills across the garment sector.
While the development of regional competency standards support broader regional integration efforts and
is intended to ensure sustained quality of training, Cambodias reliance on foreign skilled labor in key
167
168

World Bank, Value Chain Study Cambodia, Phnom Penh:World Bank, 2012.
GMAC Newsletter, ASEAN Common Competency Certification Test, Phnom Penh: GMAC, May 2010

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technical and management positions weakens the local garmentsectors future. This highlights the
importance of Cambodia implementing a national TVET framework thataddresses actual labor market
needs, including at the technical and management levels, and works hand-in-hand with industry.
Energy and Water Constraints and Environmental Impact
The high cost of electricity undermines investment in Cambodias garment sector and reduces its overall
competitiveness in global garment value chain. Since 2009, the International Finance Corporation (IFC)
has been collaborating with GMAC to improve energy efficiency in the Cambodian garment sector with a
view to reducing costs and strengthen the industrys overall competitiveness.In particular, the IFC has
worked with a team of technical experts toconduct energy audits in selected garment factories in order to
identify key improvementsneeded to decrease energy consumption and improve production costs.169
Box 7.2: Skill Development
A skilled and dynamic workforce is critical to the future of Cambodias garment sector. The 370,000+
strong workforce employed by garment factories in 2012 is both one of the sectors most important
strengths and weaknesses. The relatively low-cost wage environment in Cambodia is a significant
competitive advantage. However, the low labor productivity weighs on the sectors expansion and
diversification objectives. Similarly, the over reliance on foreign labor in key technical and management
positions weakens the sectors future as the industry know-how and expertise is essentially outsourced to
migrant workers.
Given the sectors current state of development and structure, strengthening the provision of technical
vocational education and training (TVET) should be a national priority. A national TVET framework is
urgently needed and government and industry will need to collaborate to ensure competency-based skills
and standards are adopted that meet the sectors needs. The Private Sector, however, cannot rely only on
Government or international donors to drive TVET initiatives. It too must get involved.
As part of a national reform effort to enhance the vocational education and training sector, establishing
industry-led (and co-funded) vocational training centers will be needed to address acute skills shortages
across Cambodias garment value chain. Where appropriate, these training initiatives should align with
recently agreed ASEAN Common Competency Standards relevant to the sector specifically for Sewing
Machine Operator, Sewing Machine Supervisor, Sewing Machine Mechanic, Pattern Maker and
Merchandiser positions.
Overall, strong public-private sector collaboration will be needed to address the critical skill and
education needs of the garment sector. This will help improve Cambodias labor productivity levels and,
importantly, demonstrate the sectors capacity to shift along the value chain to produce more technically
complex and demanding garments. Further, if the sector can maintain, or even improve, its reputation as
a reliable, trusted and ethical supplier (through monitoring under the Better Factories Cambodia
program) Cambodia will be well positioned to enhance its comparative advantages and secure the sectors
future in an increasingly competitive global garment value chain.
169

GMAC Newsletter, Energy Efficiency in Cambodia Garment Industry, Phnom Penh: GMAC, Feb 2011.

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Box 7.3: Progress since 2007


Cambodias garment sector has endured significant upheaval in the global economy over the 2007 to
2012 period. The global financial crisis of 2008-09 had a profound effect on manufacturing sectors
worldwide. In Cambodia, garment exports declined almost 19 percent, only to recover quickly from
2010. Despite this disruption, total garment exports increased by more than 50 percent between 2007 and
2012 to more than $4.4 billion.
Further, the dynamics and flow of Cambodias garment exports also started to shift during this period.
The US market has seen its relative importance as an export destination decline as exports to the EU
market surge following changes to the rules of origin for EBA treatment. While in 2007 the US and EU
accounted for 70 percent and 22 percent of Cambodias garment exports respectively, by 2012 the US
market accounted for less than 45 percent and the EU accounted for almost 33 percent.
However, Cambodias garment sector remains predominantly focused on simple CMT assembly activities
which offer very thin profit margins to factory operators and relatively little in terms of value added
contributions to the global garment value chain. While there are signs of an emerging textiles and fabric
industry, a more strategic approach will be needed, backed by strong public-private sector collaboration
to support industry development goals and help secure the future prosperity of Cambodias garment
industry.

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Conclusion
The main findings from this chapter are summarized in the SWOT analysis that follows.
Strengths

Weaknesses

Growth in garment sector a significant success story


for Cambodias recent economic development and
trade integration efforts.
Workforce mostly women, with significant portion
of wages remitted to support rural families.
With over 20 years of experience, Cambodia
garment manufacturing has developed a reputation
as relatively ethical as a result of its Better
Factories Cambodia program.
Growth in garment exports is driven by strong
growth in basic apparel production volumes.
Focus on basic apparel production partly shields
Cambodia garment sector from contractions in
global economy compared to more volatile high-end
garment trade.
Lead times for garment production are comparable
to other competitors in the region.
Attractive FDI environment in Cambodia.
The principal export destinations are high-income
North American and EU markets.
Low tariffs or tariff advantages on some items drive
Cambodias garment exports to US and EU markets.
Foreign investors provide industry know-how and
expertise in international trade.
Industry and government support for long-standing
Better Factories Cambodia gives international
investors and buyers business confidence.

Cambodia serves a small number of markets (US and


EU mainly) with low value basic apparel.
Garment sector remains focused on simple low value
cut-make-trim (CMT) production with extremely
thin profit margins.
Most garment factories (94%) are foreign owned
with no Cambodian lead investors in the sector.
Most garment factories have little capacity to
independently attract new orders or diversify.
Reliance on foreign labor in key technical and
management positions weakens local industrys
future (not in local hands.)
Little evidence of product diversificationthe
garments being exported today essentially the same
as those exported in the mid-1990s.
Fabrics, threads, accessories and trim used in
production of apparel exports are mostly imported
resulting in lost value.
Cambodian garment worker productivity lags
competitors in the region.
Highly mobile workforce discourages firms from
investing in vocational training programs.
High cost electricity undermines efforts to shift
garment production upstream (value-add).
Most factories have minimal investments in fixed
assets and can easily relocate if operating costs are
no longer competitive.

Opportunities

Threats

Significant welfare benefits from sectors wage and


employment growth aid poverty reduction goals.
Scope to increase profit margins and wages through
production of higher valued garments.
Potential of linking Made in Cambodia brand with
relatively good labor laws and practices.
Improvements in the transit corridor linking the
Phnom Penh & Vietnamese ports would shorten
timeframes for importing fabrics and exporting
garmentspotentially attracting orders for higher
value garments that necessitate faster turnarounds.
Additional savings in transit time could be achieved
through reducing clearance times for imported
fabrics and exported garments.
Industry-led vocational training centers would
address acute skills shortages across supply chain.
Scope to incorporate Cambodian garment
production into regional supply chain for higher
value products.

Myanmar could emerge as a lower-cost garment


production center in next 5 years.
Rising costs of production (wages & energy).
Withdrawal of main foreign investors would have a
profound and adverse impact on national income and
rural livelihoods.
Pace of the Cambodian garment sectors growth
mirrors the pace at which the sector could decline
as seen in contraction of 2008-09.
High cost of capital and financial stress discourages
the few locally owned factories from expanding
production or shifting upstream.
Strong competition from larger basic apparel
exporters such Vietnam, Bangladesh, China, and
India that offer economies of scale.
Preference erosion in key export markets.
Inability to diversify products or export markets.
Reluctance of local investors to enter the sector.
Instabilityfrom labor disputes.

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Recommendations
While, Cambodias garment sector has recovered well from the difficulties of the global financial crisis
the impact of the downturn on both factories and employees has served to highlight the sectors
vulnerability to external shocks. Diversification of export markets and the type of garment produced will
be needed to help the sector create a buffer against future downturns. This will require significant publicprivate sector collaboration and a strategic approach to sector development. The aim should be for
Cambodia to follow in the footsteps of the major international garment producing countries of the past
such as China, Singapore, Hong Kong, and Japan who have shifted along the value chain as lower cost
competitors emerged.
While Cambodias main competitive advantages namely low cost labor and reputation built around
labor compliance are not yet under threat, it is important to lay down the foundations to secure the
sectors future. This will need to include significant investment in vocational training and education
programs to support value-adding, as well as the establishment of domestic support industries able to
supply, at least in part, some of the components and inputs to the garment sector.
Possible Actions to address some of the sectors current limitations and opportunities for further
significant progress are identified in the Trade SWAp Roadmap under Outcome #7.

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Chapter 8
FOOTWEAR
For purpose of CTIS 2014-2018, data for footwear exports are drawn from Comtrade statistics using the
HS 64 (Harmonized Commodity Description and Coding System) category. Measurement of inputs for
production process is based on HS 6406 (Part of footwear; removable in-soles, heel cushion etc.; gaiter
etc.) and part of HS 41 (leather). It is not possible to assess exactly what share of leather (category HS41)
imports is dedicated specifically to footwear production, though considering Cambodias export industry
and domestic market, it is assumed that a large share of that category imports is dedicated to the footwear
industry in Cambodia. Comtrade statistics are used in the chapter up to 2011. There appears to be a
glitch in 2012 data. Limited reference to 2012 is based on Certificate of Origin data collected by MoC
and GMAC.170
Footwear exports contributed to slightly over 7 percent of Cambodias recorded manufacturing exports in
2012. Cambodias footwear exports concentrate on leather shoes, though textile and rubber shoes exports
have increased significantly over the last few years. Only seven out of 47 footwear factories (15 percent)
are located in SEZs.171 However most of them have received the status of Qualified Investment Projects
(QIP) with similar investment incentives as those available in SEZs.172
Most Cambodian footwear producers are concentrating on final assembly of shoes from parts (at a
minimum, uppers and soles) that have been cut and sewn in neighboring countries or, even, in Cambodia.
Under the EBAs rules of origins, footwear whose final assembly has taken place in Cambodia benefit
from duty free access to European markets. This is so as long asit is not produced from imported parts
that include uppers and soles that have been sewn together outside Cambodia.
An important part of the development of a footwear industry is establishing close proximity between the
assembly factories and supporting industries, such as tanneries, synthetic leather suppliers, mold makers,
chemical suppliers, and machinery repair operators. At the current stage, Cambodia has to import most of
these inputs, including raw material such as leather, production input such as chemicals, and intermediate
components such as soles.
Supporting industries to footwear manufacturers do not typically move to a new production country until
the footwear industry is well established and has reached a significant scale. Some of the supporting
industries are beginning to move to Cambodia: machinery suppliers, chemical suppliers, and tool and die
repairers. Still, because of the expense of setting up machinery and production in a new country, because
of high capacity in Vietnam, and because of the proximity of the cluster of Cambodian footwear factories
to the Vietnamese border (more on this later), large materials suppliers continue to produce inputs in
170

See discussion in Garments Chapter. Exporters of Garments and Footwear need a CO to export irrespective of destination
market.
171
GMAC data and data from Survey of SEZs carried out as part of CTIS 2014-2018
172
See chapter 9 for discussion of investment incentives

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Vietnam and shipthose to Cambodia.

Cambodian Footwear Export Performance


Export Value and Trade Balance
Total footwear exports in Cambodia were almost $311 million in 2012, up from approximately
$270 million in 2011 and $88 million in 2008.173This represents a nearly250 percent increase since 2008
or an annual average growth of almost 40 percent (Figure 8.1.) Over the same 2008-2012 period, imports
of footwear increased by nearly the same amount (413 percent) to reach around $50 million in
2012.Cambodias trade balance for footwear products is therefore largely positive, with a net trade
surplus of more than $250 million in footwear product.
Sihanoukville seaport is the main export terminal for footwear products. However, some footwear
factories in Svay Rieng province may export their products through Saigon port in Vietnam due to
proximity. There might be some unrecorded exports originating from manufacturing plants near the
Vietnamese border and shipped out of Vietnam but those are impossible to estimate.
Footwear exports represented slightly less that 7 percent of Cambodias total recorded goods exports in
2011, while it represented only 2 percent in 2008. Footwear was Cambodias second largest recorded
goods exports in 2012, after articles of apparel (knit or no knit) but has grown much faster over the 20082012 period. The increasing importance of footwear in Cambodias export basket is based on the
sustained strength of its leather shoe exports, combined with new production in plastic/rubber and textile
shoes.

173

2008 to 2011 data are from Comtrade. Comtrade mirror data are roughly consistent with GDCE and MOC data through 2011.
2012 data is from MOC. As indicated earlier, 2012 Comtrade mirror data appears widely inaccurate and is not used here.

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Figure 8.1: Cambodia Footwear Exports,


Exports, 2008-2011
2008-2011 ($
($ millions)
millions)
350
300
250
200
150
100
50
0
2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

Leather shoes exports

Rubber and plastic shoes Textile shoes

Footwear, nes

Part of footwear

Waterproof footwear

Source:Comtrade
Source:
Type of Exports
Key footwear exports in 2012 included principally:

leather shoes approximately $180 million (about 58 percent of exports);


textile shoes approximately $70 million (about 23 percent); and,
rubber and plastic shoes for the balance or approximately $60 million (about 19 percent.)

In 2012, the Cambodian footwear industry remained concentrated in leather shoe production, which
represented approximately 65 percent of all footwear exports. However, both textile and rubber footwear
exports have increased even faster than leather footwear exports over the last few years suggesting that
there is significant diversification under way.Textile footwear exports increased by nearly 90 percent
annually between 2008 and 2011. Rubber footwear exports increased even faster. Cambodia did not
export rubber footwear before 2009. Continued strong investment by footwear firms drives technology
transfer that can support further diversification of Cambodias footwear exports, for example with an
increase in the production of shoes with textile uppers that can result in 50 percent higher FOB value.

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Cambodian footwear manufacturers must import most of the leather and other footwear components they
need for production. Local suppliers do not have the capacity to meet exporters' demand and to match the
pace of production increase. With very rapid growth in exports of finished products, import of leather,
textile, and rubber components have increased exponentially over the last few years. Unfortunately, the
different components cannot be separated out from the available Comtrade data. One might assume,
however, that imports of textile and rubber component have grown even more rapidly than imports of
leather to match the shifting trend in the composition of exports.
The faster growth in exports of finished footwear compared to growth in imports of components, suggests
that Cambodia is capturing a larger part of the value added in the production process.

Figure 8.2: Cambodia Footwear Imports


Imports and
and Exports,
Exports, 2008-2011
2008-2011 ($
($ millions)
millions)
350
300
250
200
150
100
50
0
2008

2009
Leather imports

2010
Footwear input and leather imports

2011

2012
Footwear exports

Source:Comtrade
Source:
Current and Prospective Export Markets
Cambodias key export markets for footwear include the UK, for almost $50 million (18.5 percent of
Cambodias total footwear exports) in 2011, Germany for almost $40 million (15 percent) and Japan for
almost $30 million (11 percent.) The US is the fourth largest market (9.5 percent) followed by France.
European markets attract most of Cambodias footwear exports largely because of duty free access under
EBA as explained earlier. After the EU as a regional market, Japan is the second largest export market
due to a similar duty-free advantage available from the Free Trade Agreement between Japan and
ASEAN countries. The current concentration on the EU, Japanese and US markets could be seen as a
potential future risk. However, the share of exports to markets other than the three aforementioned has
increased from approximately 7 percent to nearly 26 percent between 2008 and 2012.174 Continued
diversification of destination markets should be encouraged.

174

GMAC data

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Figure 8.3: Key Markets for Cambodia Footwear Exports,


Exports, 2011
2011

United Kingdom
United States of America
Netherlands
China

Germany
France
Canada
Others

Japan
Italy
Spain

Source:Comtrade
Source:
Table 8.1: World Footwear Imports and Cambodia Major Export
Export Destinations,
Destinations, 2012
2012
Product

World Market
Imports

Cambodias
Exports as share of
World Imports

Footwear

$117.6 billions

0.72 percent

Leather
footwear

$52.9 billions

0.92 percent

Rubber
footwear

$30.5 billions

0.60 percent

Textile footwear

$19.9 billions

0.83 percent

Worlds Largest
Import Markets as
Share of World
Imports
USA (21 percent)
Germany (8 percent)
France (6 percent)
USA (23 percent)
Germany (8 percent)
France (7 percent)
USA (23 percent)
Japan (8 percent)
Germany (6 percent)
USA (20 percent)
Germany (7 percent)
Japan (7 percent)

Cambodias Largest
Export Destinations as
Share of Total
(2011 data)
UK (18 percent)
Germany (14 percent)
Japan (10 percent)
UK (22 percent)
Germany (18 percent)
Japan (13 percent)
Japan (15 percent)
Germany (11 percent)
France (9 percent
USA (20 percent)
France (10 percent)
UK (9 percent)

Source:
Source: Comtrade

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World
World Market Conditions
Global footwear trade reached almost $120 billion in 2012, with more than 20 percent growth since 2008,
including around $50 billion worth of leather shoes and $30 billion worth of rubber footwear. Footwear
represented 0.65 percent of total global trade in 2012, which is slightly more than in 2008 when it
represented 0.59 percent.

Figure 8.4: Global Footwear Trade by Type of Products ($ billion, 2012)


140
120
100
80
60
40
20
0
2008
Leather footwear

2009
Rubber footwear

2010
Textile footwear

2011
Footwear parts

2012
Footwear, nes

Source:Comtrade
Source:
Cambodias share of the global footwear market has been growing steadily over the 2008-2012 period,
increasing from 0.09 percent in 2008 to 0.72 percent in 2012. In comparison, Cambodias share of total
global trade was 0.048 percent in 2012 and its share of global GDP was 0.044 percent, which suggests
that Cambodia is very competitive in the global market for footwear. Cambodias competitiveness in
footwear is particularly obvious for leather, for which it went from a share of 0.15 percent of the world
market in 2008 to 0.92 percent in 2012, textile, for which it went from 0.11 percent to 0.83 percent of the
world market, and rubber, for which it went from no export at all to 0.60 percent of the world market.

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Domestic
Domestic Supply
Supply Conditions
Conditions
Footwear Manufacturers in Cambodia
According to the Garment Manufacturing Association of Cambodia (GMAC), there were 47 footwear
factories in Cambodia the end of March 2013 compared to 20 in 2007, and 10 in 2003.175 Duty-free and
quota free shipping to all EU countries and Japan along with rising wages in Vietnam and China have
been the key drivers in the growth in the number of footwear factories opening in Cambodia. The pace of
growth in the number of factories has been increasing in recent years, with the average annual growth in
factory number reaching 18 percent between 2008 and 2012, compared with 9 percent between 2001 and
2007.

Figure 8.5: Number of Footwear Factories


Factories in
in Cambodia,
Cambodia, 2001-2013
2001-2013
50
45
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0

Number of factories

Source:
Source: GMAC
Footwear factories are either organized as contract manufacturers or as vendor factories. Vendor
factories are locally incorporated production units of foreign corporations. They are directly managed by
their overseas headquarters, which allocate orders to factories across the region according to capability,
capacity and cost structure. Contract manufacturers are stand-alone factories that produce finished
products according to specifications provided by buyers. They compete for production contracts and
175

GMAC, Consolidated Data for Garment and Textile Exports, Phnom Penh: GMAC, 2013

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procure themselves most of the required production input. In addition to these two types of factories in
Cambodia, a number of domestic firms provide support services into the footwear production process,
such as dying, trimming and packaging.
According to GMAC, a vast majority of Cambodias footwear manufacturers are export-oriented factories
organized as vendor factories. Their production is driven by direct orders from international buyers. Raw
materials used in the production process, such as leather, are mostly imported from neighboring countries
or from parent firms located in ASEAN, China, and Hong Kong. The limited number of large factories
and the limited access to local outsourcing and production input constrain the development of the
footwear industry in Cambodia.
Contract manufacturers are limited to a few domestic firms identified as sub-contractor factories that help
vendor factories deal with excessive orders or timelines. Sub-contractor factories are also involved in
services to footwear producers, such as dying and trimming.
Most of the raw materials used in the production process are sourced from within the region, with
Cambodia having little ready capacity to meet the rapidly increasing input requirements of the footwear
sector. In the case of vendor factories, the sourcing of inputs is usually arranged by the parent company,
as these international companies can take advantage of their size and networks to optimize the supply
process. In most cases, the parent company has long-standing relationships with their suppliers, often
located in the same country, in which case the parent company usually purchases the inputs on FOB terms
before arranging their delivery to the footwear factory in Cambodia.
Cambodian footwear factories working as contract manufacturers cannot rely in the same way on an
international partner to facilitate their access to production inputs. They are therefore at a disadvantage in
sourcing inputs because they do not have the same bulk purchase capacity and international networks that
the international parent company of vendor factories can provide. Access to production input tends to be
more expensive for contract manufacturers, with most inputs purchased C&F and shipped by the supplier.
Vendor factories sell their products to brand manufacturers, wholesalers, and retail chains, while contract
manufacturers sell primarily to wholesalers and buying agents.
Footwear Production Process
As noted in the introduction, most footwear factories in Cambodia produce shoes by assembling the
different parts of the shoe through cutting, sewing, and stitching according to buyers' orders. Input to the
production process and raw material include leather, synthesis, plastic, glue, stitching material and others.
Overall, vendor factories in Cambodia have minimal control on inbound and outbound supply chains, no
control on design, and, consequently, limited opportunities to increase the value of finished goods.
The vendor factory has minimal control over its inbound and outbound supply chains. The parent
company headquarters manages everything from sourcing of inputs and managing contacts with buyers to
product design, marketing, and finance. The factory arranges the logistics for movement between factory
gate and the forwarders warehouse or loading port. Interactions between factory and buyers are
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normally limited to an exchange of samples. As a result, the factory has limited opportunities to increase
the value of its finished goods. Production of higher value footwear may be decided by the parent
company headquarters once the vendor company has demonstrated its capability in terms of productivity
and quality control.
Contract manufacturers have a greater control over their supply chains. They are involved in sourcing
inputs, developing basic designs, obtaining export financing, and arranging local logistics. The
marketing and branding of the products is still done by the buyers, which means that Cambodian
manufacturers have no direct interaction with the final consumer market.
According to Better Factory Cambodia (BFC) most of the production costs of footwear are associated
with raw materials (65 percent in 2011.) Since Cambodia imports a large part of these raw materials, it
has little control over its costs. Labor represents only 15 percent of production costs, though increase in
wages and worker demands have been mentioned has a key concern by some of the footwear
manufacturers interviewed. The high price and poor reliability of electricity handicap footwear factories.

Figure
Cambodian Footwear
Footwear Industry,
Industry, 2011
2011
Figure 8.6:
8.6: Distribution of Production Costs in the Cambodian

20%

15%
65%

Raw materials

Labour

Other

Source:
Source: Better Factory Cambodia
To reduce the costs associated with raw materials and other inputs and to improve its competitiveness, the
Cambodian footwear industry needs to drive the development of a domestic supply capacity, either for
raw materials or for services, and reduce other costs (trade logistics, utilities, etc.)
The lowering of production costs associated with raw materials and services is important to maintain
Cambodia relative competitiveness as labor costs increase. Increase in labor costs should be expected if
the sector hires more skilled workers in order to diversify and up-skill production, which in turns increase
flow on benefits to the local economy.

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Cambodia has the capacity to develop certain shoe parts and materials (e.g. tanning) in the vicinity of
processing plants leading to clustering among contract manufacturers in particular. It also has the
capacity to source raw material such as rubber or leather from domestic producers. However, investment
in supporting industries typically does not occur until the sector has reached a critical mass. Cambodia is
likely very close to that point. Indeed, some supporting industries are starting to move to Cambodia:
machinery suppliers, chemical suppliers and tool and die repairers. However, because of the expense of
setting up machinery and production in a new country, high production capacity for inputs in Vietnam,
and the cluster of Cambodian footwear factories close to the Vietnamese border, many large materials
suppliers continue to operate in Vietnam and ship materials to Cambodia.
Labor Force
The footwear sector was estimated to provide 69,184 direct jobs in 2012, up from approximately 32,000
in 2007, with wages comparable to those of the garment sector.

Figure 8.6: Employment in the Footwear


Footwear Industry
Industry in
in Cambodia,
Cambodia, 2001-2012
2001-2012
80,000
70,000
60,000
50,000
40,000
30,000
20,000
10,000
0
2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

Workers

Source: GMAC
Source:
The pace of growth in employment in the footwear sector has increased in recent years, with average
annual employment growth reaching 23 percent between 2008 and 2012, compared with 13 percent
between 2001 and 2007.

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According to GMAC, nearly all workers in footwear factories were Cambodian in 2011, though
19 percent of the administrative and management staff was foreigners, often at the higher levels of
management.
Regional Production Chains
Footwear production is characterized by a large number of components and processes, allowing for a
division of labor across ASEAN countries. Low and diminishing profit margin for low and medium
quality footwear production drives international investors to search for cost savings, in particular through
labor cost reduction. Thus far, Cambodia has been capturing the labor-intensive, low-technology part of
the process due to availability of low skilled labor. Rising labor costs in China, Thailand, and Vietnam
have favored relocation of production to Cambodia where labor costs remain low in comparison.
Geographical proximity to other stages of the footwear production chain, in Thailand and Vietnam, has
also been a key advantage for Cambodia. In addition, relocation to Cambodia has been further facilitated
by the desire of footwear producers to benefit from the countrys duty free access with lenient rules of
origin to the European Union and a number of developed markets. However, the relative fading of
Cambodias preferential tariff access combined with the softening in international rules of origin could
reduce Cambodias regional competitiveness. In addition, the end of European anti-dumping measures
against Chinese and Vietnamese footwear exporters might lead investors to return to those locations
where they benefit from better productivity, better infrastructure, local input supply, and bigger
economies of scale.
Cambodias weak transport infrastructure compared to that of its neighbors (Thailand, Vietnam, China)
hinders its competitiveness, in particular its capacity to meet particularly footwear orders particularly
large or under strict time pressure. Overall, these observations point to the need for Cambodia to develop
domestic clusters of suppliers and to try to move up the skill ladder in order to retain its regional
competitiveness.
Box 8.1: Footwear Production in the ASEAN Region
Footwear production is characterized by a large number of components and processes, allowing for a
division of labor across ASEAN countries. This division means that raw materials, shoe components, and
final footwear are produced in different parts of Asia. Low and diminishing profit margin for low and
medium quality footwear production drives international investors to search for cost savings, in particular
through labor cost reduction, which has led to a partial reorganization of the footwear production chain
across ASEAN, partly in Cambodias favor.
Taiwan, Thailand, Vietnam, and China all export significant amount of leather, some of which is being
used in the region to produce footwear. Similarly, the rubber used in the regional footwear production
comes principally from China, South Korea, Thailand, Vietnam, Singapore, and Malaysia, while cotton
and textile comes from China, Bangladesh, Vietnam, Thailand, and Indonesia. These raw materials can be
first turned into shoe components before being re-exported or can be exported directly to footwear
factories in the region.
Cambodia is the third largest footwear exporter in the ASEAN region. The largest producer of footwear in
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the region is Vietnam. China is the world largest footwear producer in the world, and a lot of the ASEAN
chain of production in the footwear sector is organized around those two countries. For example, many
Cambodian footwear factories are smaller scale operations that take on side work from bigger Vietnamese
factories when the latter deal with order to large for their own capacity.
Higher labor costs and shortage of workers domestically have encouraged traditional ASEAN footwear
producers to invest in countries offering cheaper workforce, which has led to a switch in production
across the ASEAN region. In this context, geographical proximity is a key driver of the organization of
footwear production in the region, with Cambodia benefitting from its proximity with Vietnam. Because
of the expense of setting up machinery and production in a new country, the high capacity in Vietnam,
and the cluster of Cambodian footwear factories close to the Vietnamese border, large materials suppliers
are currently operating out of Vietnam and elsewhere, and transporting materials to Cambodia to service
the local footwear industry.
ASEAN footwear producers exports mainly to the USA and the EU, particularly Germany, the UK,
France, and Italy, as well as to Japan, Singapore, and Hong Kong. With weakening demand and
increased competition in some of these traditional developed markets, footwear producers in the ASEAN
have started looking regionally to sell their products within the Asian region. Thai producers, for
example, have been increasing their exports to Myanmar and China. China has become a significant
importer of Cambodians finished footwear and is now its tenth market for footwear exports.

Revealed Comparative Advantage and Potential Areas for Expansion


A method used to assess the comparative advantage of a given export item is the revealed comparative
advantage analysis (RCA.) It allows determining what export items a country is more specialized and
more successful in a global context, which, all things being equal, suggest a comparative advantage
internationally for the said items.
The RCA is calculated as follow:
Export value of item X of country A
Total export value of country A

RCA Index for item X of country A

=
Export value of item X in world
Total export value in world

A RCA of 1 suggests no specific comparative advantage as such; Above 1, that the exporting country is
globally competitive in producing and exporting the given item; Below 1, that the exporting country is not
globally competitive in the given item, though it can still be competitive at a regional level or in the
context of a chain of production. In any case, the highest the RCA index is, the more competitive in a
given item the exporting country is revealed to be.
RCA indexes for potential key export items of Cambodia are calculated as follows:

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Table 8.2: RCA Index for Cambodias Footwear Exports 2012


Year

Footwear

2008
2012

3.42
15.01

Leather
Footwear
5.49
19.31

Rubber
Footwear
0.00
12.62

Textile
Footwear
4.27
17.34

Source: Comtrade
While it appears that, by 2008, Cambodia was already strongly competitive in footwear exports,
especially for leather and textile footwear (it was not exporting any rubber footwear), it has gained and
captured significant market share over the following four years. Cambodias RCA increased by a factor
of four, more or less, in all categories of footwear between 2008 and 2012, to reach 15.01 in all footwear,
19.41 in leather footwear, 17.34 in textile footwear and an impressive 12.62 in textile footwear (starting
from nothing in 2008.) The rapid rise in these RCA indexes suggests a growing concentration of
footwear production in Cambodia, with regional production being switched to the country from
neighboring producers.
The development of a critical mass of suppliers, both for raw materials and services, to the footwear
industry, associated with the development of competitive infrastructure and the improvement of workers
skills, is key to drive further the improvement of Cambodia's international competitiveness and to secure
its share of the global markets. The concentration of firms in the footwear industry has allowed for
productivity gains and economies of scale that have translated into rising RCA indexes. The global
competitiveness of Cambodias garment industry with the relative transferability of workers and service
providers has supported the growth in the competitiveness of the footwear industry.

The Domestic Regulatory and Infrastructure Environment


Policy Incentives for Footwear Exports in Cambodia
Footwear companies in Cambodia benefits from a favorable investment environment with special tax
incentive when recognized as Qualified Investment Project or located in SEZs.
In addition, footwear manufacturers and companies servicing the footwear industry benefit from a number
of tax incentives to facilitate their exports. According to Prakas No. 298 of the Ministry of Economy and
Finance issued in 2005, these companies are exempted of VAT on imported production input and
equipment. Furthermore, the temporary suspension of the monthly Advance Profit Tax of garment and
footwear enterprises approved by Prakas No. 483 of the Ministry of Economy and Finance dated May 29,
2009 (on Validity Extension of Suspension of Advance Profit Tax of Garment and Footwear Enterprises
of the Ministry of Economy and Finance) will remain valid for three more years until the end of 2015.

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Besides these tax incentives supporting directly the footwear industry, the Cambodian Government has
more general policies to attract foreign direct investment presented in chapter 5 of this report. Some of
these investments supportive schemes are particularly relevant for footwear production in Cambodia, such
as a number of tax holidays, the absence of restriction on funds transfer, or the absence of exchange
controls.
Industry Organizations
A number of organizations are supporting the footwear industry in Cambodia:

The Garment Manufacturing Association in Cambodia (GMAC) is the main organization


representing the interest of footwear industry in Cambodia. While its main role is in the garment
sector, it has been increasingly involved in supporting the footwear sector, in particular since the
Footwear Orders Center of Cambodia (FOCC) stopped its activity last year. GMAC collects
information about all factories involved in garment and footwear production, including address
and contact, type of products, number of workers and nationality of owners. GMAC also
produces research on the footwear and garment industries and it offers training to management
and workers in the two sectors. Contrary to some of its activities for the garment industry,
GMAC does not organize promotional activities and overseas promotion trip for the Cambodian
footwear sector.
The Footwear Orders Center of Cambodia (FOCC) was established to provide supports to all
international footwear buyers and all footwear factories in Cambodia and to promote new export
opportunities in overseas markets such as the USA, the UK, Europe and Japan. However FOCC
stopped its activities a year ago.
Better Factories Cambodia (BFC) is a program of the International Labor Organization that
assesses and reports on working conditions in Cambodian garment and footwear factories
according to national and international standards. BFC helps factories improve their working
conditions and productivity. It works with the Cambodian Government, GMAC, trade unions and
international buyers to ensure transparent workforce condition improvement. BFC is managed by
the International Labor Organization.
The Cambodia's Arbitration Council is an alternative dispute resolution tribunal responsible for
addressing claims of labor rights violations and workplace disputes through direct engagement of
workers and employers. In 2012, the Council heard about 230 collective labor disputes in the
garment and footwear industry.
Interestingly, the footwear industry in Cambodia does not have its own representative body. At
present, its private sector representation is bundled with garment in GMAC, with most of the
focus of the organizations activities on garment production and exports. This may limit the
resources and effectiveness of the representation provided to footwear exporters. Alternatively,
GMAC could increase its support to promotion and lobbying activities on behalf of the sector.

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Socio-Economic and Environmental Impacts of Footwear Manufacturing


Employment and Working Conditions
Footwear factories in Cambodia range in size from 200 employees up to 5,000, with a national average of
1,200 workers. Over 90 percent of these footwear factory workers are female (62,700 workers out of
64,200 in 2012). Total employment in the sector has increased by almost 450 percent in the last 10 years,
and more than doubled time since 2008.
Several labor and trade unions are protecting workers interests in garment and footwear factories in
Cambodia. Labor unrest has been taken place periodically in certain areas (such as on the Vietnamese
border), as workers ask for better working conditions and higher wages. This has been mentioned as a
concern by foreign footwear investors.
With more than 90 percent of its workforce female, the footwear industry significantly empowers female
to formally participate to the economy. A large share of women is young unmarried females who have
migrated to Phnom Penh and neighboring provinces from rural areas. They receive higher wages than
rural jobs can offer, which converts into extra income for their families through remittances. The high
participation of women in footwear sector can be linked to a couple of Cambodias Millennium
Development Goals (MDGs), namely eliminating gender disparities in all economic sectors and reducing
poverty in rural areas. However, this predominance of female workers in the industry also reflects a
certain degree of discrimination toward male workers with certain job announcements only referring to
females or with male workers being offered only short term contracts compared with unlimited duration
contracts for female workers.
Child labor can be an issue, as almost 55 percent of footwear factories surveyed by the BCF in 2012 were
found to not use reliable documents to verify applicants age prior to hiring, with altered documentation
or age-verification documents borrowed from family and friends.
Health and safety issues are a recurring concern as accidents and casualties in footwear factories are
regularly reported in the news. Another concern is the potential for workers to be exposed to hazardous
chemicals through both inhalation and dermal routes, with BCF trying to monitor the health risk it
represents. In a 2012 survey, it found that more than 55 percent of the companies inspected did not have
the proper chemical safety solutions in place. Almost 90 percent of them did not provide adequate safety
equipment to their staff.
Regional Impact
Most of Cambodias footwear factories are located in Phnom Penh (26 factories, or 55 percent of total)
and in the neighboring areas of Kampong Speu (6 factories or 12 percent), Kandal (4 factories or 8
percent). Phnom Penh is shown in yellow in the map below, Kampong Speu in red and Kandal in green.

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Map 8.1: Location


Location of
of Footwear
FootwearFactories
FactoriesininCambodia,
Cambodia,2013
2013

Source: GMAC
Source:
Note: Principal locations shown in yellow (Phnom Penh), red (Kampong Speu), and green
Note:
(Kandal)
Environmental Impact
The environmental impact of certain activities associated with the sector (e.g. tanning) poses significant
environmental challenges through the pollution of water and has yet to be managed properly. Areas of
potential pollution associated with the footwear production are associated predominantly with chemical
processes involved in the production of shoe materials, such as leather, synthetic materials and textiles,
and with issues relating to the return of extracted waste water.
Little information is available regarding the real environmental impact of this industry and more research
is necessary in that field. These social and environmental risks associated with certain parts of the
footwear production process (tanning) are currently monitored poorly in Cambodia.
Some operators suggest that the absence of environmental regulationsmake it difficult for investors to
estimate the possible future cost of certain operations in Cambodia.
Footwear factories are relatively heavy consumer of electricity and are thus relying on power provided by
public utilities, with few of them having their own generators.

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Conclusion
Information analyzed and reviewed in this chapter can be summarized in the SWOT table that follows.

Strengths

Cambodias low-cost, low-skilled workforce is


particularly attractive for footwear production
which is labor-intensive and not complex.
Geographical proximity to other stages of the
footwear production chain, in Thailand and
Vietnam, facilitates the integration of the
Cambodian footwear industry in regional
production networks.
Cambodia has a limited number of large vendor
factories with modern equipment, with relatively
high productivity.
Favorable investment environment for footwear
companies benefitting from the Qualified
Investment Project status or located in SEZs.
Cambodia enjoys duty free access to the E.U. and
selected other markets, with lenient rules of origin

Weaknesses

Low skilled workforce and low productivity are


limiting the relocation of more complex stages of
footwear production in Cambodia.
The Cambodian footwear industry is concentrated in
leather shoe production.
The Cambodian footwear industry depends almost
exclusively on imported materials for its production.
The high price and poor reliability of electricity
handicap footwear factories.
Cambodias weak transport infrastructure compared
to that of its neighbors (Thailand, Vietnam, China)
hinders its competitiveness.
The limited number of large factories and the limited
access to local outsourcing constrain the
development of the footwear industry in Cambodia.
Factories in Cambodia have minimal control on
inbound and outbound supply chains, no control on
design, and, consequently, limited opportunities to
increase the value of finished goods.
The footwear industry in Cambodia does not have its
own representative body. At present, its private
sector representation is bundled with garment in
GMAC.

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Opportunities

Rising labor costs in China, Thailand, and Vietnam


favors relocation of production to Cambodia.
Footwear production is characterized by a large
number of components and processes, allowing for
a division of labor across ASEAN countries.
Cambodia can easily capture the labor-intensive,
low-technology part of the process.
Cambodia has the capacity to develop certain shoe
parts and materials (e.g. for tanning) in the vicinity
of processing plants leading to clustering among
contract manufacturers in particular.
Rubber can be sourced locally to feed in the
footwear production process.
Continued strong investment by footwear firms
drives technology transfer that can support
diversification of Cambodias footwear exports, for
example with an increase in the production of
shoes with textile uppers that can result in 50
percent higher FOB value.
Low and diminishing profit margin for low and
medium quality footwear production drives
international investors to search for cost savings, in
particular through labor cost reduction.

Threats

The softening formulation of international rules of


origin can reduce the share of the footwear production
process actually taking place in Cambodia.
The end of European anti-dumping measures against
Chinese and Vietnamese footwear exporters might
lead investors to return to those locations where they
benefit from better productivity, better infrastructure,
local input supply, and bigger economies of scale.
The relative fading of Cambodias preferential tariff
access as a result of a general reduction of tariffs on
footwear can reduce its regional competitiveness.
Cambodias exports of final footwear products are
dependent on a limited number of markets (nearly 60
percent to its 4 largest markets).
Low and diminishing profit margin for footwear
production limits investors capacity to provide
training programs for workers.
Social and environmental risks associated with certain
parts of the footwear production process (tanning) are
monitored poorly currently in Cambodia.
Increases in Cambodian wages for skilled workers are
necessary to diversify and up-skill production, which
in turns reduce Cambodias main competitive
advantage.
Labor unrest in large footwear factories disturbs
production

Recommendations
Cambodias footwear industry seems to be following in the footsteps of the garment sector. Strong
growth in the industry reflects a shift in production from neighboring countries to take advantage of low
labor cost and Cambodias duty-free access to the EU. As wages increase further in China, Thailand, and
Vietnam and as finding workers for footwear production in these countries becomes increasing difficult,
more investors might set up factories in Cambodia.
Footwear production is characterized by a large number of components and processes, allowing for a
division of labor across ASEAN countries. Low and diminishing profit margin for low and medium
quality footwear production drives international investors to search for cost savings, in particular through
labor cost reduction. Cambodia has captured a growing share of the labor-intensive, low-technology part
of the process and has seen its footwear exports increase dramatically, by more than 76 percent annually
between 2008 and 2012. These exports have diversified as well, with Cambodia becoming more and
more competitive for textile and rubber footwear, on top of its traditional leather footwear niche. Further
diversification will help Cambodia receive higher and steadier revenues from its footwear exports.

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Still, labor represents only 15 percent of production costs, and raw materials almost 65 percent. In order
to reduce the share of raw material and other services in the production cost of footwear, thus improving
its competitiveness and added value, the Cambodian footwear industry needs to drive the development of
the domestic material and services supply capacity. In particular, Cambodia has the capacity to develop
certain shoe parts and materials (e.g. for tanning) in the vicinity of processing plants leading to clustering
among contract manufacturers in particular. It also has the capacity to source raw material such as rubber
or leather from domestic producers.
Similarly, while almost all workers in footwear factories are Cambodian, Cambodia has to rely on foreign
workers for key management staff in its footwear factories, with local workers lacking the relevant skills.
Building local management skills is important to help reduce this dependence on foreign managers and
thus increased the flow-on benefits to the local economy.
The recent growth of the Cambodian footwear industry is due more to push factors rather than pull
factors. Investment in the sector has been driven by wages dynamics in neighboring countries and by tax
policies in key markets (push factors), which are not directly linked to the strategies of the Cambodian
Government and footwear industry. To sustain future growth and increase the added value of its
production process, the footwear industry to improve its pull factors. This includes sourcing more input
domestically (such as rubber or leather), improving worker productivity, developing infrastructure
(transport and utilities), and promoting the quality of Cambodian footwear overseas. This will contribute
to attract new footwear suppliers and brands while maintaining existing buyers and factories.
Cambodia is considered too small to support a large footwear industry such as exists in China, Vietnam or
Indonesia, but Cambodia is well-suited to support smaller scale production. Its footwear factories are
almost exclusively vendor factories, which have minimal control over its inbound and outbound supply
chains and no control over design or marketing. As a result, Cambodian factories have limited
opportunities to increase the value of its finished goods. Further tax incentives and policy support will be
necessary to support the development of more contract manufacturers and sustain the inflow of foreign
investment in Cambodias footwear industry
The development of a full supply chain, like in China and Vietnam, is important to support and sustain
the competitiveness of Cambodian footwear exports, while improving benefits to the local economy. At
the moment, footwear producers must import most of the components needed in assembling a shoe, which
limits the added value available for Cambodian shoe producers and the flow-on effects on the local
economy.
Cambodias key export markets for footwear is Europe and to a lesser extent Japan, thanks to duty-free
and quota-free shipping to these markets. This concentration to a few export markets as the relative
fading of Cambodias preferential tariff access as a result of a general reduction of tariffs on footwear can
reduce its regional competitiveness. The end of European anti-dumping measures against Chinese and
Vietnamese footwear exporters might also lead investors to return to those locations where they benefit
from better productivity, better infrastructure, local input supply, and bigger economies of scale. GMAC
has a role to play in promoting Cambodias footwear industry overseas and thus help it diversify its
export markets.
Possible
to address some of the sectors current limitations and opportunities for further
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224 Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

Chapter 9
LIGHT MANUFACTURING and SPECIAL ECONOMIC ZONES
Light manufacturing sector is defined as labor intensive operations in automotive and machinery, electrics
and electronics, and other various assembly activities. Under the Harmonized Commodity Description
and Coding System, it includes HS 87 (Vehicles other than railway, tramway), 85 (Electrical, electronic
equipment), 84 (Machinery, nuclear reactors, boilers, etc), 73 (Articles of iron or steel), 94 (Furniture,
lighting, signs, prefabricated buildings) and 95 (Toys, games, sports requisites). For purpose of CTIS
2014-2018, exports of motorized vehicles (part of HS 87) and exports of machinery (HS 84) are excluded
from the scope of this chapter. The first item represents primarily re-export of second-hand cars,
motorbikes, or various machinery; the second, re-export of sewing machines. In other words, they do not
reflect items associated with value-adding operations in Cambodia.176Footwear and garments are
receiving dedicated chapters in this study.
Manufacturing (exclusive of garments and footwear) contributed around 5 percent of Cambodias GDP in
2012. Except for garments and footwear, Cambodias other manufacturing exports are nearly exclusively
light manufacturing as defined above. Light manufacturing operators are located primarily in Special
Economic Zones (SEZs.) Proximity to borders and transport infrastructure are key determinants of
location to enable the integration of Cambodias light manufacturing operations in regional production
chains.

Cambodian Light Manufacturing Exports and World Markets: Overall


Cambodian Light Manufacturing Exports
Cambodia exported around $372 million worth of light manufacturing products as defined above in 2012.
This was a 450 percent increase since 2008, for more than 50 percent of annual average growth. Over the
same period, imports increased by 158 percent, or an average of 37 percent annually, to reach more than
$3,300 million. Hence, Cambodias trade balance for light manufacturing products shows a large net
trade deficit in 2012.
Based on Comtrade data (see Figure 9.1 below) light manufacturing represented a little more than
4 percent of Cambodias total recorded goods exports in 2012 compared to 2 percent in 2008. The
growing importance of light manufacturing products in Cambodias export basket is due primarily to
emerging items such as bicycles, insulated wires, and electronic circuits. Based on Comtrade data:

176

Exports of bicycles were worth around $291 million in 2012;


Exports of electrical and electronic equipment worth more than $62 million; and,
A mixed of other light manufacturing products (referred to as other light manufacturing for the
Data for exports of motorized vehicles appear to be widely inaccurate for 2011 and 2012.

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CTIS exercise) worth more than $20 million, including sport requisites and toys ($9 million),
furniture (mostly mattresses and seats for $6 million), articles of iron and steel (mostly spring and
screws for more than $3 million.)
Electrical and electronic equipment was the fastest growing category, increasing by 113 percent annually
between 2008 and 2012, while bicycles increased by 56 percent annually and other light manufacturing
by 2 percent.

Figure
Light Manufacturing
Manufacturing Exports,
Exports, 2008-2012
2008-2012 ($
($ millions)
millions)
Figure 9.1:
9.1: Cambodia
Cambodia Light
400

350

300

250

200

150

100

50

0
2008
Bicycles

2009

2010

Electrical, electronic equipment

2011

2012

Others light manufacturing

Source:
Source:Comtrade
World Demand for Electrical and Electronic Equipment, Bicycles, and OtherLight Manufacturing
Global light manufacturing imports in electrical and electronic equipment, bicycles, and other light
manufacturing reached nearly $3 trillion in 2012, or a 12 percent growth since 2008, including more than
$2 trillion worth of electrical and electronic equipment s (Figure 9.2.)

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Global light manufacturing imports, as defined above, represented 16 percent of total global trade in
2012, nearly unchanged since 2008.

Figure 9.2
9.2 Global
Global Light
Light Manufacturing
Manufacturing Imports
Imports
Figure
(Electrical and
(Electrical
and electronics,
electronics, bicycles,
bicycles, other
other light
light manufacturing),
manufacturing), 2008-2012
2008-2012($
($billions)
billions)

3,500

3,000

2,500

2,000

1,500

1,000

500

0
2008
2009
Electrical, electronic equipment

2010
Bicycles

2011
2012
Other light manufacturing

Source:Comtrade
Source:
Cambodias share of the global light manufacturing markets as defined in this chapter has been growing
steadily though still very small, increasing from 0.0032 percent in 2008 to 0.013 percent in 2012. In
comparison, Cambodia share of global trade was 0.0480 percent in 2012. This suggests that Cambodia is
under-performing in these global markets and has room for significant improvement.
Cambodias key export markets for light manufacturing products include Germany for $37 million
(27 percent) and the UK for $31 million (22 percent) overwhelmingly bicycles in both cases. Thailand
is another important market for Cambodia as it imports more than 30 percent of Cambodias electrical and
electronic exports. In value, that amount is still quite small but likely to grow rapidly. See Table 9.1.

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Table 9.1: World Light Manufacturing Imports 2012


Product

World Imports

Cambodias
Exports as a
Share of World
Imports

Light Manufacturing

$2,957 billions

0.013 percent

Bicycles

$8 billions

3.5 percent

Electronic and
electrical equipment

$2,338 billions

0.003 percent

Other Light
Manufacturing

$611 billions

0.004 percent

Worlds Largest Import


Markets
China (15 percent)
USA (14 percent)
Germany (6 percent)
USA (20 percent)
Japan (11 percent)
Germany (8 percent)
China (23 percent)
Hong Kong (10 percent)
USA (8 percent)
n/a

Cambodias Largest
Export Destinations as
Share of Total*
Germany (27 percent)
UK (22 percent)
Belgium (9%)
Germany (29 percent)
UK (28 percent)
Belgium (11 percent)
Thailand (30 percent)
Hong Kong (10 percent)
Australia (10 percent)
USA (68 percent)
Belgium (9 percent)
Australia (4 percent)

Source: Comtrade
Note: *2011 data
Proximity to neighboring ASEAN markets leads to shorter lead time as part of a production supply chain,
with Thailand and Malaysia, in particular, having well developed electric and electronic industries.
Likewise, the concentration of ASEAN electronic production in Thailand, Vietnam and Malaysia
provides opportunities for neighboring Cambodia to be involved in part of the assembly and supply
processes. In addition, most components, parts, and raw materials required in light manufacturing
assembly can be sourced from neighboring countries such as Thailand, Vietnam, China, and Malaysia.

Cambodian Light Manufacturing and World Markets: Specific Export Sectors

Bicycles
Cambodian Exports: As noted earlier, Cambodian bicycle exports were worth more than $291 million in
2012 a 498 percent increase since 2008, for an annual average growth of 56 percent. Over the same
period, imports of part of bicycles and motorcycles increased by 774 percent, or an average of 27 percent
annually, to reach $251 million. Comtrade statistics do not allow to separate bicycles parts from
motorcycles parts. However, since Cambodias imports of motorcycles have increased significantly over
the period, it is safe to assume that a significant part of the bicycles and motorcycles part imports were
directed to servicing motorcycles. The balance served as inputs to the Cambodian bicycles export
industry, with that sector adding value through production.

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Figure
9.3: Cambodias
Cambodias Bicycle
Bicycle Trade,
Trade, 2008-12
2008-12 ($
($ millions)
millions)
Figure 9.3:
350
300
250
200
150
100
50
0
2008

2009
Cambodia Bicycles Exports

2010
Bicycles imports

2011

2012

Bicycle and motorcycle parts imports

Source:
Source:Comtrade
Bicycles exports grew from 56 percent of Cambodias light manufacturing exports in 2008 to more than
77 percent in 2012, with total exports of light manufacturing products growing from 2 percent to
5 percent of total recorded goods exports respectively based on Comtrade data. Clearly, bicycles have
become one of Cambodia's most successful export products in recent years, taking advantage of
preferential tariff treatment to access key consumer market (Europe in particular).
Cambodias top export markets for bicycles in 2011 included Germany (29 percent of Cambodias
bicycles exports), the UK (28 percent), Belgium (11 percent), the USA (8 percent) and Canada (4
percent). While the UK has kept a relative steady share of Cambodia bicycle exports between 2007 and
2011 (with significant fluctuations from year on year), Germany has more than doubled its share over the
period, with Cambodias bicycles exports to this country increasing by more than 55 percent annually on
average. Belgium, the USA and Canada are relatively new markets that have grown from negligible
destinations to significant markets in the space of a couple of years.
The Global Market for Bicycles: Global bicycles imports increased 20 percent between 2008 and 2012
to reach more than $8 billion in 2012. During this period, Cambodias bicycle exports increased by
almost 500 percent, gaining market shares and growing from a 0.7 percent market share of worlds
bicycle trade to 3.5 percent.
The global market for bicycles is relatively mature with stable growth patterns. Global bicycle sales are
forecast to reach around $60 billion by the year 2018. Growth is driven by economic development and
urbanization in the poorest economies, by fitness aspiration in richer ones, and by rising fuel and energy
prices, environmental concerns and technological advancements in both. Sustained development and
urbanization in the densely populated and rapidly expanding Asian markets of China, India, Indonesia,
and Taiwan offer vast growth potential for Cambodia's bicycles exports. Furthermore, governments in
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developed countries are investing increasingly in bicycle promotion projects and policies. Countries like
Australia, Germany, and the Netherlands have government sponsored network of bicycle paths and trails.
So do a number of large US cities. Green and environmentally friendly policies target bicycle use as a
mean to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
The USA is the largest national market for bicycles ($8 billion in 2012) in the world, followed by Japan
($2 billion). Europe is the largest regional market, representing 47 percent of the world market in 2012
but this share is eroding with the Asia-Pacific markets share growing to 43 percent of the market. Other
Asian countries are also producers and exporters of bicycles. China makes and sells fully assembled
bicycles, frames, and components. It is also the largest bicycle market in the world, despite a growing
share of the middle-class population adopting motorized vehicles. However, pricing pressures on Chinese
manufacturers is shifting production to other Asian nations such as Thailand, Taiwan, and Cambodia.
The domestic and regional demand for motorbike and bicycles is increasing quickly, in particular due to
the young population in the region, providing opportunities for strong development and economies of
scale.
European markets attract most of Cambodias bicycle exports because they offer duty free access for
Cambodian footwear exports. The EU Council Regulation 732/2008, Everything But Arms, which
became effective as of 1 January 20093, gives Cambodia duty-free and quota-free shipping to all EU
countries, with increasing leniency in the rules of origin. While the US, which is the largest market for
bicycles in the world, and Japan do also offer preferential tariff access for bicycles produced in LDCs,
they have significantly tougher rules of origin than those of the EU. This explains, in part, why
Cambodias bicycles exporters have focused on European markets. In order to capture a growing share of
the US and the Japanese markets, Cambodia needs to produce more elements of the final bicycle products
it exports. Australia and Canada are other important markets for bicycles that could offer opportunities for
Cambodian bicycle exporters. China is also a large market in close geographical proximity of Cambodia,
but domestic production, with high competitiveness associated with large economies of scale, would
make it difficult for Cambodian exporters to capture a market share.
Table 9.2: World Bicycle Market 2012
Product

World Market
Imports

Cambodias Exports
as Share of World
Imports

Worlds Largest
Import Markets

Bicycle

$8.3 billions

3.5 percent

USA (20 percent)


Japan (11 percent)

Cambodias Largest
Export Destinations as
Share of Total*
Germany (29 percent)
UK (28 percent)
Belgium (11 percent)

Source: Comtrade
Note:*2011 data
Electronic and Electrical Equipment Market
Cambodian Exports: Cambodia exported almost $63 million worth of electronic and electrical products
in 2012. Exports were negligible around $5 million or less until 2011 (Figure 5.9). Over the same
period, electronic and electrical imports increased by 156 percent, or an average of 27 percent annually, to
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reach more than $630 million. While the deficit in the electronic and electrical trade balance remains
quite large, exports are now growing much faster than imports.
Electronic and electrical products represented 17 percent of Cambodias light manufacturing exports in
2012, compared to 4 percent in 2008. The electrical electronics industry is nascent in Cambodia with
technology firms from Japan, China, and other advanced Asian economies setting up operations in
Cambodia, primarily in SEZs, to take advantage of low labor cost for simple labor-intensive operations.
Those investments have focused on electrical and electronic products that require only a simple assembly
process, such aswinding, for wire harnesses, coils, transformers, and motors.
Cambodias top export markets for electrical and electronic products in 2011 included Thailand (30
percent of Cambodias electrical and electronic exports), Hong Kong (10 percent), Australia (10 percent),
China (7 percent), and Vietnam (6 percent). Apart from Australia, all these markets are Asian countries
where components produced in Cambodia are integrated to next stage of the production process.
Figure 9.5:
9.5: Cambodias
Cambodias Electrical
Electrical and
Figure
and Electronic
Electronic Exports,
Exports, 2008-12
2008-12 ($
($ millions)
millions)
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

Insulated wire/cable exports


Electric motors and generators (excluding generating sets) exports
Specific components for televisions exports
Electronic and printed circuits exports
Specific components for line telephony
Other electronic and electrical components

Source:
Source: Comtrade
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Cambodias growth in electronic and electrical equipment exports is based on a limited number of
products, most of which are built and assembled in SEZs:

Insulated and wire cable is the largest export, worth $26 million in 2012 and representing 44 percent
of Cambodia electronic and electrical exports.
Electric motors and generators are the second largest electronic and electrical export category worth
$13 million in 2012 and 22 percent of Cambodia electronic and electrical exports. Minebea is an
example of a Japanese firm with a successful operation in the Phnom Penh SEZ producing and
exporting electrical motors.
Cambodia started exporting electronic and printed circuits in 2010, for a total value of $7 million in
2012 (12 percent of total electronic and electrical exports). These circuit boards are part of an Asian
production chain and are exported to factories in Japan, China, and Thailand where the final
electronic products are assembled.
Cambodia is getting involved also in the regional production chain of television sets, with exports of
almost $11 million in television components in 2012 (18 percent of total electronic and electrical
exports.)

Figure 9.6 Trade in Specific Electrical and Electronic Products, 2008-2012 ($ millions)
millions)
14
12
10
8
6
4
2
0
2008

2009

2010

2011

Electronic and printed circuits exports


Electronic and printed circuits imports
Electric motors and generators (excluding generating sets) exports
Electric motors and generators (excluding generating sets) imports
Specific components for televisions exports
Specific components for televisions imports

Source:
Source: Comtrade
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2012

Global Market:The world market for electrical and electronic equipment reached more than
$2,300 billion in 2012, 15 percent more than in 2008. Cambodias share of the world market remains very
small -- around 0.0027 percent of world imports.
Again Thailand is the main destination for Cambodia electronic and electrical exports, as parts and
components produced in Cambodia are then assembled in specific electronic and electrical consumer
goods in Thailand. Production has been relocated to Cambodia mainly because of lower labor costs.
Box 9.1: Insulated Wire Cable
Wire harnesses are net-like cable components used to inter-link circuits and components inside electronic
and electrical products. As such, global demand is driven by the production of automotive instruments
and other electronic appliances.
Because each manufacturer and product has its own structure and specifications, the production process
of these cables is highly diversified to produce small lots of wire cables with specific characteristics.
Because of the diversity of specifications and design of the final electronic or electrical product, it is
particularly difficult to mechanize theprocess of bundling cables of various lengths and thicknesses
according to requirements. It is very labor-intensive, which gives Cambodia a competitive advantage in
such a production.
Seeking to reduce their production costs, a number of Japanese companies have been looking to move
production of wire harness to new locations with lower labor costs. As costs increase in more developed
ASEAN countries where factories were initially implanted, such as Thailand, investors increasingly move
or divide their production processes to new countries in search of the high-dexterity, low-cost workforce
that can be found in Vietnam, Laos, or Cambodia. Industrial sites close to the borders and with good
transport infrastructure, as is the case of a number of SEZs, are very attractive destinations for such a relocalization.

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Table 9.4: World Electronic and Electrical Imports, 2012


Product

World Market
Imports

Cambodias Exports
as Share of World
Imports

Electronic and electrical


equipment

$2,337.6

0.003 percent

Insulated wire cable

$105.0 bn

0.03 percent

Electric motors and generators

$49.7 bn

0.03 percent

Television camera, transmission


appliances for radio-telephony

$78.2 bn

0.014 percent

Printed circuits

$588.8 bn

0.001 percent

Electric appliances for line


telephony

$448.1 bn

0.001 percent

Worlds Largest Import


Markets
China (23 percent)
Hong Kong (10 percent)
USA (8 percent)
China (17 percent)
USA (9 percent)
Mexico (8 percent)
USA (17 percent)
China (9 percent)
Germany (8 percent)
Hong Kong (16 percent)
Mexico (13 percent)
China (9 percent)
China (30 percent)
Hong Kong (21 percent)
South Korea (6 percent)
USA (18 percent)
Hong Kong (12 percent)
China (9 percent)

Source: Comtrade
Note: 2012 data are lacking for Cambodian exports to specific markets, and 2011 are not relevant
for this category of products since exports were very small.
Other Light Manufacturing Exports
For the purpose of CTIS 2014-2018, the other light manufacturing export category includes a variety of
products belonging to three different HS code:

articles of iron or steel (HS73), mainly springs, screws, and nuts;


furniture (HS94), mainly mattresses and seats; and,
toys and sports requisites (HS95), mainly sport equipment and various toys.

Cambodias exports from the other light manufacturing category represented $18.0 million in 2012.

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Figure 9.6:
9.6: Cambodias
Figure
Cambodias Other
Other Light
Light Manufacturing
Manufacturing Exports,
Exports, 2008-2012
2008-2012 ($
($ millions).
millions).
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

Toys, games, sports requisites


Furniture, lighting, signs, prefabricated buildings
Articles of iron or steel

Source: Comtrade
Source:
In 2012, the largest items of the other light manufacturing exports included:

articles and equipment for gym and sport, for around $6 million, though some of it might be reexports as Cambodia also imported $5 million of gym equipment;
varied toys including scale model, puzzle, and stuffed toy for almost $2 million, though once again
some of it might be re-exports as Cambodia imported almost as much;
arcade games and equipment for $1 million;
mattresses and mattress support for almost $3 million; and
springs and bolts/screws for more than $1 million each.
computer parts for over $0.5 million

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Figure 9.7:
Figure
9.7: Exports
Exports of
of Other
Other Light
Light Manufacturing
Manufacturing Products,
Products, 2008-2012
2008-2012($
($millions)
millions)
16

14

12

10

0
2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

Gym and sport equipment


Other toys (scale model, puzzles, stuffed toys, etc.)
Mattresses and supports
Seats
Springs
Screws,bolts and nuts

Source:
Source: Comtrade
Cambodia exports light manufacturing consumer products to developed markets around the world:

The main market for Cambodias sport equipment and toys in 2011 was the USA for almost
$1.5 million.
The main markets for Cambodias mattresses and seats in 2011 were the USA for around$15 million
and Australia for around $13 million.
The main market for Cambodias springs and screws in 2011 were Belgium for more than $12 million
and Germany for more than $11 million.

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Table 9.5: World Other Light Manufacturing Imports 2012


Product

World Market
Imports

Cambodias Exports
as Share of World
Imports

Sport equipment

$22.8 billions

0.026 percent

Other toys and


scale model

$28.7 billions

0.006 percent

Mattresses

$13.9 billions

0.021 percent

Seats

$64.4 billlions

0.003 percent

Springs

$6.3 billions

0.019 percent

Screw and bolts

$33.2 billions

0.003 percent

Worlds Largest
Import Markets
USA (25 percent)
Japan (6 percent)
Germany (5 percent)
USA (29 percent)
Germany (6 percent)
UK (6 percent)
USA (21 percent)
Japan (11 percent)
Germany (8 percent)
USA (28 percent)
Germany ( (8 percent)
France (5 percent)
USA (15 percent)
China (8 percent)
Germany (8 percent)
USA (13 percent)
Germany (9 percent)
China (8 percent)

Cambodias Largest Export


Destinations as Share of
Total*
Czech Republic (42 percent)
Italy (40 percent)
Columbia (6 percent)
USA (99.7 percent)
China (0.1 percent)
Philippines (0.1 percent)
USA (88 percent)
Australia (6 percent)
Canada (6 percent)
Estonia (50 percent)
South Africa (25 percent)
Switzerland (25 percent)
USA (100 percent)
Belgium (51 percent)
Germany (15 percent)
Netherlands (12 percent)

Source: Comtrade
Note: *2011 data
Other light manufacturing exports might pick up rapidly in the near future, driven by various social and
economic trends. For example, the rapid growth in agriculture (i.e. rice, cassava, corn) and
mechanization will support domestic and regional demand for agricultural equipment such as tractors,
tiling, and harvesting machineryand Cambodia, with relevant investment, might be able to carve a niche
in that market.177

Domestic Supply Conditions


Regional Production Chains
Over the past decades, Eastern and South-Eastern Asian countries have become the worlds factory,
producing and assembling a wide range of low and high-tech manufacturing products for the rest of the
world. Japanese, Korean, and Chinese firms as well as European and American multinationals have
organized their production process across the eastern Asian region in order to take advantage from cheap
labor force, preferential tariffs, and supportive industrial policies. As the ASEAN market integrates
further, with additional tariff reductions under the AFTA scheme, the division of labor and trade within
177

In 2012, Cambodia exports of agriculture machinery were worth $365,000 in 2012 (12 percent of all machinery exports),
compared to $3,000 the previous year and no export in 2010.

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ASEAN is likely to increase, making larger markets of the region more easily accessible, thus creating
opportunities for economies of scale.
Manufacturing companies in the region have organized their production process across specialized
functional networks where the different components of a given product are made in different factories and
different countries. Various stages of the production process are located according to the relatives
competitive advantages of a given country, based on labor costs, labor skills, tariff advantages, transport
logistics, other infrastructures, supportive servicing industry, or easier access to the direct market.
Except for garments and, to a lesser extent footwear, Cambodia is a late entrant in the regional division of
labor. However, it is beginning to build on such assets as its low labor costs, political stability, a
favorable investment environment,favorable market access conditions as an LDC, and proximity to Thai
and Vietnamese factories to start integrating into regional production chains. Through the development
of special economic zones (SEZs), Cambodia is attracting investment in a broad variety of laborintensive, low-skilled light manufacturing sectors from across the region. It is buildingalso on the fact
that most components, parts, and raw materials required in light manufacturing assembly can be sourced
from neighboring countries and that proximity to neighboring ASEAN markets results in shorter lead
time as part of a production supply chain.
In the next few years, Japanese, Korean, and Chinese firms are expected to develop further their supply
chain network for machinery and electronics manufacturing searching for new locations to curb
production cost increases. In addition, foreign investors operating in regional or international production
networks are seeking to diversify locations and lower their dependency on a few countries in the region
(e.g. China, Thailand, Vietnam, Indonesia, or Malaysia) in order to mitigate rising labor costs (e.g. China
or Vietnam) or potential natural disasters (Thailand, Japan.) For instance, rising wages in China in
particular is leading to the relocation of the electronic production chain to Thailand for assembly and to
Vietnam which is becoming a key parts and component supplier.
Cambodia is becoming an increasingly attractive destination for the relocation of parts in regional
production processes. In addition, as more investors from Japan and China converge on Cambodia SEZs,
the trend is likely to attract more investment from the same countries. Recent experiences shows that
strong agglomeration of foreign investment from a given country in a specific SEZ (i.e. Japan in PPSEZ,
China/Taiwan in Bavet, China in Sihanoukville) tends to attract new investors from the same country.
As Cambodias own light manufacturing industry develops and reaches a critical mass to generate
economies of scale and clusters of local suppliers, it is likely to gain an increasing market share in basic
light manufacturing components and products and, gradually, move into basic assembly functions such as
assembling of mechanical electronics parts.
While Cambodias initial focus on the simpler, labor-intensive parts of the production process, with
supportive policies, its integration into the regional production chain can have a positive effect on its
capacity to absorb skills and diffuse technology. The mechanical assembly part of the production process
for which Cambodia is particularly suited can drive a beneficial cycle of foreign currency earnings,
economic growth, and skills development. This model of development has been observed historically in
other countries in the region, from Japan and China, to Thailand, and Vietnam. Increased technology
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dissemination within Cambodian industry will result in a better integration in the ASEAN light
manufacturing production.
For electrical and electronic products in particular, price and lead time loom large as a factor of
competitiveness. Cambodia benefits from its proximity to Malaysia and Thailand, which have both welldeveloped electrical and electronic industries, and its workforce, which remain cheaper than in other
countries in the region. The prospect of potential industrial clusters, as in special economic zones, can
compound that competitive advantage thus facilitating Cambodias deeper integration in the regional
production process.
But for Cambodias integration into regional supply networks to succeed, the country needs to tackle a
number of challenges, in particular:

addressing the low productivity and low skill-level of the manufacturing workforce;
tackling key infrastructure challenges such as relatively weak transport and costly, unreliable
electricity supply;
addressing labor unrest and strikes that disturb the production process and delay Cambodias
contribution to the regional chain of production, with a focus on poverty and inequality; and,
facilitating investment and technology transfer by removing unnecessary hurdles.

Addressing these issues is all more important for Cambodia. The erosion of some of the countrys
competitive advantage due to technological and regulatory changes and increased competition from new
countries (in particular Myanmar and Laos) might threaten Cambodias capacity to integrate more deeply
into the regional production chains.
Box 9.2: Manufacturing Production in the East Asia and ASEAN Regions
The signature of a number of trade agreements, such as the Association of Southeast Asian Nations
(ASEAN) Free Trade Agreement, in East Asia has resulted in an increase in intra-regional light
manufacturing trade and investment in the region, which reflects the vertical integration of manufacturing
production networks among ASEAN countries and their partners (mainly Japan, China and Korea). In
particular, the increase in intra-regional light manufacturing trade is due to a rise in a trade in parts and
components or intermediate goods being produced in different countries before final assembly in another
East Asian country. As a consequence, the share of parts and components trade in total regional trade has
been increasing steadily. The final consumer markets of the ASEAN manufacturing production remain
predominantly the USA, the EU and Japan.
FDI inflows and outflows in the ASEAN region are a key driver of international manufacturing
production networks. FDI inflows have surged in the ASEAN region, following a similar pattern to that
of parts and components intra-regional trade. Investment liberalization and promotion have contributed to
a surge of inward FDI into ASEAN countries. As a result, the regional production chains between the
ASEAN and Japan, Korea and China have been strengthened and extended. Most of the industrial
production in East Asia, especially in autos and auto parts, computers and computer parts, and electronics
and electrical appliances, is part of international production networks, where production is fragmented
into several stages and then conducted in various countries of the ASEAN, according to their respective
comparative advantages.
In addition to investment liberalization and investment promotion, regional integration is crucial in
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linking economies within a regional chain of production. The ASEAN Free Trade Area and the ASEAN
and Japan Comprehensive Economic Partnership have created the framework for the regional
organization of manufacturing production. In addition to bilateral trade agreements, the ASEAN has
embarked on several economic integration initiatives such as the ASEAN Free Trade Area, the ASEAN
Framework Agreement on Services, and the ASEAN Investment Area, which have all contributed to
accelerate intra-regional trade and supported the regional organization of production, with the ultimate
aim of creating a ASEAN Economic Community. The ASEAN Economic Community will be completed
by 2015, with some of the ASEAN members including Brunei Darussalam, Indonesia, Malaysia, the
Philippines, Singapore, and Thailand having already lifted their tariffs under the ASEAN Trade in Goods
Agreement, while others, like Cambodia, Lao PDR, Myanmar, and Viet Nam expected to lift their tariffs
later.
The ASEAN and the PRC Free Trade Area, the ASEAN and Japan Comprehensive Economic
Partnership, the ASEAN and Korea Free Trade Area, and, to a lesser extent, the ASEAN and India Free
Trade Area have all played an important role in facilitating the reorganization of manufacturing
production away from Asian countries with rising production costs, such as Japan, South Korea, China
and now Thailand, toward ASEAN countries with lower labor cost, such as Cambodia.
The ongoing reorganization of the ASEAN and regional manufacturing production networks results from
market-driven forces such as vertical specialization and higher production costs in certain countries such
as China and Thailand, and from institutional-led reasons such as free trade agreements. China and
Thailand are key manufacturing assembly bases in the East Asia region. Other countries, such as
Cambodia, are organizing their production and supply chains around economic activities in these two
countries. The recent decline in the share of parts and components exports of several members of the
ASEAN such as Indonesia and Thailand, suggests that these countries have moved up the production
chain to assemble final products from components produced in other, less developed and cheaper ASEAN
economies such as Cambodia.
As the ASEAN market integrates further, with additional tariff reductions under the AFTA scheme, the
division of labor and trade within ASEAN is likely to increase, making larger markets of the region more
easily accessible, thus creating opportunities for economies of scale.

Revealed Comparative Advantage and Potential Areas for Expansion


A simple method to assess the comparative advantage of a given export item is the revealed comparative
advantage analysis (RCA.) RCA allows determining the export items for which a country is more
specialized and successful in a global context. All things being equal, this suggests a comparative
advantage internationally for the said item.
The RCA is calculated as follow:
Export value of item X of country A

Total export value of country A


RCA for item X of country A

=
Export value of item X in world
Total export value in world

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An RCA of 1 suggests no specific comparative advantage as such; above 1, that the country is globally
competitive in producing and exporting the given item; below 1, that the country is not globally
competitive in the given item, though it can still be competitive at a regional level or in the context of a
production chain. The highest the RCA index, the more competitive the country is in a given item.
RCA indexes for potential key export items of Cambodia are calculated as follows:

Year

Light
manufacturing

Bicycles

Electronic and
electrical
components
0.01
0.06

Other light
manufacturing

2008
2012

0.05
0.12

26.5
73.6

Year

Electronic and
electrical
components

Insulated wire
cables

Electronic and
printed
circuits

Electric motors
and generators

2008
2012

0.01
0.06

0.00
0.52

0.00
0.25

0.02
0.55

Other light
manufacturing
0.02
0.01

Toys and
equipment
0.01
0.18

Year
2008
2012

Furniture
0.13
0.06

0.02
0.01
Specific
electronic
component for
television
0.01
0.29

Articles of iron
and steel
0.11
0.02

Apart from bicycles where Cambodia appears extremely competitive, with a RCA index peaking at 73.6
in 2012, the statistics show that, all thing equal, the country is not yet very competitive in light
manufacturing in general. However, the rapid rise in the RCA index over the last few years for a number
of light manufacturing goods suggests that Cambodia has potential to become a competitive player in
global trade for a number of items, as it did earlier with bicycles.
The development of a critical mass of operators for a given light manufacturing item, associated with the
development of a competitive infrastructure, in particular in SEZs, will contribute to the attraction of
additional investment in the production of light manufacturing exports and to the development of local
skills. For instance, the concentration of firms in sub-sector such as bicycles allows for productivity gains
and economies of scale. These developments are keys to improving Cambodia's international
competitiveness.
Labor Force and Skills
Low labor costs make Cambodia attractive for the labor-intensive stages of light manufacturing
production in the ASEAN division of labor, in particular for tasks with lower level of technology such as
bicycles, wire harness, electric motors, electronic and printed circuits, mattresses and seats. However,
low productivity and low skill-level can more than eliminate the competitive advantage provided by low
labor cost, thus make Cambodia less attractive for the more capital-intensive stages of the regional chain
of production, such as the mechanized winding process involved in the development of coil, filters,
converters and vibration motors.

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The Domestic Regulatory and Infrastructure Environment:


The Key Role of Special Economic Zones (SEZs)
SEZs are critical elements of the emerging integration of Cambodia into regional and global production
chains. In 2005, the Cambodian Government adopted the Anukret (Sub-decree) on the Establishment
and Management of Special Economic Zones that created the Cambodian Special Economic Zone Board
within the CDC.178 The intention was to help free businesses from regulatory and legal constraints.
Chinas experience with SEZs was initially used as a guide to establish SEZs in Cambodia.There are two
types of SEZs in Cambodia general industrial zones and export processing zones though in practice
the Government does not distinguish between the two.179
To further understand their role, strengths and weaknesses, five SEZs -- Phnom Penh SEZ, Manhattan
SEZ, Sihanoukville II SEZ, Siahnoukville Port SEZ, and Neang Koh Kong SEZ -- were visited in the
course of the field work associated with the preparation of CTIS 2014-2018.
Face to face interviews were conducted with 20 companies and with the operators of the five SEZs. Short
surveys were also completed by 30 light manufacturing and footwear companies from four of the five
SEZs to provide information on their activities and their workforce. While by no means a full survey of
all companies based in SEZs, the data collected provides some insights into the operations of light
manufacturing exporters located in SEZs. Difficulty to access accurate financial data, confidentiality
issues, and the partial nature of the data collected mean that no updated export and employment data
could be compiled for 2012-13.
SEZs in Cambodia
Description of Cambodian SEZs:So far, the Council of Development of Cambodia CDC) has granted 23
licenses to develop SEZs. Only eight of them Phnom Penh SEZ, Siahnoukville SEZ II, Siahnoukville
Port SEZ, Manhattan SEZ, Tai Seng Bavet SEZ, Neang Koh Koh Kong SEZ, Poi Pet ONeang SEZ and
Goldfame Pak Shun SEZ have investors and only six zones are fully operational with a total of close to
100 companies. Main investors come from Cambodia, Japan, China, Thailand, and Taiwan. The
additional 15 SEZs that have been licensed have been created but have no investors as of yet.
Most of the active licenses granted for SEZs are regrouped in 4 different areas:

178
179

in Phnom Penh itself (Phnom Penh SEZ);


in Sihanoukville, where Cambodias main port is (Sihanoukville Port SEZ and Sihanoukville SEZ II);
close to the Vietnamese border in the Bavet area (Manhattan SEZ and Tai Seng SEZ); and,
close to the Thai border, in the Koh Kong area (Koh Kong SEZ).

A draft Law on SEZs, to be submitted to Parliament, is under preparation. See chapter 1.


While this categorization exists in the Anukret, it is not functioning practically. No formally designated EPZs currently exist.
Rather, all currently existing SEZs are in effect industrial zones where investors enjoy export related incentives.

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All these SEZs are expanding their operations. According to government officials, approximately five
additional zones have the potential to attract investors and start operations in the short term to medium
term if they receive sufficient technical and financial resources from their developers. Based on
experience from other countries and Cambodias overall investment attractiveness, the country has
potential to expand significantly the economic impact and community benefits generated by these zones.
In 2011, the eight active SEZs were generating over 7,000 jobs and exports worth just under $100 million
per year. At that time, only three SEZs had more than two companies each having started operation in the
zone. Five of them now have more than two companies operating in their zone. Workforce and exports
data at a country level for all SEZ are not available for 2012 as of yet but it is expected that the value of
exports from SEZs has grown significantly over the last year.
Just over half of the companies (45 firms) located in SEZs produce light manufacturing exports. Another
19 percent of companies (17 firms) in SEZs produce garments and 8 percent (seven firms) produce
footwear. The rest are either utilities or companies providing a service or a good for the domestic market.
The contribution of these SEZs to Cambodias light manufacturing exports, though not directly
quantifiable in terms of monetary value, could be divided as follow according to export types in 2013:

While bicycles represented Cambodias largest light manufacturing exports in 2012, only five
companies produce bikes from inside three different SEZs. Four of those companies are located
closed to the border with Vietnam.
Three companies (3 percent of all SEZ companies) in three different SEZs work on assembling
motorized vehicles, which was Cambodias largest light manufacturing export in 2011.
Twelve companies (13 percent of all SEZ companies), a majority of which located in Phnom Penh
SEZs, produce electronic and electrical exports. Sixty percent of these companies produce one of
Cambodias top electronic or electrical exports (wires, motors, circuits, tv components, line telephony
components).
Twenty five companies (28 percent of all SEZ companies) were involved in producing other light
manufacturing, including 8 percent in sport equipment and toys, 1 percent in mattresses, 1 percent in
nuts, screws and bolts, 2 percent in machinery, and 16 percent in other type of light manufacturing.

To compare, there were seven companies producing bicycles across Cambodia in 2011, five producing
motorized vehicles parts and components, 15 producing electronics and electrical goods, and 24 that
could be classified under the other light manufacturing (minus furniture) category. This suggests that
SEZs represent most of Cambodias total light manufacturing production. They are also likely to
produce a much larger and more valuable share of exports.

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Figure
Figure 9.8:
9.8: Distribution
Distribution of
of SEZ
SEZ Firms
Firms by
by Type
Type of
of Export,
Export, 2013
2013 (All
(All SEZ
SEZ Firms)
Firms)

8
12
44

25

Vehicles

Electronics and electrical

Other light manufacturing

Other

Electronics and electrical

Vehicles

3
5

1 1

Bicycles

Cars

Wire

TV component

Circuits

electric motors

Line telephony

Other electronic

Sport equipment

Other light manufacturing

Other toys
Mattresses
6
Seats
Springs
1
1

14
1
2

Screws and nuts


0

00

Sewing machine
Other machinery
other other light manufacturing

Source:
Source: CDC and site visits

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Phnom Penh SEZ: Phnom Penh SEZ (PPSEZ) is the largest and fastest growing SEZ in Cambodia.
From 14 companies in operation in 2011, it was now home to 37 as of mid 2013, a 164 percent increase in
less than two years. PPSEZ is located just outside Phnom Penh, in close proximity to the international
airport. PPSEZ is managed by Japanese investors and hosts a broad array of activities ranging from
animal feed and food processing, utilities, steel processing and construction material production to
motorbike assembly, precision mechanical products, and high tech electronic engine. Most investors in
PPSEZ are from Japan, Taiwan, and Cambodia. Production in PPSEZ is destined both to the export and
domestic markets.
PPSEZ is managed privately by a Khmer-Japanese company which provides language services, also
appealing specifically to Japanese investors. Manufacturers operating here include multinational
Japanese brands such as Ajinomoto, Minebea, Sumitomo Wiring System, Yamaha, and Combi baby
products. More recently, investors in new industries such as light electronics manufacturing (Denso),
food processing (Vinamilk), and diamond polishing (Laurelton diamonds), are beginning to construct
large production facilities there.
Light manufacturing export is the main activity for 46 percent of the companies located in PPSEZ, with in
particular seven electronic and electrical export companies (including three companies producing
insulated wires) and nine companies in other light manufacturing targeting exports. PPSEZ had also one
vehicle assembly factory.
Most investors interviewed indicated that they located their operations in PPSEZ for the following
reasons:

management and administrative services provided by the zone developer;


better physical infrastructure;
proximity to domestic market and major transport infrastructure (airport, roads);
stable supply of utilities, in particular energy; and,
cultural understanding (Japanese) with zone developer.

By locating close to Phnom Penh, investors have been able to minimize transaction costs even though
their overall costs of shipping from the capital city to overseas markets can be higher than for investors
located in the border-SEZs or next to the Port of Sihanoukville. Investors targeting the domestic market
or less price or time sensitive have therefore favored PPSEZ.
Investors in the zone expressed specific concerns about the persistence of informal fees in administrative
procedures, the lack of independence for Government officials inside the SEZ that lengthens these
procedures, and the systematic requirement for certificates of origin including for those products that do
not get any tariff benefits through certificate of origins.
Manhattan SEZ: Manhattan SEZ was the first SEZ opened in Cambodia. It is located in the Bavet area
close to the Vietnamese border. It began operations in late 2006 and is still one of the fastest growing
SEZ in Cambodia. There are currently 18 factories operating, mainly from Taiwan. This is a 125 percent
increase on 2011.

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Light manufacturing export was the main activity of eight companies located in PPSEZ, with in particular
one bicycle factory, one car assembly factory, one electronics company and five companies in other light
manufacturing targeting exports of sport equipment, mattresses, screws and machinery.
Reasons cited by investors locating in the Manhattan zone include:

proximity to Vietnam from which better and cheaper transport infrastructure and utilities can be
accessed;
quality of the one stop shop for administrative procedures (with five different Government
departments represented) available inside the SEZ. So much so that investors from the neighboring
SEZ come to use these services; and,
cultural understanding with the zone developer and most investors in the zone (Taiwanese), with a
majority of investors being Chinese speaking.

In particular, utilities and infrastructure cost competitiveness is a key advantage for Manhattan SEZ. The
cost of shipping a container to the USA from the Manhattan SEZ via Ho Chi Min in Vietnam is less than
$500 compared to $800 to shipping through Sihanoukville. Electricity costs in Manhattan SEZ are also
cheaper than in other SEZs, with Vietnam-sourced electricity in Manhattan costing $0.12/Kwh compared
with $0.193/Kwh in PPSEZ.
Investors in the zone expressed specific concerns about the complexity, cost, and delays associated with
the process of doing business with Cambodian companies outside the zone (in particular in Phnom Penh)
and about labor unrest.
Sihanoukville SEZ II: Sihanoukville SEZ II is the third largest SEZ in Cambodia in terms of investors
and the largest in terms of land area (more than 1,000 hectares). Following its opening in 2009, it has
grown steadily and now counts 18 investors. Sihanoukville SEZ II is located immediately outside
Sihanoukville, in close proximity to Cambodias largest port.
Sihanoukville SEZ II is managed by Chinese investors and has a significant focus on light manufacturing.
Light manufacturing export is the main activity of 14 companies located in the zone, with nine companies
in other light manufacturing, three firms in electronics, and two in vehicle assembly. Most investors in
Sihanoukville SEZ II are coming from China. Production in the zone is targeted mostly to the export
market.
Most investors interviewed indicated that they located their operations in Sihanoukville SEZ II for the
following reasons:

proximity to the Sihanoukville port;


quality and independence of government officials located in the zone; and,
cultural understanding (Chinese) with zone developer.

Investors in the zone expressed specific concerns about health, safety and security in the zone, workers
availability, transport, as well as the cost and reliability of power.
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Siahnoukville Port SEZ: Sihanoukville Port SEZ is the latest SEZ developed in Cambodia. Financed
with a loan from the JICA, it is the only SEZ in Cambodia developed and managed by the Government.
Sihanoukville Port SEZ is located directly next to Sihanoukville Port.
Sihanoukville Port SEZ II has only one investor currently, whose main activity is packaging. Reasons for
setting up operation in Sihanoukville Port SEZ include:

proximity to the Sihanoukville port; and,


access to government support and services in a SEZ managed by government.

Key concerns in the zone are linked to the risks and limitations associated with the public management of
a special economic zone and to the rental cost of land inside the SEZ.
Neang Koh Kong SEZ: Neang Koh Kong SEZ is a young SEZ next to the Thai border that started
development in 2011. Building on its proximity to factories in Thailand, the SEZ has only three factories
and does not have a one-stop shop government office yet.
The three companies located in Koh Kong SEZ work on car assembly (for the domestic market), wire
harness, and footwear respectively. Reasons for setting up operation in Neang Koh Kong SEZ include:

proximity to the regional chain of production in Thailand; and


access to a pool of more skilled workers.

Key concerns in the zone are linked to the risks of losing workers to better paid job in Thai factories
across the border, to unnecessary red tape in export procedures (in particular for sealing export
containers,) and to electricity costs.

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Figure
per Type
Type of
and per
per SEZ
SEZ
Figure 9.9:
9.9: Number
Number of
of Firms
Firms per
of Export
Export Products
Products and
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
Phnom Penh
SEZ

Manhattan
SEZ

Tai Seng SEZ Sihanoukville Siahnoukville Neang Koh


Port SEZ
SEZ 2
Kong SEZ

Bicycles

Vehicles

Electronics and electrical

Other light manufacturing

Footwear

Garment

Packaging

Domestic market and other exports

Utilities

Source: CDC and site visits


Source:
The SEZ Framework in Cambodia
Legal Framework: The legal framework for SEZ in Cambodia is based on the Anukret No.147 on the
Organization and Functioning of the CDC, which includes the Establishment and Management of
Special Economic Zones. The sub-decree was published in December 2005 and is implemented as part
of the Investment Law. While conceived initially as a way to link urban and rural economic areas, to
support workforce development, and to test export support policy reform, SEZs have become fully private
driven industrial parks, successfully attracting foreign investment and concentrating key light
manufacturing operations.
The SEZ legal framework in Cambodia applies many best practice principles based on private sectordriven good economic governance, competition, as well as openness and transparency. This legal
framework meets international legal standards including by:
supporting a private sector-driven development of most zones;
not imposing limitations on foreign and local ownership; and,
providing a labor arbitration mechanism.
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Table 9.6: International Best Practice for SEZ Legal Framework


Elements of the Legal
Framework
Concept of extraterritoriality

Eligibility of benefits

Foreign and local


ownership
Private zone
development
Sales to the domestic
market
Purchases from
domestic market
Labor policies

International Best Practices


Outside domestic customs territory;
Eligible for national certificates of origin; and,
Eligible to participate in national trade agreements and arrangements.
No minimum export requirement;
Manufacturers and services;
Foreign and local investors;
Expansions of existing enterprises; and,
Private developers of zones.
No limitations; and,
Equal treatment
Clearly identified in legislation;
Specific zone designation criteria;
Eligible for full benefits; and,
Competition from government-run zones on a level-playing field.
Liberalized, provided on a blanket basis rather than case-by-case;
Treated as imports into domestic market; and,
Subject to payment of import duties and taxes
Treated as exports from domestic market; and,
Enterprises eligible for indirect exporter benefits
Full consistency with International Labor Organization labor standards; and,
Specialized dispute settlements mechanism.

Source: World Bank


According to the sub-decree, the private company owning and managing a SEZ is also responsible for
part of the salaries of government officials staffed inside the zone, though it appears that, in many cases,
salaries paid for by SEZ operators are complemented with informal fees.
Any imports and exports to and from an SEZ are treated as imports and exports to and from Cambodia
(the relevant customs paperwork must be completed.) Furthermore, SEZ investors cannot remove their
output from the zone without permission and any domestic purchase or disposal of products must be
approved. No retail businesses can locate in an export processing zone. Each zone contains a production
and service area and may also include dormitories to accommodate workers.
Reforming SEZs was on the agenda of the Fourth Cambodia Economic Forum in 2011 and the stated next
steps include:

implementing extra-territoriality (all zones designated as a separate external customs territory);


harmonizing the existing laws and regulations; and,

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computerizing administrative formalities.

Ownership Structure: Apart from Sihanoukville Port SEZ, managed by the Cambodian Government and
financed by a loan from JICA, all other SEZs are owned and developed by private investors under
licenses obtained from CDC. Those investors are allowed to run the SEZs as they will, within the
boundaries of their license. As such each SEZ has its own individual ownership structure.
SEZs typically own the land on which they are situated. An exception is where the zone developer
obtains a land concession from the government these are generally near the Cambodian border or in
isolated regions. The Government stipulates certain minimum requirements relating to the size of the
zone and the infrastructure it provides.
Private ownership supports the development of market driven best practices on zone governance and
management and include:

private sector and market driven initiative approach;


responsive decisionmaking;
streamlined administrative processes;
Government one-stop-service;
physical, legal, and tax incentives for zone developers and investors;
avoidance of specific export incentives;
broad diversity in the type of investors in the zones; and,
relative flexibility as regards sales to the domestic market.

Government Agencies:The Council for the Development of Cambodia is the Government agency
responsible for SEZs. CDC was established by the 1994 Law on Foreign Investment. Its Board includes
senior ministers from related government agencies and is chaired by the Prime Minister of Cambodia.
Under the supervision of the CDC, the Cambodian Special Economic Zone Board (CSEZB) is in charge
of granting licenses and supervising the development and management of SEZ operations. According to
Articles 2, 4.2 and 4.3 of Anukret #147, the CSEZB is responsible for setting up a permanent One-StopShop Government service unit in each SEZ.
The Special Economic Zones Trouble Shooting Committee that is part of the CDC deals with SEZ legal
and technical issues beyond the competence of the SEZ management and of the CSEZB on an ad-hoc
basis. It also receives and handles complaint filed by zone developers and investors.
Incentives:The key benefits provided by SEZ to investors include:

on-site One-Stop-Shop with Government representatives to help with administrative procedures and
implementation of regulations;
VAT exemption across multiple sectors, including for construction materials for development and
operation within the Zone. A similar benefit is available outside SEZs through qualification under a
Qualified Investment Project (QIP);
trouble-shooting facilitation with zones management providing support and cultural understanding

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(when of the same origin) to investors;


industrial-ready land with appropriate utilities for investors to set up and expand their operations; and,
better infrastructure than that found usually outside the zone.

The degree of support and services offered by different Government agencies via the One-Stop-Shop
office located inside SEZs varies depending on the zone. Investors in the Manhattan SEZ claim to receive
strong support from the on-site representatives of the five government agencies and investors from the Tai
Seng SEZ are even calling on their services though it implies travelling to a different zone. Investors in
PPSEZ express greater concerns about the quality of on-site Government services offered, with concerns
over delays, lack of independence from the actual ministries located in Phnom Penh, and informal fees.
The Koh Kong SEZ does not have Government representatives on-site, and the Sihanoukville Port SEZ,
because of its public management structure appears to be able to fast track government procedures. It
seems as well that the capacity, knowledge and skills of on-site Government representatives vary
considerably from one SEZ to the other, with a general need for improvement.
SEZs provide an expedited mechanism for Certificates of Origin required by importing markets, in
particular the EU. The Ministry of Commerce has adopted a streamlined procedure for speedy issuance
of Certificate of Origins in SEZs within One-Stop-Shops. One concern expressed by investors is that
these certificates are systematically required by MoC even for products or markets do not benefit from
such, which creates unnecessary red tape and costs.
The Benefits of SEZs
The degree of success of the different SEZs varies based on different factors. Investors in the Manhattan
SEZ benefit from the utilities and infrastructure available from next-door Vietnam and from a
comprehensive and effective One-Stop-Shop office on-site. Investors in the PPSEZ take advantage of the
proximity to the domestic market and the airport and from access to a larger pool of workers. The zone
has been particularly successful in attracting Japanese investors because of cultural affinity with the zone
developer. Sihanoukville SEZs' success is based on the proximity to Cambodia's major port. More
broadly, the attractiveness of Cambodia's SEZ framework is evidenced by the rapid increase in the
number of investors in SEZs, particularly in the Phnom Penh, Manhattan, and Sihanoukville II zones.
Infrastructure: High electricity costs and unreliable supply are significant constraints to the development
of light manufacturing in Cambodia, with steady power supply required in automated processes.
Relatively weak transport logistics across Cambodia weakens the labor cost advantage and restricts
Cambodias ability to expand into higher-value, time-sensitive segments of the market. SEZs provides
better infrastructure than elsewhere in Cambodia, in particular, water, waste water treatment, logistics and
communication infrastructure. These facilitate investors operations and support their competitiveness.
However, the transport infrastructure linking SEZs to their markets is still relatively poor in comparison
to international standards and to competitors.
The proximity of some SEZs to international transport infrastructure reduce export time and cost. PPSEZ
benefits from the neighboring international airport, while investors in Sihanoukville SEZ II and
Sihanoukville Port SEZ provide easy access to the port facilities. The proximity of SEZs to the Thai and
Vietnamese borders facilitates integration of manufacturing operations into the regional production
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chains, through easy access to those countries transport infrastructure. Integration into regional
production networks should benefit further from regional development programs such as the Greater
Mekong Sub Region projects. A number of those projects focus on funding improvement in east west
transport network corridor (Vietnam to Thailand via Cambodia.) Such improvements should reduce
transport time between SEZs in Phnom Penh and Bavet and their supply/markets.
Preferential Policies and Incentives: Various preferential policies are granted to SEZs in Cambodia,
including relatively cheaper land, rapid customs clearance, streamlined administrative procedures, dutyfree imports of raw materials and intermediate goods destined to be incorporated into exported products,
and a license to sell into the domestic market. The benefit of some of these tax-free investment incentives
is limited however and do not encourage investment expansion as they only apply to the initial
investment.
Some of these preferential policies are embedded in the granting of Qualified Investment Project status
available to investors outside SEZ but also granted to firms located in SEZs. Because companies located
outside SEZs but benefiting from the Qualified Investment Project status receive similar tax and
investment incentives as companies located inside SEZs, it does reduce the attractiveness of SEZs.
Zone developers all have QIP status and are provided with the following incentives:

Profit tax exemption for nine years;


Import duty exemption for equipment for constructing the zone;
VAT exemption;
No foreign exchange transfer restrictions; and
Guarantees against nationalization and price fixing.

Zone investors, that have received QIP status, benefit from the following:

QIP incentives;
VAT exemption (exporters receive VAT exemption on construction materials, production
materials, and production equipment; domestic-focused companies receive VAT exemption on
construction materials and production equipment); and
No restrictions on foreign exchange transfers.

The fact that companies located outside SEZs but benefiting from the QIP Project status receive similar
tax and investment incentives as those located inside SEZs does reduce the attractiveness of SEZs.
Government Support: As mentioned earlier, various Government agencies provide a range of services to
handle the processing of forms and procedures relating to export and import through the One-Stop-Shop
set up in each SEZs, though it appears that not all officials in all SEZs are fully trained in handling some
of this work. Investors can also received expedited support for various submissions, requests, and
complaints through CDCs Special Economic Zones Trouble Shooting Committee.
SEZs also offer expedited trade and administrative procedures. As of September 2008, special
streamlined customs procedures apply to SEZs located within 20 km of the Cambodian border. Some of
these expedited trade procedures needs to be better defined and communicated to investors and to on-site
officials.For example, it appears that investors in SEZs are meeting difficulties in organizing supply
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contracts with domestic companies located outside SEZs. This issue needs to be addressed if Cambodia
wants to encourage the development of domestic clusters of suppliers to feed into the operations of
investors based in SEZs and tied into regional production networks.
Published official fees provide increased transparency and certainty to investors, even though it seems
official fees are not yet implemented systematically and informal fees continue to be required for many a
procedures. Informal fees continue to be a concern for many investors.
SEZ Management: SEZ operators provide assistance to investors in dealing with Government. An
association of major SEZs also allows for discussion of common issues and lobbying with Government.
In general, it seems that private management of SEZs allows for more efficiency and better services in the
zone. Furthermore, continuity in management of SEZ operations provides confidence and reliability to
investors.
In many case, interviews and surveys show that cultural affinity reinforces the attractiveness of a given
SEZ for investors from a specific country. SEZs provide a comforting and supportive environment for
companies of the same nationality as the operator.
Workforce and Skills Development: Cambodia lacks many of the technical, engineering, and business
skills necessary not only for the development and automation of operations in SEZ companies, but also
for operating the services provided by the SEZs themselves. Furthermore, Cambodia lacks an integrated
national labor market to ensure investors they can find the workers they need beyond the direct proximity
of the SEZ. Cambodian managers and mid-manager in firms located in surveyed SEZs represented 1
percent of the firms total workforce in 2013.
However, SEZs can help deal with these workforce and skill issues faced by investors in two ways:

By attracting workers to the SEZ area where jobs are available, providing a larger pool of labor for
companies to hire from. Many SEZ developers also work with other local businesses to ensure that
workers can access accommodations close to the zone, transport to the zone, and food and other
services when working in the zone. This makes SEZ area more attractive to workers and thus
increase the pool of workers the zone investors can pick their employees from.
SEZ manager can facilitate training for workers in the zone, either by providing their own training
programs, as in Sihanoukville SEZ II, or by facilitating study trips to factories across the border in
Thailand or Vietnam. In 2012, 1 percent of employees in the SEZs surveyed received training
abroad. Language training provided by SEZ developers can be particularly helpful as the lack of
foreign language skills together with low management skills hinders the promotion of Cambodian
workers to management and supervisory positions.

In addition, by concentrating foreign direct investment and Diasporas, SEZs facilitate capital investment,
technology transfer, and management skills development in Cambodia, generating learning and spill-over,
and, thus, helping build the local manufacturing capacity.

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The Challenges of SEZs


Electricity Costs:Energy costs in most SEZs remain high, even though somewhat lower than outside the
zones. SEZs, like the rest of the country, suffer from expensive electricity and unreliable supply. Price of
electricity in Cambodia is $0.23 per Kwh from EDC and approximately $0.40 per Kwh or more if selfgenerated. Electricity prices in Vietnam vary between $0.05 and $0.09 per Kwh and in Thailand between
$0.04 and $0.09 per Kwh. Even for SEZs with enhanced access to electricity (either through selfgeneration like in PPSEZ or across the border like in Manhattan), costs remain high compared to
competitors in neighboring countries. High cost is compounded by unreliability in power supply, with
companies in Manhattan SEZ facing up to 40-50 power interruptions a week on average.
Government Support: Government recognizes that more on-the-job training is required to help officials
in One-Stop-Shops further develop their competencies as facilitators, rather than pure regulators, of
investors. While officials in Manhattan SEZ One-Stop-Shop have developed a good understanding of
investor servicing and the importance of continued improvements in daily operations, their experience
have not been emulated fully by officials in other zones. Interviews and surveys in Cambodian SEZs
show that not all SEZs offer the same level and quality of government services.
Furthermore, uncertainty in enforcement of laws and regulations generates confusion among business.
Around 42 percent of firm respondents located in SEZs mostly involving manufacturing and assembly
considered regulatory policy uncertainty as a major or very severe constraint.180
Taxes and Incentives: Tax administration remains problematic. Investors claim that government officials
exact tax penalties excessively. Although investors in Cambodia fare relatively well compared to other
regions, almost 15 percent of surveyed firms still identify tax administration as a major constraint.
Table 9.7: Tax and Red Tape Constraints
Share of senior management time spent in
dealing with requirements of government
regulation
Average number of visits or required meetings
with tax officials.
If there were visits, average number of visits or
required meetings with tax officials.
Percentage of firms identifying tax rates as
major constraint
Percentage of firms identifying tax
administration as a major constraint

Cambodia

Region

All Countries

5.6 percent

7.3 percent

8.6 percent

1.0

2.3

2.2

2.3

3.3

3.2

16.3 percent

23.1 percent

35.4 percent

14.8 percent

15.5 percent

23.5 percent

Source: World Bank Enterprise Surveys 2011

180

World Bank,Investment Climate Assessment Cambodia, Phnom Penh:World Bank, 2012.

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Informal fees are a major burden on business, although zone investors report that unofficial fees are lower
inside than outside the zones. Even among zone investors, the informal fee paid by individual firms
varies widely depending on how well each company has negotiated with respective officials and whether
they use a broker or not. Although information is limited, some zone developers do absorb these fees on
behalf of investors, further adding to the zone-developers cost of doing business. Given that the majority
of firms operating in Cambodia are in the manufacturing sector with investments of less than $5 million
(almost 70 percent of 108 firms surveyed in the World Bank Survey), the unpredictability of fees
seriously impacts operations and competitiveness of Cambodia compared to other countries in the region
and globally. One investor that re-located to Cambodia from Vietnam claims that informal fees are still
three times higher than those the company previously paid in Vietnam.
Table 9.8: Informal Fees
Cambodia
Percentage of firms expected to pay
informal payment to public officials 61.2 percent
(to get things done)
Percentage of firms expected to give
60.3 percent
gifts in meetings with tax officials
Percentage of firms identifying
53.7 percent
corruption as a major constraint

Region

All Countries

28.1 percent

27.4 percent

19.1 percent

16.8 percent

29.0 percent

36.6 percent

Source: World Bank Enterprise Surveys 2011


International Perceptions and Competitiveness: The current shortfalls that remain in SEZs
(infrastructure, government services) may lead to a potentially negative perception of SEZs in Cambodia
among foreign investors. This negative perception might be compounded by a comparison with
neighboring countries that offer SEZs with better infrastructure and lower investment costs (Thailand,
Vietnam), better electricity supply (Thailand, Vietnam, Laos), or even better growth potential (Myanmar).

Socio-Economic and Environmental Impact


Employment Prospect and Working Conditions
The manufacturing sector employed more than 531,000 people in 2011, with nearly 80 percent employed
in garments (370,000) and footwear (64,200.) Workers in non-garment manufacturing industries receive
wages slightly higher than in the garment industry.
In 2011, the bicycle sector was employing 1,527 workers, the electronic and electrical sector 262 workers,
and the other light manufacturing (minus furniture) sector 352 workers, the furniture industry 3,685
workers. In total, the light manufacturing export sector represented just more than 1% of total
manufacturing employment in Cambodia in 2011.

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Worker health and safety is a significant issue in Cambodias manufactures. However, issues in light
manufacturing companies tend to be lesser that in the garment industry, as light manufacturing operations
necessitate more capital input, offer better wages, and require more skills. Labor unrest and strikes in
certain industrial areas (for example in Manhattan SEZ on the Vietnamese border), along with the health
and safety issues (for example in Sihanoukville SEZ II) mentioned above can disturb the production
process and delay a deepening of Cambodias integration into regional production chains.
Contribution to Skills Development
The very limited availability and supply of skilled labor, particularly in rural areas, is a very serious
concern especially for light manufacturing operations taking place in SEZs away from Phnom Penh. In
most cases, high-skilled workers and managers are brought from the country of origin by the investor.
Shortages in engineering and technical personnel result in high dependency on more expensive expatriate
personnel. It also requires companies to provide their own training. Cambodian workers are also lacking
the language skills needed to facilitate their promotion to management and supervisory positions in
foreign firms. 181
.
SEZs and companies within SEZs provide training to their workers, either on site or through visit to
parent factories in neighboring countries. Combined with the used of new technologies in factories, light
manufacturing can be a key driver of skill development across the Cambodian economy.
Regional Impact
Most of the impact of light manufacturing in SEZ is concentrated to four regions: in the capital city,
Phnom Penh, on the Vietnamese border at Bavet, on the Thai border at Koh Kong, and in the
Sihanoukville area. Some of these SEZs to attract workers from much further rural areas, which means
that the impact of economic activities in these zones can stretch beyond the immediate proximity of the
zones.

181

See chapter 17 for further discussion of this issue.

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Map 9.1:
9.1: Location
Map
Location of
of Main
Main SEZs
SEZs

Environmental Impact
Special economic zones in general and light manufacturing operations in particular are heavy consumers
in electricity and, to a lesser extent water.
No specific data was available about the environmental impact of special economic zones, though the
zone managers in Phnom Penh and Siahnoukville indicated having specific plans to monitor and mitigate
environmental impacts. In general, SEZs seem better equipped to manage the environmental
consequences than factories outside the zones.

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Conclusion
Information analyzed and reviewed in this chapter can be summarized in the two SWOT tables that
follow. The first SWOT focuses on light manufacturing exports; the second, on the operation of SEZs
themselves.
Light Manufacturing Exports
Strengths

Low labor costs make Cambodia attractive for the


labor-intensive stages of light manufacturing
production in the ASEAN division of labor, in
particular for tasks with lower level of technology
such as wire harness, structural blocks for digital
information appliances, chassis and auto body
component.
The concentration of firms in sub-sector (i.e. bikes
or wire harness) allows for productivity gains and
economies of scale.
The domestic and regional demand for motorbike
and bicycles is increasing quickly, in particular due
to the young population in the region, providing
opportunities for strong development and economies
of scale.
Duty-free status for exports to EU for a number of
manufactured good (such as bicycles) has brought
investors to move production from neighboring
countries to Cambodia.
Most components, parts, and raw materials required
in light manufacturing assembly can be sourced
from neighboring countries (Thailand, Vietnam,
China, Malaysia).
Proximity to neighboring ASEAN markets leads to
shorter lead time as part of a production supply
chain, with Thailand and Malaysia, in particular,
having well developed electric and electronic
industries.
Rapid growth in agriculture (i.e. rice, cassava, corn)
and mechanization support domestic and regional
demand for agricultural equipment such as tractors,
tiling, and harvesting machinery.
Political stability limits external disruptions to the
flow of component supply.
Foreign expatriate employees can enjoy a safe
residential environment.

Weaknesses

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Low productivity and low skill-level are trumping


low labor cost and make Cambodia less attractive
for capital intensive stages in the ASEAN chain of
production, such as the mechanized winding
process involved in the development of coil, filters,
converters and vibration motors.
High electricity costs and unreliable supply
constrain the development of light manufacturing,
with steady power supply required in automated
processes. See discussion in SEZs Operators
SWOT.
Relatively weak transport logistics weakens the
labor cost advantage and cuts off Cambodia from
higher-value, time-sensitive segments of the
market.
Unnecessary and inconsistent clearance and
administrative procedures slow imports and exports,
both in domestic trade and as part of the ASEAN
division of labor. This hinders Cambodias
integration into the regional chain of production.
With the exception of bicycles, the critical mass for
clustering of various light manufacturing industries
has not been reached as of yet, with a lack of
Cambodian firms capable of performing outsourced
processing, hindering further
investment/development (vicious circle).
Cambodian workers lack the language skills needed
to facilitate their promotion to management and
mid-management positions in foreign companies.
The shortage in engineering and technical personnel
results in high dependency on more expensive
expatriate personnel.
Labor unrest and strikes disturb the production
process and delay Cambodias contribution to the
regional chain of production.
Cambodias small scale domestic market limits the
development of light manufacturing industries and
economies of scale.
Limits in capital and technology sourced locally
constrain technology transfer.

Opportunities

Strong agglomeration of foreign investment from a


given country in a specific SEZ (i.e. Japan in
PPSEZ, China/Taiwan in Bavet, China in
Sihanoukville) tends to attract new investors from
the same country.
Rubber can be sourced locally to feed into the light
manufacturing production processes.
The concentration of ASEAN automobile
production in Thailand and electronics production in
Thailand, Vietnam, and Malaysia, provides
opportunities for neighboring Cambodia to be
involved in part of the assembly or supply
processes.
Proximity of countries with strong light
manufacturing sectors and investment from firms
already operating in those countries provides
opportunities for training Cambodian workers and
for technology transfer.
The reduction of tariffs under the AFTA scheme is
likely to increase trade and division of labor in the
ASEAN, making larger markets of the region more
easily accessible for Cambodia, thus creating
opportunities for economies of scale.
Foreign investors operating in regional or
international production networks are seeking to
lower their dependency on a few countries in the
region (e.g. China, Thailand, Vietnam, Indonesia, or
Malaysia) and mitigate issues such as rising labor
costs (e.g. China or Vietnam), natural disaster
(Thailand, Japan), and others.
Rising wages in China, which is moving up the
value chain in electronic production, in Thailand,
which has become a key center for automotive
production in the ASEAN, in Vietnam, which has
become a key parts and component supplier, as well
as in Singapore and Malaysia are leading to the
relocation of production across the region, with an
opportunity for Cambodia to capture some of the
more labor intensive part of the work.
Increasing strategy of horizontal division of labor
implemented by Japanese, Taiwanese, and Korean
companies.
Domestic demand will increase along with
economic development.
Large manufacturing firms, in particular in
electronics from Japan, are seeking to diversify
away from Chinese suppliers (and from other
location with political risks) as part of their risk
management strategy.
Increased technology dissemination within
Cambodian industry will result in a better
integration in the ASEAN light manufacturing
production, in particular for the electronic
assembling process.

Threats

Because efficient procurement of parts and material


from other countries is critically important in the
production process, logistic issues might factor
higher in investment decision than labor cost. This
can penalize Cambodia because of its relatively
weak soft and hard logistics infrastructure.
Trends toward more mechanization and more
capital intensive production is reducing Cambodias
cheap labor competitive advantage and making its
electricity constraints more damaging for
manufacturing investment attraction.
Negative changes in rules of origin of the EUs
EBA program threaten market access for
Cambodian bicycles.
Cambodian workers once trained can be tempted to
take jobs in Thai and Vietnamese factories across
the borders where they get better wages (for SEZs
close to the borders).
Chinas scale of production and domestic market
keeps the Chinese industry cost competitive in spite
of potentially longer lead time and rising wages,
thanks to economies of scale.
Lowering of electrical costs in Laos as a result of
large scale hydro-electricity projects may attract
light manufacturing winding process in that
country.
The democratization process in Myanmar and its
opening to investment is capturing the attention of
regional investors because of low wages and a large
domestic market (though heavy constraints in
infrastructure suggest that Myanmar may not be a
viable investment option before 4 or 5 years at
best).
The increasing contraction of design-production
cycles in electronics leads to shorter lead time
requirement, emphasizing one of Cambodias
weaknesses.
Sustained morose economic climate in the Western
World, especially in Europe, constrains traditional
demand for cycles and high end electronics.

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Cycling companies located in Western markets are


increasingly moving to Asia to cut costs in response
to falling demand in the USA and Europe, with
Cambodia already capturing parts of this
investment.

Special Economic Zones


Strengths

SEZs provides better infrastructure than elsewhere


in Cambodia (in particular, water, waste water
treatment, logistics and communication
infrastructure).
Firms located in SEZs benefit from Qualified
Investment Project status. QIP grants new investors
(inside or outside SEZs) a number of investment and
tax incentives.
Government officials on site in the SEZ provide a
one-stop shop to handle foreign investors
submissions, requests, and complaints.
SEZs offer streamlined trade and administrative
procedures.
Published official fees provide transparency and
certainty to investors.
SEZ operators provide assistance to investors in
dealing with public administration.
Private management of SEZs allows for more
efficiency and better services in the zone.
SEZs proximity to borders or export infrastructure
facilitates integration of manufacturing facilities into
regional production chains, in particular with firms
in neighboring countries as potential suppliers or
customers (especially Thailand and Vietnam).
Proximity to international transport infrastructure
reduce export time and cost (maritime or air, Phnom
Penh, Sihanoukville).
SEZs attract workers, providing a larger pool of
labor for companies to pick from. .
SEZs provide a comforting and supportive
environment for companies of the same nationality
as the operator (i.e. Phnom Penh SEZ for Japanese
or Sihanoukville SEZ II for Chinese).
An association of major SEZs allows for discussion
of common issues and lobbying of government.

Weaknesses

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Companies located outside SEZs can receive


similar tax and investment incentives as companies
located inside SEZs under the Qualified Investment
Project status, which reduces the attractiveness of
SEZs.
Tax free investment incentives do not encourage
investment expansion as they only apply to the
initial investment.
SEZ rules are unclear as to which procedures must
be followed to allow trade with firms outside SEZ,
making subcontracting relationships with firms
located outside the zone uncertain, costly, and time
consuming
SEZs, like the rest of the country, suffer from
expensive electricity and unreliable supply. Price of
electricity in Cambodia is $0.23 per KWH from
EDC and approximately $0.40 per KWH or more if
self-generated. Electricity prices in Vietnam vary
between $0.05 and $0.09 per KWH and in Thailand
between $0.04 and $0.09 per KWH.
The lack of language skills to communicate with
SEZ investors and low management skills hinders
the promotion of Cambodian workers to
management and mid-management positions.
The Cambodian workforce lacks the technical,
engineering, and business skills necessary for the
development and automation of operations in SEZ
companies.
The Cambodian Government, and in particular
CDC, does not coordinate with SEZs operators for
external SEZ promotion initiatives.
Exports and transport infrastructure linking SEZs to
their markets are relatively poor in comparison to
international standards and to competitors.
Published official fees are not implemented
consistently by government officials with informal
fees still required systematically.
Government officials on site in SEZs are not always
informed about the administrative procedures firms
operating in SEZs must follow.
Not all SEZs offer the same level and quality of
government services.
Low mobility and distribution of the workforce at a
national level means that certain SEZs face
difficulty to access the workforce they need.

Opportunities

Foreign investors express a preference for privately


developed and managed SEZ as it is the case in
Cambodia.
Foreign investors express a preference to invest in a
SEZ managed by a company from their own country
of origin.
Cooperation of major SEZs through a single
representative association can facilitate the
resolution of issues with Government.
Continuity in management of SEZ operations
provides confidence and reliability to investors.
The Greater Mekong Sub Region projects focusing
on the east west corridor (Vietnam to Thailand via
Cambodia) continues to fund improvement in road
network thus reducing transport time between SEZs
in Phnom Penh and Bavet and their supply/markets.
Development of night shifts in SEZ factories help
switching electricity demand to low peak time.

Threats

Current shortfalls in SEZ (infrastructure,


government services) generate a potentially lasting
negative perception of the SEZ system in Cambodia
amongst foreign investors.
Lifestyle requirements of foreign workers might not
be easily met for provincial SEZs.
Neighboring countries offer SEZs with better
infrastructure and lower investment costs (Thailand,
Vietnam), with better electricity supply (Thailand,
Vietnam, Laos) or with better growth potential
(Myanmar).

Recommendations
The contribution of light manufacturing exports to Cambodias economy has grown rapidly over the last
few years, with exports increasing by an annual average of 44.3 percent between 2008 and 2012, to reach
$373 million. These exports represented just below 5 percent of Cambodias total recorded goods exports
in 2012. Bicycle is the success story of Cambodias light manufacturing exports, reaching $291 million
in 2012 (almost 80 percent of all Cambodian light manufacturing exports) as it captures a growing share
of the global market. But, with electrical and electronic parts attracting new FDI, it appears a second light
manufacturing export sector is taking shape. Cambodias key export markets for light manufacturing
exports include Thailand, mainly for electrical and electronic components that will be integrated in an
ASEAN chain of production, and European markets for finished products (mainly bicycles).
This relative success of the Cambodian light manufacturing industry is linked to its capacity to integrate
into regional production networks. Manufacturing companies in the region have organized their
production process across specialized functional networks where the different components of a given
product are made in different factories and different countries. Various stages of the production process
are located according to the relatives competitive advantages of a given country, with Cambodia
capturing labor intensive stages of the production process. Proximity to neighboring ASEAN markets
where the core of the regional chain of light manufacturing production is taking place has also provided
opportunities for neighboring Cambodia to be involved in part of the assembly and supply processes. In
addition, most components, parts, and raw materials required in light manufacturing assembly can be
obtained from neighbors. As the ASEAN market integrates further, with additional tariff reductions
under the AFTA scheme, Cambodia will have more opportunities to integrate regional chains of
production and to take advantage of easier access to larger markets in the region.
As Japanese, Korean, and Chinese firms are expected to try and curb their production costs and develop
further their supply chain network for light manufacturing in the next few years, Cambodia, a late entrant
in regional chains of productions, has an opportunity to attract part of these investments. SEZs, with their
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261

access to better infrastructure, larger pool of workers, and streamlined administrative process, are in an
ideal position to capture these investments. Cultural affinity with the zone manager might dictate what
foreign direct investment flows to what zones.
access to better infrastructure, larger pool of workers, and streamlined administrative process, are in an
ideal positioninitial
to capture
investments.
Cultural
affinity with parts
the zone
manager
might
dictate what
Cambodias
focus these
has been
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foreign
direct
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flows
to
what
zones.
supportive policies, its integration into the regional production chain can have a positive effect on its
capacity to absorb skills and diffuse technology, thus moving the countrys production up the value chain
182
Cambodias
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182
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footwear),
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as of yet, with a lack of operators in Cambodia capable of performing outsourced processing.
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markets
and bychallenges
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addressing labor unrest and strikes that disturb the production process and delay Cambodias
contribution
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with a focus
on poverty
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182
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further
discussion ofofthese
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significant progress are identified in the Trade SWAp Roadmap under Outcome #9.
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See chapter 5 for further discussion of these issues

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262 Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

Chapter 10
PROCESSED FOOD
Background
The processed food industry in Cambodia is characterized by thousands of SME operations, typically
household run and often located in rural areas close to agricultural production zones. While larger
commercial-scale food processing operations are emerging, the sector is heavily domestic-focused and
competes directly with significant agro-food imports. Overall, Cambodias processed food, beverage, and
tobacco industries were estimated to account for around 2.3 percent of GDP in 2011.183
With the right policy incentives and a coherent strategy for export-led development, Cambodia could
position itself as a key supplier of processed food and related products. With significant changes
underway in the dynamics of global food trade and unprecedented expected growth in demand for food
products in the Asia region, Cambodia has an ideal opportunity to transform its processed food industries.
The further expansion of a local processed food sector would complement Cambodias economic profile
as a large and growing producer of agricultural products. The processed food industry is important for
both export market development and import-substitution production of selected consumer goods
generating income from value-adding as well as diverting cash outflows from the economy. With much
of the food processing taking place at the household or village level, the prospects for continued growth in
demand for value-added food (and animal feed) offers important food security and poverty reduction
benefits for Cambodia.

Export Performance
Export Value
Cambodia's export of food, beverage, and tobacco products is estimated at around $59.6 million in 2011
as has grown considerably since 2007, as outlined in Table 10.1 below.184Much of the growth is due to
increases in the export of tobacco, cane sugar, and palm oil.

183

Council for the Development of Cambodia, Cambodia Investment Guidebook, Phnom Penh: CDC, 2012.
Comtrade data using Standard International Trade Classification (SITC, Revision 4) system. Note: Tariff classification of
processed food products vis--vis raw agricultural products is a matter of contention. Based on ADB Economics Working Paper
Series No. 154, Appendix I: Defined List of Processed Food Products, Manila: ADB, April 2009.
184

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Table 10.1: Cambodian Processed Food, Beverage & Tobacco Exports, $ millions,
2007-2011
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
Value
($ million)

$16.2

$22.4

$23.5

$35.0

$59.6

Source: Comtrade using Standard International Trade Classification (SITC, Revision 4).
Type of Exports
As shown in Table 10.2, tobacco products are the main export item in this category, followed by palm oil
and cane sugar. Opportunities to diversify the export base beyond these three commodity groups will
need to form part of Cambodias export development strategy for this sector. In particular, encouraging
increased value-adding should be a priority.
Table 10.2: Cambodian Top Exports of Processed Food, $ millions, 2011185
Category of Product
Tobacco goods
Animal & vegetable oils
Sugar preparations
Beverages
Fish products
Vegetables

Cambodian Exports
Unmanufactured tobacco & cigars/cigarettes
Mainly crude palm oil
Mainly cane sugar
Mainly spirits & non-alcoholic drinks
Frozen shrimp and frozen fish
Incl. cassava preparations

Value ($ millions)
$20.1
$17.2
$12.6
$3.1
$3.1
$2.5

Source:Comtrade
Current Export Destinations
Key export markets for processed food, beverage and tobacco products vary depending on the production,
although there are strong trade links (for both exports and imports) with the ASEAN region. For tobacco
products, Vietnam, Singapore, Indonesia and Thailand are important export markets. Crude palm oil is
exported mostly to India and Switzerland, and to a lesser extent to Vietnam and Malaysia. For beverages,
most exports go to Vietnam and Singapore. Almost all vegetable exports head to Thailand and, similarly,
virtually all of Cambodias sugar exports head to the UK market with the benefit of duty-free access.186
Exports of fish products (particularly frozen goods) rely heavily on Japan and China as export markets,
and to a lesser extent the US.187

185

Wherever possible, unprocessed products such as fresh cassava and fresh (live) fish have been excluded from these
estimates. Also note, substantial quantities of fish and semi-processed cassava products are exported informally and are not
reflected in the trade data above.
186
The EUs EBA policy permits duty-free imports of sugar products from LDCs.
187
TradeMap data

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Potential Export Destinations


With the right policy settings and strategic investments, Cambodia can be well placed to support growing
food demand and changing consumer preferences of nearby markets in South East Asia. This might even
include demand for Halal food products from the key markets of Indonesia and Malaysia. Other potential
export markets for Cambodias processed food sector include China, India, and the Middle East.
More generally, the expansion of Cambodias livestock industries would offer scope to supply emerging
markets as demand for animal foods increase.188 This would require significant investment in disease
management, for example in order to secure a FMD-free zone, which would offer scope to develop meat
export markets. This would also have a multiplier effect of encouraging expansion of local animal feed
production plants as an input industry.
Trade Balance
Cambodia is a net importer of processed foods, beverages, and tobacco goods, with the local industry
almost exclusively focused on the domestic market and import-substitution production. Key imports
include tobacco products, cereal preparations (particularly flours), and beverages. Total imports of food,
beverage and tobacco products were estimated at $251.8 million in 2011.189
Dynamism of Exports
In an industry dominated by thousands of household and village-level SMEs, the export-oriented
processed food industry in Cambodia is still in its infancy. A 2010 IFC-sponsored survey of SMEs in
Cambodia found that more than 93 percent of businesses did not practice importing or exporting activities.
Only 3.2 percent were involved in exporting, 4.2 percent in importing and just 0.8 percent in both
importing and exporting functions. While the relatively low participation levels of SMEs in international
trade activities reflect the basic nature of SME operations, it also presents an opportunity for development
and expansion.190 Efforts to disseminate information on processed food trade in South East Asia would
aid strategic investment by both small and large businesses and support efforts to expand processed food
exports.
Export Prospect
There are a number of key agro-food sectors with good prospects for future export development. For
example, Cambodias emergence as a significant producer of cassava has created an opportunity for
increased production of semi-processed and processed cassava products used in global industries
including cassava pellets for animal feed, cassava flour and starch as inputs for processed food, or even
methanol.Similarly, Cambodias extensive fish resource, if sustainably managed, could support an
expanded fish processing industry to target consumers in the ASEAN region and key markets worldwide.

188

See chapter 4
Comtrade data using Standard International Trade Classification (SITC, Revision 4) system.
190
International Finance Corporation, Understanding Cambodian Small and Medium Enterprise Needs for Financial Services and
Products, Phnom Penh: IFC, 2010.
189

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Further, as modern cultivation practices and agro-industry supply chains are still in development in
Cambodia, there is scope to develop a national organic food industry The Cambodian Organic Agriculture
Association (COrAA) has identified rice, soybeans, cashews, fruits, spices, and palm sugar as sectors
offering the greatest potential for organic industry development.191 Small quantities of organic rice and
cashews are currently exported illustrating Cambodia can export organic products although the process
of acquiring and maintaining organic certification is expensive and the costs and potential benefits need to
be carefully weighed by individual farmers and producer associations.

World Market Conditions


Market Access Conditions
In general, processed agricultural food products do not enjoy the same level of tariffpreferences as raw
agricultural goods. Similarly, the practice of tariff escalation in global trade discourages trade in valueadded goods. However, as an LDC in ASEAN, Cambodia has access to a number of important growth
markets in South East Asia. The ASEAN Free Trade Area (AFTA)is a trade bloc agreement that helps to
support local manufacturing in ASEAN member countries. Regional integration can therefore be
expected to be an important aspect of future growth in Cambodias processed food exports.
For exports such as cane sugar that target EU markets, theEBA preferential trade scheme allows
Cambodian sugar to be sold duty-free on the European market and avoid an MFN applied tariff of 1.9
percent. Cambodias crude palm oil exports to Switzerland also avoid an MFN duty of 122.3 Swiss
Francs/100kg.192
Major Competitors
Cambodias principal competitors for trade in processed food products are within the ASEAN region. In
particular, Thailands food processing industry has grown rapidly in the past decade and is one of the most
developed in South East Asia. This growth is built on Thailand being a leading supplier of a wide variety
of agricultural commodities including rice, rubber, cassava, sugar, seafood, poultry meat, frozen and
ready-to-eat foods and processed fruits and vegetables.
In Thailand, there are over 10,000 food and beverage processing factories consisting of small, medium
and large-scale plants. Most of these factories, which are small to medium size, serve mostly the domestic
market, while medium to large food processors tend to produce higher-valued products for the domestic
and export markets. Overall, Thailands food processing sector is heavily export-oriented with more than
50 percent of production sold outside the country.193

191

Cambodian Organic Agriculture Association (COrAA), Organic Agriculture and Food Processing in Cambodia Status and
Potentials, Phnom Penh: April 2011.
192
World Trade Organization, Tariff Download Facility. Geneva: WTO, 2013.
193
Food Export Association, Country Profile Thailand, Chicago: Food Export Association, 2012

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Vietnams food processing industry has also expanded rapidly in recent years with estimated annual
growth rate in excess of 10 percent per year. Government reforms including efforts to make regulations
more transparent and reduce red-tape have enticed both foreign and local investors into Vietnams food
processing industry. Vietnam has also tried to protect local food manufacturers by imposing high import
tariffs (from 20 40 percent) on selected food imports that compete with locally produced products (such
as confectionery, snack foods, juices, canned foods, ice cream.)It is reported that most large local
manufacturers have GMPor HACCP.
As major processing hubs, both Thailand and Vietnam also rely heavily on processed food ingredients and
additives. This presents an opportunity for Cambodia to form part of a regional supply chain for
processed agricultural goods, for example, in the supply of cassava flour and starch a major ingredient in
the production of food and consumer goods.
World Market Prospect
World exports of processed food, beverage and tobacco products were valued at $791 billion in 2011.194A
clear worldwide trend exists towards diets that include more animal products such as fish, meat and dairy
products, which in turn increases the demand for animal feed and grains. Population and income growth
will drive global demand for food products. The worlds population is projected to reach around 8 billion
by 2025. As the world economy shifts from west to east, millions of people are likely to move out of
poverty and the middle class is predicted to grow from 1.8 billion in 2010 to 3.2 billion in 2020 and
4.9 billion in 2030. Upwards of 85 percent of this growth will be in Asia.195
Consequently, the value of world food consumption is projected to be 75 percent higher in 2050 than in
2007, an annual average increase of 1.3 per cent. Demand for food is projected to increase most strongly
in Asia, doubling between 2007 and 2015.China and India alone will contribute a combined 56 percent of
the expected growth in global demand for food.196
Global food security will also remain a priority as populations continue to grow in many fooddeficient
countries. The prospect of feeding a larger and wealthier global population is not without its challenges.
For example, by 2025 global food production will be affected increasingly by the availability of key inputs
to production, including land, soil, energy, water, wild fish stocks and, potentially, phosphorous.197
Global supplies of food can therefore be expected to continue to be volatile and subject to sudden
disruptions and price spikes.
Overall, the medium to long-term outlook for agro-food commodities and products is overwhelmingly
positive. Cambodia has the potential to position itself as a key agro-food supplier in a region where the
majority of the increased demand for food products will be generated. Consequently, it will be imperative
for Cambodia to develop a national strategy that can help it build on these advantages and drive the
development of an export-oriented processed food sector.
194

World Trade Organization, International Trade Statistics 2012, Geneva: WTO, 2012.
Kharas, H., The emerging middle class in developing countries, OECD Development Center, Paris: OECD, 2010.
196
Linehan, V. et al., Global food production and prices to 2050: scenario analysis under policy assumptions, ABARES
Conference Paper 13.6, Canberra: ABARES, 2013.
197
Foresight, The Future of Food and Farming, Final Project Report, London: Government Office for Science, 2011.
195

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Domestic Supply Conditions


Producers
The domestic agro-processing sector is heavily geared toward grain milling, while beer and wine, sugar
and tobacco production also represent a significant number of businesses. The seasonal surpluses of
perishable agriculture goods (such as fruit and vegetables) in Cambodia provide a useful platform on
which to base a processed food and beverage sector. However, the informal export of many raw
agricultural goods (particularly to Vietnam and Thailand) reduces access to a reliable supply of inputs for
processing. Of course, a local processing sector with access to international markets would create a strong
market signal and encourage the flow of informal exports to reverse and source the domestic supply chain
for value-adding.
The processed food, beverage, and tobacco supply chain in Cambodia can be divided into two components
thousands of small household and village-level SMEs that supply nearby consumers, and the growing
number of larger factories that mostly target the domestic markets with some limited capacity to supply
export markets.
In 2010 there were more than 31,400 registered SMEs in Cambodias processed food, beverage and
tobacco sector. As shown in Table 10.3, the number of SMEs in the sector has increased by 45 percent in
the seven years to 2010, with the sector accounting for 84 percent of all registered SMEs in Cambodia.
Total employment from registered SMEs in the processed food, beverage and tobacco sector reached more
than 93,700 in 2010, equivalent to a 90 percent increase in the workforce since 2004 with the sector
accounting for more than 70 percent of total SME employment. Total output from these SMEs also
increased by 56 percent to $780million over the same period.198
Table 10.3: SME Profile inFood, Beverage & Tobacco Sector, 2004 2010
No. of SMEs
Employment
Output
($ million)

2004
21, 692
49,383

2005
23,727
57,557

2006
25,455
58,512

2007
26,379
60,262

2008
26,208
57,496

2009
29,987
90,148

2010
31,479
93,704

$ 500

$ 588

$ 615

$ 574

$ 555

$ 631

$ 780

Source:Council for the Development of Cambodia (CDC), Cambodia Investment Guidebook,


Phnom Penh: 2012.
In contrast to the SME operations, there were 56 large factories in the sector in 2011, an increase from the
42 in operation in 2008 (see Table 10.4 below). While the processed food, beverage and tobacco sector
dominate SME operations in Cambodia, the sector accounts for just 8.1 percent of all large factories
operating in 2011, a modest increase from the 7.3 percent share recorded in 2008.199
198
199

Council for the Development of Cambodia,Cambodia Investment Guidebook, Phnom Penh: CDC, 2012.
Council for the Development of Cambodia, Cambodia Investment Guidebook, Phnom Penh: CDC, 2012

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Table 10.4: LargeFactories in Food, Beverage & Tobacco Sector


Food, Beverage & Tobacco

2008
42

2011
56

- Food
- Beverage
- Tobacco

21
12
9

30
15
11

Source: Council for the Development of Cambodia (CDC), Cambodia Investment Guidebook,
Phnom Penh: 2012.
Production Capacity
As the processed food sector in Cambodia is dominated by family-run SMEs it is difficult for the sector to
gain economies of scale. While this may be less of an issue when focusing solely on the domestic market
and import-substitution, it can weigh on industry development plans. Similarly, being family-run and
rural-based, SMEs in the sector tend to rely on utilizing obsolete technologies and have limited access to
capital and market information to successfully expand or diversify production. Other constraints to SMEs
include a lack of a robust regulatory and legal framework, lack of access to and the high cost of
institutional finance, and the high cost of infrastructure services such as refrigerated transport and
energy.200
These obstacles to export-led growth warrant close public-private sector collaboration in the development
of a national policy platform and action plan to spur investment and create a more business-friendly
environment in the processed food sector for both SMEs and larger businesses. Indeed, despite a
relatively attractive FDI regime there has been relatively little foreign investment in Cambodias
processed food sector compared to other industries such as garments and tourism.201Table 10.4 outlines
key Cambodian and foreign (fixed-asset) investments in the processed food sector over the ten years 2001
to 2010.

200

Cambodian Development Research Institute Case Study 3 Policy Support for the Promotion of Non-farm Rural Enterprise
A Focus on SME Development Policy, Phnom Penh: CDRI, July 2011.
201
There has been fairly significant investment in other agricultural and agro-food sectors such as rubber and cashew plantations
by Vietnam, rice milling by China and Malaysia, and others as well. See Chapter 5.

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Table 10.5: Approved Fixed Asset Investment in Food Processing


$ million, 2001-2012
Origin of
Investors
Cambodia

2001

2003

2004

0.8

Australia
Canada
China
Singapore
Thailand
Vietnam
TOTAL

0.7

2.0

0.7

FDI Share

60%

100%

2007

2008

2009

2010

10.1

3.7

8.5

30.2

9.0

Total
2001-10
53.3

Share
%
71.3%
13%
5.7%
0.9%
5.1%
1.6%
2.3%
100.0%

0.7

1.7
20.9

3.7

8.5

38.3

9.7
4.3
0.7
3.8
1.2
1.7
74.7

100%

51.5%

21.2

28.7%

4.3
0.7
3.8
1.2

Source: Cambodian Development Research Institute (CDRI), Foreign Investment in


Agriculture in Cambodia, Working Paper Series No. 60, Phnom Penh: 2012.
In the decade 2001-2010 there has been patchy involvement in Cambodias food processing sector by
foreign investors. Over this period, foreign investors share of fixed assets in total sector fixed assets was
28.7 percent. Cambodian businesses have generally taken the lead in investing in this sector.
A number of noticeable foreign investments over this period include:

Australian investors set up a soya milk manufacturing plant with 100 percent-own assets in 2003
and, separately, have partnered with Cambodia interests (which holds 51 percent) in beer
manufacturing in 2007.
Canadian investors launched a beer manufacturing project in 2010 with 100 percent-own fixed
assets.
Singaporean investors partnered with a Cambodian firm (10 percent stake) to produce bottled pure
drinking water.
Thai investors partnered with Cambodian interests (40 percent stake) in producing instant noodles
and other instant food.
Vietnamese investment partners with a Cambodian business (30 percent interest) in producing
beer, soft drinks and drinking water.
Chinese investors with 100 percent-own assets established a sea-food processing in 2004.202

More recently, Thailands CP Group established its food processing business in Cambodia with 100
percent foreign ownership by the parent company. These operations produce both animal feed products
and processed consumer goods. For animal feed production, almost 95 percent of inputs are locally
sourced namely corn, cassava, rice bran, broken rice and soya bean. For consumer goods, 100 percent

202

Council for the Development of Cambodia, Cambodia Investment Guidebook, Phnom Penh: CDC, 2012

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of inputs are locally sourced including pork and chicken meat. Both of these production chains are
focused on supplying the local domestic market only.203
On the whole, investors from within the region have a strong interest in Cambodias food processing
sector albeit on a relatively small-scale. There is a clear need to encourage further private sector
investment in the processed food sector as well as attract more foreign investors from beyond the region.
This will be central to expanding Cambodias processed food production capacity. Developing large-scale
processing facilities that meet international standards can also be supported through joint partnerships
between local and foreign businesses.
Quality of Product
Given the overwhelming focus on servicing the domestic market, Cambodias processed food sector is
only just starting to come to grips with the challenges and complexities of securing access to international
markets. In this context, a key constraint to the further development of an export-oriented processed food
sector is the lack of compliance with international SPS measures in Cambodia.
Significant investment by both government and industry will be needed to improve the SPS and food
quality standards in Cambodia if the local sector is to shift from inwards-looking to export-oriented. As
soon as acceptable standards have been reached by key food processing facilities, a national brand /logo
that promotes Made in Cambodia should be established to support marketing initiatives on international
markets and trade fairs.
Availability & Quality of Labor Force
Labor costs are relatively low in Cambodia. However there is a general and widespread shortage of
skilled labor in Cambodia that can discourage investment across industry. While processing operations
reliant on manual labor may benefit from low wage conditions, modern processing plants that are most
likely able to target export markets will require skilled labor to service and manage more capital-intensive
operations. To avoid over-reliance on foreign labor for managers and technicians, introducing local
training requirements as part of operating licenses and/or investment requirements may create an added
incentive for the private sector to invest in local training programs.
Level of Processing Technology
The large and vibrant SME component of Cambodias processed food sector is characteristically set up
with small amounts of financial capital, low level technology, and unskilled labor. Further, household
SMEs often rely on unpaid family labor with little access to institutional finance, making it even harder to
adopt modern processing technologies. In this context, expanding access to institutional finance and
banking to rural areas would create significant opportunities to greatly improve the productivity of the
sector.

203

Interview with CP Foods, Phnom Penh: May 2012.

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For the larger commercial factories operating in the processed food sector, modern processing technology
is more widely utilized. However, access to export markets remains difficult due to a lack of widespread
certification in food safety (such as HACCP / GMP). Cambodias pursuit of increased production of
semi-processed or processed agricultural commodities (e.g. milled rice and cassava products) will help
create demand for post-harvest agribusiness such as grading, handling, laboratory, and logistics services
that will also complement the wider development of local agro-processing. However, investment in
internationally recognized food safety regimes should be a priority for the sector if exports are to drive
development and new export markets are to be secured.
Cost and Quality of Infrastructure
Poor transport (including highways, railways and ports) and storage infrastructure and the high cost of
energy in Cambodia discourage private investment in food processing facilities. Indeed, there is a risk to
the local processing industry that it is more cost-effective to export raw agricultural goods to Thailand and
Vietnam for onward-processing and then re-import the finish products for consumption in the local
market. This underscores the importance of developing a national action plan to support export-led
development of the processed food sector.
Efficiency of Domestic Support Industries
The processed food and beverage sectors are particularly dependent on the quality of raw agricultural
inputs supplied. In Cambodia, the seasonality of supply and a lack of available refrigerated transport
lower the overall consistency and quality of raw inputs and impede efforts to expand local processing
facilities.
While Cambodias agriculture sector is predominantly small-scale, the use of contract farming by
processors may be a useful means of securing more reliable inputs while also giving greater certainty in
terms of how individual business can manage respective inwards supply chains. Further, those raw
agricultural inputs considered poor quality may be still useful in the production of animal feed that could
be used to support the development of local livestock industries.
Domestic Demand
As the Cambodian economy grows and household consumption increases, the food processing industry
can be expected to grow at a faster pace. However, it will be important the Cambodian food processing
industry remains competitive in order to continue to service the local market and avoid loss of market
share to foreign imports.
Prospect for Domestic Supply Conditions
A number of agricultural sectors such as rice and cassava are enjoying encouraging increases in yields
and are pursuing export-oriented growth strategies. This will lead to improvements in both the quality and
availability of supply for processing industries.

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Policy and Regulatory Framework


Government Initiatives and Sector Policy
The processed food industry in Cambodia has not enjoyed the same level of strategic attention as other
sectors such as garments, tourism, and rice. Instead, issues relating to the processed food industry have
tended to be addressed through other industry development initiatives that happen to overlap with this
sector. While a broad SME Development Framework 2010-2015(Strategy 2015) is in place, it is largely
an internal strategy for the General Department of Industry rather than a national policy platform adopted
by RGC.
The Strategy 2015 framework does identify the lack of domestic investment along the value chain
especially in agro-industries as a major issue and points to the need for regulatory reforms to create an
enabling environment conducive to increased private sector interest in the sector.204 Other priorities for
industry development that have been identified include the need to increase marketing initiatives on a
global scale to help drive exports, to establish international standards across Cambodias manufacturing
sectors, and to better enforce of rules and regulations to protect business interests and investments.
The successful implementation of sector-specific policies including in relation to garments, tourism and,
most recently, rice underscores the importance of developing policy platforms backed by strong publicprivate sector engagement. For Cambodias processed food sector, a sector-specific national policy is
needed to drive export-led development. This policy will need to address important cross-cutting issues,
such as FDI, the environment, agriculture, trade, infrastructure, energy, SMEs, and vocational training.
Business Associations
While a Working Group on Agriculture & Agro-Industry does convene under the Government-Private
Sector Forum (G-PSF), no national business association specific to the processed food industry exists in
Cambodia. However, a number of commodity-specific associations do exist in the agriculture sector.
These associations (such as Rice Millers Associations) often seek to influence the whole supply chain, for
example, by working with farming communities to improve the quality and consistency of raw products
being supplied.
Due to the pressing need to establish a national policy platform to drive development of Cambodias
processed food sector, a national association is warranted and would serve as a useful mechanism for
public-private sector collaboration. Given the structure of Cambodias processed food sector, it will be
important that any such collaboration includes the interests of the thousands of SMEs with a stake in the
sectors future.

204

General Department of Industry, The Strategic Framework of the General Department of Industry (20102015) Concept
Paper, Phnom Penh: MIH, GDI May 2010

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Socio-Economic and Environmental Impacts


Current Employment and Job-Creation Prospect
In 2010, there were more than 31,400 registered SMEs in Cambodias processed food, beverage and
tobacco sector, employing more than 93,700 people.205Many of these are small household agro-processing
businesses, and typically engaged in grain milling (especially rice). With forward and backward supply
chain linkages, the processed food sector offers high multiplier effects in terms of job creation and value
addition in Cambodia.
Impact on Development of Disadvantaged Regions
The development of the SME sector is important to rural livelihoods in Cambodia because of its ability to
generate employment and income for poverty alleviation.Survey results confirm that access to markets,
particularly new markets, remains a challenge for SMEs due to limitedaccess to information, lack of
demand from SMEs, and the fact that SMEs do not have the capacity to pursue largermarkets.
It is quite common in Cambodia that when one enterprise succeeds, similar enterprises start up in close
proximitywith the hope of being successful too. Today, with too many similar businesses operating in the
same area, and notenough consumers/customers to go around, accessing new markets, whether within
Cambodia or internationally,is increasingly important for household and village-based SMEs.206
Contribution to Skill Development
For Cambodias vast number of SMEs operating in the processed food sector, opportunities for skill
development are limited. Empowering these businesses with the right tools to access and interpret market
information and identify new opportunities will therefore need to be a key component of Cambodias
strategy for export-led development of the food-processing sector. The larger commercial-oriented food
processing businesses that have foreign investor backing are known to, at least occasionally, invest in staff
training activities in order reduce reliance on skilled labor from overseas. Such initiatives should be
encouraged as part of wider government efforts to entice future investment in the sector.207
Energy and Water Constraints and Environmental Impact
Electricity prices in Cambodia are considered the highest in the ASEAN region. By way of comparison,
the average price of electricity in Cambodia is $0.18 per kilowatt/hour, and prices are as high as $0.90 per
kilowatt/hour in remote rural areas. This compares to around $0.054 per kilowatt/hour in Vietnam.208
The price of electricity is a major deterrent to foreign investors and undermines Cambodias ability to
205

Council for the Development of Cambodia, Cambodia Investment Guidebook, Phnom Penh: CDC, 2012.
International Finance Corporation, Understanding Cambodian Small and Medium Enterprise Needs for Financial Services and
Products, Phnom Penh: IFC, 2010.
207
Interview with CP Foods, Phnom Penh: May 2012.
208
Sotharith, Chap, Industrial Readjustment in Cambodia, BRC Research Report No.7, Bangkok Research Center, IDE-JETRO,
Bangkok: IDE-JETRO, 2012.
206

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compete with neighboring countries such as Thailand and Vietnam including in the processed food and
related industries.
As the processed food sector expands, it will also need to be conscious of its environmental impact, not
only at the enterprise-level, but also up and down the supply chain. For example, a processing facility will
need to be mindful of the environmental impact of any raw agricultural inputs it sources. Similarly, waste
products from agro-processing need to be carefully managed and, in this context there is real opportunity
to address high electricity costs through use of alternative technology, such as the use of by-products as
biofuel. As been trialed in the milled rice sector, generating power from organic materials by combining
effective waste management with clean technology could contribute substantially to lowering costs in
processing facilities in the future.
Box 10.1: ASEAN & Regional Integration
Given the right policies and strategic plans, Cambodia can position itself as a reliable supplier of key
agro-food products to the growing number of middle-class consumers in the Asia region. Worldwide,
millions of people are likely to move out of poverty and the middle class is predicted to grow from
1.8 billion in 2010 to 3.2 billion in 2020 and 4.9 billion in 2030. Upwards of 85 percent of this growth
will be in Asia.
As incomes grow in the region, diets will shift toward including more animal products such as fish,
meat and dairy products, which in turn increases the demand for animal feed and grains. As an
emerging agricultural exporter in South East Asia, these changing global dynamics in world food trade
present an important opportunity for Cambodia to develop a viable and export-oriented processed food
industry. Wedged between two large regional food exporters Thailand and Vietnam Cambodia
also has an opportunity to become more closely integrated in the regional supply chain. This will
require the vast quantities of agricultural products (such as rice, cassava and fish) that are currently
traded informally across these borders to reverse direction and enter the formal economy. This will
provide further opportunities for value-addition such as through the production of cassava starch, a
major ingredient in both the global food and animal feed industries.
Regional integration is already taking place at an investment-level, with modest but growing FDIlevels from within the ASEAN region being recorded in Cambodias processed food sector. While
these larger commercial food processing operations are still focused on servicing the domestic market
in Cambodia, they may well serve as useful platform on which to drive export-led development of the
sector. It will be important also that Cambodias vast numbers of SMEs in the processed food sector
are given an opportunity to diversify, expand production, and share in the dividends of export-led
development.

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Conclusion
The main findings from this chapter are summarized in the SWOT analysis that follows.
Strengths

Weaknesses

The development of a local processed food sector


complements Cambodias economic profile as a
large and growing producer of agricultural goods.
The processed food sector is dominated by a very
large number of SMEs at household and village
level, generating direct livelihood benefits.
The processed food industry important for both
export market development and import-substitution
production of selected consumer goodsgenerating
income from value-adding as well as diverting cash
outflows from the economy.
Increased exports of agricultural commodities will
create demand for post-harvest agribusinesssuch
as grading, handling and logisticsand support the
wider development of local agro-processing.
Seasonal surpluses of highly perishable agricultural
goods (such as fruit and vegetables) are well suited
to further processing.
Agricultural production of low qualityunsuitable
for use in processed foodcan be used in production
of animal feed and support the development of local
livestock industries.
Cambodias extensive fish resource supports a fish
processing industry that focuses on meeting
traditional consumer preferences in the domestic
market (with limited exports to the ASEAN region).
Cambodias emergence as significant producer of
cassava has created an opportunity for increased
production of processed and semi-processed cassava
productsincluding pellets for animal feed and
flour/starch for the global food processing industries.

A major constraint to development of an exportoriented processed food sector in Cambodia is the


lack of compliance with international SPS standards.
Inconsistent and generally low quality of raw
agricultural products impedes efforts to expand local
processing facilities.
Informal export of many raw agricultural goods
further reduces access to inputs for food processors.
Often more cost-effective to export raw agricultural
goods to Thailand and Vietnam for processing and
then re-import finished product for local market.
Poor transport and storage infrastructure and the high
cost of energy in Cambodia discourage private
investment in food processing facilities.
Limited access to finance impedes SME expansion in
the processed food industry.
Cambodian agriculture sector predominantly smallscale farms with very limited contract farming
available for food and beverage processors to secure
reliable supplies of raw inputs.
Despite the large size of the poultry sector, smallscale farms make little use of support services such
as animal health, advisory, and technical services.
Despite an attractive FDI regime there has been
relatively little foreign interest in investing in
Cambodias processed food sector compared to other
industries such as garments and tourism.
Low availability of skilled labor discourages
investment.
Lack of information on processed food trade in
Southeast Asia impedes strategic investment and
efforts to expand processed food exports exports
(especially for household and village-level SMEs).
Tariff preferences generally not as favorable for
processed agricultural goods.

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Opportunities

Threats

As the Cambodian economy grows and household


consumption increases, the food processing industry
can be expected to grow at a faster pace.
With much of the food processing taking place at the
household or village level, the prospects for
continued growth in demand for value-added food
offers important food security and poverty reduction
outcomes for Cambodia.
With forward and backward supply chain linkages,
the processed food sector offers high multiplier
effects in terms of job creation and value addition.
Modern cultivation practices and agro-industry
supply chains are still in development in Cambodia,
offering scope for development of export-oriented
organic food industryespecially in sub-sectors
such as milled rice, soybeans, cashews, fruits, spices,
and palm sugar. Incentives that encourage use of
locally produced raw agricultural goods in food
processing sector could substantially boost industrial
development in Cambodia.
Improved disease management and securing an
FMD-free zone would offer scope for development
of meat export markets.
With appropriate policy settings and strategic
investments, Cambodia can be well placed to support
the growing food demands and changing consumer
preferences of nearby markets in Southeast Asia,
possibly including demand for Halal food.

Processed food sector expands on the back of


imported agricultural inputsdenying the local
farmers an opportunity to improve earnings and
diversify supply chains.
Larger food processing facilitieschoose not to rely on
smaller, resourcepoorfarmers for raw inputsthe
latter are left out of supply chains and the socioeconomic benefits of a processed food industry are
potentially reduced.
Failure of local food processors to link up with larger
multinational companies would undermine efforts to
better understand international markets as reduce the
prospect of significant export earnings.
Cambodias consumer preferences shift to imported
international brands of processed food and beverage
products.
Failure to entice substantial FDI in food processing
sector would deny local sector access to global value
chains, technology and finance.

Recommendations
Cambodias processed food and associated industries are at an important cross-road. While current
production levels are relatively small and focused mostly on servicing the domestic market, there is a clear
opportunity for Cambodia to position itself as supplier of key agro-food products on international markets.
This will require significant structural changes to the industry and a renewed approach to industry
development specific to the processed food sector.
The overarching catalyst for action in developing an export-oriented processed food sector will be the
creation and implementation of a national policy platform and strategic plan for the sectors expansion.
Similar approaches have been taken elsewhere (such as the RGCs national policy for the rice sector) and
serve as a useful model for how to organize government and industry stakeholders and develop cohesive
action plans that are realistic and practical.209 First and foremost, a national industry association is needed
that represents the key stakeholders (large and small) in the processed food sector to facilitate closer
public-private sector collaboration.
A national policy platform together with regulatory reforms will help create a business environment
conducive to further investment in Cambodias food processing sector. Where appropriate, partnerships
209

Refer to Promotion of Paddy Production and Rice Export 2010 as discussed in Chapter 12.

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with foreign investors that have expertise in food processing and export market development should be
encouraged.
Indeed, a modern processed food sector will not emerge from Cambodias cottage food processing
industry, but will require large domestic and foreign investors with experience in the sector. Such largescale investment and expansion will also help restructure the local industry, create greater awareness and
understanding of international markets, and highlight the importance of meeting the Good Manufacturing
Practices (GMP) and HACCP standards that are expected.
While there is a clear trend toward more processing activities taking place in specific agro-industries
such as rice, cassava, and fish the absence of a national strategic approach to food processing
development is holding back the industry. In developing a national policy platform and action plan for the
sector, a comprehensive review and detailed stock-taking of current processing activities will be needed.
This will require strong public-private sector collaboration that is not present currently in the sector. Such
an approach will help build a stronger body of industry knowledge on which to base regulatory reforms
and targeted policy incentives needed to drive export-led growth in the sector.
There are significant changes underway in the dynamics of global food trade and unprecedented expected
growth in demand for food products in the Asia region. This presents Cambodia with an ideal opportunity
to transform its processed food sector over the medium-term, grow and diversify its industries, and
develop new export markets.
Possible Actions to address some of the sectors current limitations and opportunities for further
significant progress are identified in the Trade SWAp Roadmap under Outcome #10.

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Chapter 11
FISHERIES
Background
Cambodias fisheries sector is inextricably linked to the countrys history, environment, and culture. The
sector is a major contributor to food security and freshwater fish is the largest source of animal protein for
most Cambodians. It is estimated the average person consumes around 50 kg of fish per year, making
Cambodia one of the largest per capita consumers of fish in the world.210
The Mekong River and the Tonle Sap Great Lake create a vast inland water system that extends into
flooded forests, grasslands, rice fields, and swamps. This water resource supports extensive inland
capture fisheries in Cambodia, playing a very important role in rural livelihoods and the national
economy. Further, policy reforms implemented over the past decade have significantly expanded local
communities access to freshwater fisheries, and instituted a system that establishes community-based
management. In comparison, Cambodias marine capture and aquaculture industries are relatively small,
although have the potential to contribute significantly to national income and export revenue into the
future.
The annual production of the fisheries sector (including harvesting, processing and trading)was estimated
between $1.2 and $1.6 billion in 2009, contributing around 10 to 12 percent of GDP.211 Because of the
limits to wild fish stocks and growing demand for fish products, aquaculture is likely to provide an
increasingly important contribution to domestic fish supplies and export revenue.

Export Performance
Types of Exported Products
Recorded fish exports include freshwater species from Cambodias vast inland fisheries as well as marine
catch. Fish products are predominantly exported in chilled or frozen form, although some small volumes
of fish sauce are exported to regional markets. Some exporters specialize in live fish exports with high
value fish such as the Marbled Sand Goby especially popular in Asian markets.

210

Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry, Fishery Administration, Fisheries Statistics, Phnom Penh: MAFF/FiA, 2011.
Presentation by Deputy Director of Cambodias Inland Fisheries Research and Development Institute (IFReDI), Mr Hap Navy,
Implications for Smallholders in Fisheries Sector in Cambodia, Chang Mai: 26 July 2012.

211

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Exports
Cambodias recorded exports of fish exports in 2012 were 21,000 MT, down from 35,000 MT in 2010.212
Despite the fall in volumes, export revenue rose from $40 million in 2010 to $60 million in 2011 on the
back of higher international prices.213
However, actual exports are likely significantly higher as most of Cambodias fish exports are informal
and unrecorded. For example, large quantities of freshwater species are traded informally with Thailand
and Vietnam. Exports of Cambodias marine catch are also significantly under-reported. This is due to
licensed vessels trading catch at sea rather than at port, as well as the prevalence of unlicensed foreign
vessels operating in Cambodias Exclusive Economic Zone. However, it is likely informal exports of
inland fish are significantly larger than those from marine resources.
Current Export Destinations
The main export markets are Thailand and Vietnam, however, much of this trade is informal and
unrecorded. Other key export markets are Singapore, Malaysia, Hong Kong, China (live fish), Taiwan,
Japan (particularly frozen shrimp), the US (an important market for frozen fish, fish fillet, fish boil and
salted dry fish) as well as Australia. Some of Cambodias fish exports to regional markets in Asia seem
relatively well established with regular trade occurring yearly. In contrast, fish exports to the US and
Australian markets appear more irregular and sporadic. This suggests trade ties with these important
markets remain under-developed, possibly due to stringent SPS requirements.
Potential Export Destinations
The high value markets of the US, EU countries, Japan, Korea, account for the top ten global importers of
fish products (see Table 11.2.) Other major importing markets for fish products (see Table 11.3) include
several countries from the region, many with current trade ties with Cambodias fisheries sector, as well as
farther markets (such as Russia, Brazil, or Nigeria.) In this regard, at this stage in the development of the
sector, efforts might include growing trade volumes to current export markets especially Hong Kong,
China, Malaysia, Singapore, or even Japan or developing new markets in some of those farther
destinations especially if their standards requirements are easier to manage.
Trade Balance
Historically, given strong consumer preferences for local freshwater fish, imports of fish products have
been small around 18 000MT each year making Cambodia a slight net exporter of fish.214 However,
much like fish exports, it is estimated significant quantities of imported fish are informal and unrecorded.

212

Compiled from FiA Annual Reports, Phnom Penh: MAFF/FiA, 2007 to 2012.
As reported in an interview with Mr Nao Thouk, (Director of the FiA) in the Phnom Penh Post, Fish Exports Fall in plan to
Increase Production, Phnom Penh: 4 January 2012.
214
Kim Leang, I., The Importation of Fish into Cambodia, MAFF Working Paper, Phnom Penh: MAFF, 2006
213

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Dynamism of Exports
The decline in Cambodias fish export volumes from 2010 to 2012 has been attributed to the abolition of
commercial fishing lots in mid-2012 as part of wider government reforms to improve the sustainability of
the sector and preserve rural livelihoods dependent on the inland fisheries sectors viability.
In terms of seasonality, Cambodias inland capture fisheries are particularly reliant on the flood season.
Traditionally, the Great Lake is the spawning ground for many fish habitats that migrate through the Tonle
Sap River when the lake expands with floodwaters usually by a factor of four to six times from its level
during the dry season. Fluctuations in the scale, timing, and duration of each flood season therefore
influence freshwater fish populations and available export supplies.
Export Prospect
Given strong consumer preference for local freshwater fish products and growing pressures on wild fish
stocks, future export growth is more likely to come from expansion of Cambodias aquaculture industry
(fresh water or marine.) This could lead to significantly increased capacity to target key segments of the
global fish trade such as shrimp and pangasius (catfish) in which Thailand and Vietnam are key
suppliers.As noted earlier, in the short-medium term, the best prospect for increasing fish exports may be
to target markets in the region where Cambodia has already established a consistent trade profile or target
new, far distant markets especially if their standard requirements are easier to meet by the sector. In the
longer term, on-going efforts by industry and fisheries authorities to comply with EU regulatory and SPS
requirements may open up access for Cambodian fish exporters to the EU markets the largest fish
importing market in the world by value, but this is likely to take time to materialize.

World Market Conditions


Market Access Conditions
Owing to the high perishable nature of fish and fishery products, 90 percent of trade in fish and fishery
products in quantity terms (live weight equivalent) consists of processed products (i.e. excluding live and
fresh whole fish.) Fish are increasingly traded as frozen food (39 percent of the total quantity in 2010,
compared with 25 percent in 1980.)215
Trade liberalization has reduced tariff barriers, increasing developing countries access to developed
country markets. However, the main barrier to increased exports is no longer tariff barriers but the
difficulties developing countries such as Cambodia face in meeting the importing markets quality and
safety-related requirements. As more than 70 percent of seafood trade is destined for three main markets
(the European Union, the US and Japan), these markets are important regulatory reference points and
represent a more complex regulatory regime for potential exporters.However, this does not mean that
215

FAO, State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture 2012, Rome: FAO, 2012.

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export opportunities cannot be pursued elsewhere, especially to regional markets (ASEAN, Hong Kong,
China and Taiwan) where demand for fish imports is growing very rapidly or to markets where less
onerous SPS and regulatory regimes may exist.
Stringent EU regulations require countries to establish a Competent Authority. This means Cambodias
fisheries sector is unable to take advantage of the duty free access it is afforded until such Authority is
established and approved by EU.216 Current efforts to have Cambodias Fisheries Administration (FiA)
recognized as a Competent Authority that meets EU regulatory requirements, together with parallel
capacity building actions at the processors level, should help remove a substantial barrier to increased
export earnings.
While regulatory requirements for other markets such as the US, Canada, or Australia may be less
onerous and do not mandate a Competent Authority be established to meet the requirements of each
importing country, stringent health, hygiene and SPS certification standards must still be met. In addition,
individual processing plants will need to be certified by the importing countrys SPS agency before
exports of fisheries products can commence.
As future export growth in Cambodias fisheries sector is likely to come for the emerging aquaculture
sector, effective disease management practices will need to be adopted as intensively farmed fish and
shellfish are naturally susceptible to bacterial, fungal, and parasitic infections. Overall, a clear industry
strategy backed by Government is needed across Cambodias fisheries subsectors to increase the food
safety and regulatory compliance with international standards.217
Major Competitors
Key exporting and importing markets vary depending on the type of fish product being traded. Table 11.1
below outlines the main participants in each of the key segments of global fish trade.
Cultured fish products from aquaculture production now accounts for 37 percent of global fish trade and
this is expected to increase further given concerns of over-exploitation of many of the worlds wild fish
stocks.218 China is by far the leading aquaculture producer, accounting for about two thirds of world
aquaculture production. The other major aquaculture producing countries are India, Vietnam, Indonesia,
Thailand, and Bangladesh.

216

A number of conditions must be met to obtain approval, such as ensuring compliance with standards such as antibiotics
residues, hygiene and health certification in line with the OIE standards. See Kees van der Meer Laura L. Ignacio, SPS Balance
Sheet for Cambodia, Research work for the Standards and Trade Development Facility, Phnom Penh: STDF, 2008.
217
See chapter 4
218
FAO, State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture 2012, Rome: FAO, 2012.

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Table 11.1: Key Segments of Global Fish Trade


Fish Product
Shrimp
Salmon
(Atlantic & Pacific)

Main Exporters

Main Importers

Thailand, China,
Vietnam
Norway, Chile

US, Japan

- Accounts for 15 percent of global fish


trade.
- Accounts for 14 percent of global fish
trade.
- Farmed salmon accounts for 70 percent of
global salmon trade.
- Accounts for 10 percent of global fish
trade.
- Popular in Scandinavian and EU markets.
- Accounts for 4 percent of global fish
trade.

Japan, China

Ground Fish
(e.g. Cod / Haddock)

Denmark, Norway,
Sweden

Denmark, France, Spain

Cephalopods
(e.g. squid, octopus)

Thailand, Spain, China,


Morocco

Spain, Italy, Japan

Vietnam Thailand

US, EU,
Australia

Pangasius
(Freshwater fish species
often labelled basa)

Comment

- Accounts for <1 percent of global fish


trade but fastest growing segment.
- In top 10 of fish species purchased in key
markets such as US and EU.
- Low-cost aquaculture product from
Vietnam, popular with price-sensitive
consumers in developed markets

Source:Extracted from FAO, The State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture

Table 11.2: Top 10 Exporters & Importers of Fish and Fishery Products, 20002010
Top 10 Exporters
2000
2010
$ Millions

Top 10 Importers
2000
2010

APR
percent

China

3,603

13,268

13.9

Norway

3,533

8,817

Thailand

4,367

7,128

Vietnam

1,481

USA

$ Millions

APR
percent

USA

10,451

15,496

4.0

9.6

Japan

15,513

14,973

-0.4

5.0

Spain

3,352

6,637

7.1

5,109

13.2

China

1,796

6,162

13.1

3,055

4,661

4.3

France

2,984

5,983

7.2

Denmark

2,756

4,147

4.2

Italy

2,535

5,449

8.0

Canada

2,818

3,843

3.1

Germany

2,262

5,037

8.3

Netherlands

1,344

3,558

10.2

UK

2,184

3,702

5.4

Spain

1,597

3,396

7.8

Sweden

709

3,316

16.7

Chile

1,794

3,394

6.6

Korea

1,385

3,193

8.7

26,348

57,321

8.1

43,171

69,949

10.3

Rest of the
World

29,401

51,242

5.7

33,740

41,837

2.2

World Total

55,749

108,563

6.9

76,911

111,786

6.4

Top 10 Total

Top 10
Total
Rest of the
World
World
Total

Source:FAO, The State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture 2012


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Table 11.3: Other Key Importing Markets of Fish and Fish


Products, $ Billions, 2012
Hong Kong ($3.1bn)
Thailand ($2.8bn)
Vietnam ($2.4bn)
Russia ($2.4bn)
Canada ($1.9bn)

Nigeria ($1.4bn)
Brazil ($1.2bn)
Malaysia ($0.9bn)
Australia ($0.8bn)
Singapore ($0.7bn)

Source: TradeMap
World Market Prospect
Fish and fishery products are among the most traded food commodities worldwide. Between 1976 and
2011, global trade in fish and fishery products grew significantly, rising from $8 billion to $125 billion.219
Higher prices and increased demand from developing countries has driven global fish trade over the past
five years despite the weak economic conditions in many developed markets.
The factors that might influence the sustainability and growth of fishery trade include the evolution of
production and transportation costs as well as the prices of fishery products and substitute commodities,
including meat and feeds.
The fishery market is very dynamic and it is changing rapidly. It is becoming much more complex and
stratified, with greater diversification among species and product forms. High-value species such as
shrimp, prawns, salmon, tuna, ground fish, flat fish, seabass, and seabream are highly traded, in particular
towards high income markets. Low-value species such as small pelagic are also traded in large quantities,
mainly to developing countries. In the last two decades, aquaculture has contributed to a growing share
of the international trade in fishery commodities, with species such as shrimp, prawns, salmon, molluscs,
tilapia, catfish (including Pangasius), seabass, and seabream.
Notwithstanding their perishability, trade in live, fresh, and chilled fish represented 10 percent of world
fish trade in 2010, up from 7 percent in 1980, reflecting improved logistics and increased demand for
unprocessed fish.220

Domestic Supply Conditions


Producers
In recent years there has been a sizeable shift in the production scale of Cambodias inland fisheries
sectors. Table 11.4 below outlines the diminishing role of commercial-scale inland fisheries production as
219 FAO, State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture 2012, Rome: FAO, 2012.
220
FAO, State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture 2012, Rome: FAO, 2012.

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a proportion of Cambodias total annual catch and the increasing role of small-scale family-based
production. In contrast, the contribution of rice-field production, aquaculture, and marine capture to
Cambodias total annual catch has been relatively stable over the same period.
Table 11.4: Share of Annual Catch by Type of Fisheries
Production Type
Inland fisheries
- Medium-Large (Commercial)
- Small-scale (Family)
- Rice-field
Aquaculture
Marine Capture

20002010 Average
76%
35%
20%
21%
10%
14%

2012
74%
15%
39%
20%
11%
15%

Source:2000-2010 data from IFReDI, Fisheries Resources in Cambodia, Phnom Penh:


2011and 2012 data from MAFF, Annual Report 2012

Between 2000 and 2010 commercial-scale inland fisheries production accounted for an average of 35
percent of Cambodias total annual catch, with small-scale family-based production accounting for 20
percent over the same period. By 2012, commercial-scale production had fallen to 15 percent of
Cambodias total annual catch, with small-scale production rising to 39 percent in the same year.
This change coincides also with the RGCs announcement in 2012 to abolish all remaining commercial
fishing lots with fishing areas either returned to Community Fisheries organizations or set aside as
sanctuaries to promote regeneration of wild fish stocks. The practice of co-management of Cambodias
inland water resources through the use of Community Fisheries organizations has given greater voice to
small-scale fishers and has heralded an important step forward in the sustainable use of these natural water
resources.
Production Capacity
Cambodias inland freshwater fisheries are among the most productive in the world due to the presence of
large floodplains around the Great Lake and along the Tonle Sap and Mekong Rivers. Cambodias inland
fisheries are estimated to be the fourth largest in the world on the basis of total catch, after China, India,
and Bangladesh. In 2012, total catch from inland fisheries reached 509,000MT, representing more than 74
percent of Cambodias total fisheries catch. In contrast, the marine capture fisheries (99,000MT in 2012)
and aquaculture (74,000MT in 2012) is small compared to other countries in Southeast Asia.

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Table 11.5: Inland, Marine, and Aquaculture Production in MT, 2007-2012


Year
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012

Inland Catch
395,000
365,000
390,000
405,000
445,000
509,000

Marine Catch
63,500
66,000
75,000
85,000
91,000
99,000

Aquaculture
35,260
40,000
50,000
60,000
71,930
74,000

Total Catch
493,760
471,000
515,000
550,000
608,000
682,000

Source:MAFF Fisheries Administration , Annual Report 2012


Cambodias inland fisheries productivity stems from the annual inundation by the Mekong River of the
large floodplains in central Cambodia. However, increasing pressures on these inland water resources has
led to a decline in the average fish catch rate in the Tonle Sap region, falling from 347kg/fisher in 1940 to
116kg/fisher in 2008, a 70 percent decrease over seven decades.221 These pressures are also evident in the
increasing dominance of small-sized fish (with lower economic value) that was estimated to account for
85 percent of Cambodias total catch in 2011.222 The current moratorium on commercial fishing lots
provides an opportunity for a more sustainable management regime for Cambodias inland water
resources to be developed in partnership with fishing communities dependent on these resources.
Cambodias marine capture sector faces similar over-fishing pressures that are exacerbated by the illegal
activities of unlicensed foreign vessels operating in the EEZ. The economic prospects of the sector are
also affected by the practice of local fisherman trading deep-sea catch at sea to larger Thai, Vietnamese,
and Hong Kong vessels, bypassing Cambodias markets and on-shore processing facilities. Increased
resources and capacity for Cambodia to patrol and monitor its marine fish resources could lower the
significant quantity of fish harvested by foreign vessels as well as discourage the practice of deep-sea
trading. Improved regional cooperation among the Gulf of Thailand countries could help with wider
efforts to more sustainably manage this important fisheries resource. Similarly, improved regulation of
marine catch and more efficient fishing practices could also ease the pressure on marine fish stocks.
Expansion of the aquaculture sector provides an opportunity to reduce the fishing pressures on wild stock,
while also providing future export capacity. Historically, the aquaculture sector has been primarily
focused on shrimp and freshwater fish with production family-based or in conjunction with small-scale
farming. However, given the likely supply constraints facing inland and coastal fisheries, aquaculture will
become essential to the future of Cambodias fish supply.223 The opening of the Marine Aquaculture
Research and Development Centre (MARDeC) in 2012 might help the sector grow rapidly.However,
experience elsewhere in South East Asia suggests the use of private hatcheries to produce and distribute
fingerlings will be key to the development of a sustainable and profitable aquaculture sector in Cambodia.
221

Inland Fisheries Research Development Institute (IFReDI), Fisheries Resources in Cambodia - Current Status, Key Issues &
Directions, Phnom Penh: IFReDI, 2009.
222
IFReDI, Fisheries Resources in Cambodia, Phnom Penh: IFReDI, 2011.
223
World Fish Centre, Fish Supply and Demand Scenarios in Cambodia, 2011.

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Ultimately, as in other markets in the region, it will be feed availability and low fish production costs that
stimulate the aquaculture sector in Cambodia.224
Quality of Product
The bulk of Cambodias inland fish production is sold through small villages and markets. The use of ice
in these markets is limited with much of the produce sold live or in a fermented or dried form. Poor roads
and lack of electricity also make the storage and transportation of fish products difficult and hampers
efforts to maintain international standards of quality and food hygiene that are essential attributes for
accessing lucrative export markets. Increased institutional capacity for fish inspection and enforcement of
quality and food safety standards is required to grow export revenue.
Availability & Quality of Labor Force
FiA statistics for 2009 suggest that over 420 000 people were employed in the fisheries sector, accounting
for almost 5% of the Cambodian workforce.225 Many more Cambodians especially in rural areas
participate in the fisheries sector on a part-time basis or for subsistence purposes (particularly during the
wet season). As a traditional sector with a long history there is a significant knowledge base of fisheries
species and habitats across Cambodia in remote areas, coastal zones, and along the large inland
waterways.The development of commercial-scale aquaculture sector in Cambodia would provide an
important source of rural employment and may mitigate migration to urban centers.
Level of Processing Technology
The fish processing industry is small and predominantly household-oriented, reflecting Cambodias
centuries old tradition of processing freshwater fish. The FiA estimates that 85,000 tons of freshwater fish
and 6,200 tons of marine fish were processed in Cambodia in 2012. The fish processing sector is focused
largely on supplying the domestic market, with 7,000 tons (or 7.5 percent) exported in 2012.226
Due to the seasonality of inland capture fisheries, processing fish products is a means of managing the
irregularity of supply. The most common products being fish paste, fish sauce, salted dry fish, fermented
fish, and smoked fish. There is increasing demand for sun-dried fish for animal feed, including for export
to Vietnam. Processed fish products from high-value fish species are exported to regional markets.
There are four freezing plants in Cambodia to process fish, all of which hold export permits. One plant is
in Phnom Penh to service inland fisheries catch and three are in Shihanouk Province to service marine
catch. However, the seasonality of supply of inland fisheries catch and lack of consistent supply from
marine capture inhibit efforts to expand output or reliably service export markets.
Overall, investment in both harvest and post-harvest technology to meet international standards could
provide a catalyst for improved access to export markets. The planned expansion of Cambodias
224

FAO, Analysis of Aquaculture Development in Southeast Asia: A Policy Perspective, Rome: FAO, 2009
FAO, National Fishery Sector Overview Cambodia, Rome: FAO, 2011
226
MAFF, Annual Report, Phnom Penh:MAFF, 2012.
225

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aquaculture sector could also provide the consistency of supply to make commercial processing (including
freezing) more economical.
Cost and Quality of Infrastructure
In many rural areas poor roads and a lack of electricity make the storage and transportation of fisheries
products difficult and more expensive vis--vis competitors in Thailand and Vietnam. Frozen fish is
exported through the seaport of Sihanoukville and fresh and live fish is exported via Phnom Penh
International Airport.
Domestic Demand
It is estimated the average Cambodian consumes around 50kg of fish per year, with the population in the
Tonle Sap region consuming as much as 80kg of fish per year.227 Cambodians have a strong preference
for freshwater fish and domestic demand is expected to increase with population growth. However, as
incomes rise, consumer preferences are shifting away from preserved fish products toward consumption of
live and fresh fish. However, for those with no access to refrigeration preserved fish products (mainly
prahoc) will remain the mainstay of the daily diet. Domestic consumption of marine fisheries products
is low and most marine fisheries products are exported.
Prospect for Domestic Supply Conditions
Increased government and industry investment in research and development would enhance efforts to
promote fish processing technology and minimize post-harvest losses. As aquaculture becomes more
important to Cambodias future fish supply, there will be increased demand for better technical, market
and financial services. Support to better organize rural and fishing communities will also improve
capacity to deliver extension services and help fishers access to inputs and markets.

Policy and Regulatory Environment


Government Initiatives and Sector Policy
Given the importance of the fisheries sector to Cambodias rural livelihoods, food security, and
contribution to the national economy creating a sustainable fisheries sector is a national priority. A series
of policy reforms implemented over the past decade have significantly expanded local communities
access to freshwater fisheries, and instituted a system that enables community-based management. Key
actions have included (1) reducing (and in 2012 abolishing) commercial fishing lots; (2) creating a
dedicated department to support Community Fisheries; (3) building capacity of community fishery
organizations; and, (4) revising the fisheries law and adopting regulations that establish the legal authority
of community fishery organizations to manage designated fishing grounds.
227

MAFF/FiA, Fisheries Statistics 2011, Phnom Penh: MAFF/FiA, 2012

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The Strategic Planning Framework for Fisheries 2010-2019 seeks to achieve the national goals of
environmental fisheries protection and conservation of biodiversity in order to secure the sustainable use
of fisheries resources for current and future generations. In this framework, the Fisheries Administration
defines goals that encompass the RGCs vision for the future of the sector. These goals include
(1) maintaining a sustainable contribution of fisheries and aquaculture production to national prosperity;
(2) improving livelihoods and resilience in the fisheries sector, sustainable management of the fisheries
domain and associated resources, and sustaining abundant fish supply as a valuable source of food; (3)
promoting sustainable, profitable and responsible business development in the sector; (4) collaborating
closely with neighboring countries for fisheries management, development and conservation; and (5)
enabling appropriate policy and regulatory environment to support the fisheries sector.228
Implementation of national fisheries policies has yielded significant progress and enabled a more povertyfocused approach to managing Cambodias fisheries resources. For example, access to inland freshwater
and marine resources for the rural poor has been supported through the establishment of 468 Community
Fisheries with 126,360 families countrywide.229
While these policy initiatives and strategic plans have been important steps toward more sustainable
management of Cambodias fisheries resources, closer collaboration between Government and industry
will be needed to create a more export-oriented value chain especially in relation to aquaculture
development and marine capture fisheries.
Business Associations
Cambodias three fisheries resources inland catch, marine catch, and aquaculture are three distinct
fishing supply chains. A recent objective of RGC is to promote the development of a more dynamic and
export-oriented private sector in Cambodias fisheries. For example, the Fisheries Administration (FiA)
has been assisting by organizing small producer associations in the three main coastal provinces Koh
Kong, Kampot and Kompong Som. Similarly, the practice of co-management of Cambodias inland water
resources through the use of Community Fisheries organizations (that have been backed by government
legislation) has also given greater voice to small-scale fishers and enhanced the sustainable use of inland
water resources. While these have been important steps toward creating better-organized marine fisheries
and small-scale inland fishers, closer collaboration between Government and industry is needed to deliver
a more export-oriented value chain.
The establishment of a single national association that encompasses the export interests of each of the
three fisheries sectors would help drive the export-led development of Cambodias fisheries. A national
association representing the interests of key stakeholders (including both small and commercial-size
fishers and processors) would help drive private sector collaboration, investment, and export-oriented
industry reform.

228

Extract from CDRI, Policy Coherence in Agricultural and Rural Development: Cambodia,Working Paper Series No. 55,
Phnom Penh: CDRI, July 2011.
229
Japanese International Cooperation Agency, Cambodia Investment Guidebook, Phnom Penh: JICA, 2010.

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Closer collaboration between Cambodian fish processors is particularly important and established
cooperatives in each of the freshwater, marine, and aquaculture sectors would provide an additional
catalyst for export market development. In particular, processor cooperatives could be used to improve
export readiness across Cambodias fisheries sectors through: (i) identification of markets, development of
market contacts, match-making with import buyers, trade missions and trade fairs; (2) becoming SPS
compliant to meet requirements of high-value export markets; (3) identifying possible negative
environmental impacts and possible mitigations as appropriate; and (4) branding and marketing of exports.
Current proposals to trial export readiness programs in a select number of small and medium-size marine
fish processors may serve as a useful guide to more widespread adoption of export strategies in
Cambodias fisheries sectors.

Socio-Economic and Environmental Impacts


Current Employment and Job Creation Prospect
With few barriers to entry working in the fishing sector is, for many, a job of last resort. As a result, the
overall development and sustainability of the sector can have profound economic consequences for the
rural poor and Cambodias most vulnerable. Greater access to international markets and improved
economic returns could lead to welfare benefits for up to 420,000 people that work directly in Cambodias
fisheries sector. Reforms to the fisheries sector over the past decade have also returned vast fishery
resources to the rural poor including through the establishment of 468 Community Fisheries involving
more than 126,000 families nationwide. Future growth of both small-scale and large commercial aquaculture
will provide further employment opportunities in a sector where overall fishing effort in fragile inland and
marine eco-systems will need to be carefully managed.
Regional Impact
Cambodias fisheries provide permanent employment for up to 420 000 people, with participation in the
sector increasing significantly during the wet season when many rural households undertake fishing for
subsistence purposes.230Map 11.1 below provides an indication of Cambodias vast inland waterways that
swell four to six times in size during the annual wet season. Thirteen of the twenty-one provinces of
Cambodia are considered fishing provinces and more than 3 million Cambodians, about 25 percent of the
population, live in the six provinces bordering the Tonle Sap Great Lake.231In contrast, Cambodias
coastline is relatively small, with most marine and coastal fisheries activities limited to Koh Kong,
Kampot and Kompong Som (home to the major deep-water port town of Sihanoukville.)

230

FAO, National Fishery Sector Overview Cambodia, Rome: FAO, 2011.


Cambodian Institute for Cooperation and Peace, A Competition Study in The Fishery Sector in Cambodia, Working Paper No.
13, Phnom Penh: CICP, 2006.
231

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Map
Provincesin
inCambodia,
Cambodia,2012
2012
Map 11.1:
11.1: Major
Major Fishing
Fishing Provinces

Source:
Source: Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry
Gender
Fish processing and trade are often conducted in addition to fishing and/or farming, therefore provide an
additional source of income for many households. Fish marketing and trade provide one of the few
opportunities for women and poor households who live in and near the Tonle Sap Lake areas to increase
household income.Increased access to international markets has the potential to increase prices received
for fish catch and improve livelihoods for fishers. However, as a mainstay of the national diet higher fish
prices also has the potential to adversely affect low-income Cambodians.
Contribution to Skill Development
While Cambodias inland fisheries sector relies predominantly on the traditional fishing techniques of
small-scale fishers, the future growth and expansion of the sector will rely heavily on development of a
significant aquaculture sector. This will require significant investment in extension services to train rural
families in small-scale aquaculture production.

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Energy and Water Constraints and Environmental Impact


The high cost of electricity significantly impedes the competitiveness of Cambodias fish processing
industries, especially energy-intensive freezing facilities. Future opportunities to develop alternative
energy sources, such as biofuel from agricultural by-products may assist cost pressures facing fish
processing plants.
A wide range of environmental factors affects the quality and reliability of Cambodias vast water
resources. As recognized by the FiA in the Strategic Planning Framework for Fisheries 2010-2019,
improved monitoring of fishing and agricultural activities will be needed to reduce pressures from overfishing and habitat degradation. However, the fisheries sector still faces a number of challenges related to
destructive fishing practices, land use change, fishing beyond the natural capacity of the system to
regenerate, dam development in the Greater Mekong Basin, climate change and competing use of water
and wetland expansion.232The impending expansion of Cambodias aquaculture sector also poses risks to
the environment, particularly in relation to water pollution and destruction of important ecosystems (such
as mangroves).
These environmental challenges justify the priority given to sustainability in the RGCs and FiAs
approach to fisheries management over the next decade. While improved monitoring will be needed,
strong public-private collaboration in Cambodias fisheries sector will be needed to ensure decisive action
and further reforms are enacted where unacceptable risks to the future sustainability of the countrys vast
waterways are identified.
Box 11.1: ASEAN & Regional Integration
The ASEAN region will remain a global growth center for fish supply and demand into the future.
The fisheries sector in the region has the capacity to meet this increased demand but to do so
governments and industry will need to engage pro-actively. In particular, efforts will be needed to
stimulate investment in aquaculture, and evaluate research and policy development needs along the
entire supply chain from inputs to consumer markets.233
While countries such as Thailand and Vietnam dominate fisheries exports in the ASEAN region,
other countries such as Indonesia, Brunei, and Myanmar have invested heavily in aquaculture
development and may offer lessons for Cambodia as it seeks to further drive expansion of its
aquaculture sector. More broadly, shared learning of best practice across the ASEAN region in
sustainable fisheries management, R&D and aquaculture development could offer opportunities to
close the gap between Cambodia and other fish exporters in the region.

232

CDRI, Policy Coherence in Agricultural And Rural Development: Cambodia, Working Paper Series No. 55, Phnom Penh:
CDRI, July 2011.
233
World Fish Center, Aquaculture in the ASEAN Region, Malaysia: World Fish Center, 2011.

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Box 11.2: Progress Since 2007


Cambodias fisheries exports (by volume) have fluctuated significantly since 2007, although the
upward trend in the value of fisheries exports has helped to offset the recent fall in volumes. These
variations in export performance are to be expected especially where the RGC has sought to place a
high priority on implementing domestic fisheries reforms aimed at improving the sustainable use of
Cambodias fisheries resources. These reform efforts have taken place over more than a decade, and
include the most recent decision in mid-2012 to abolish all remaining fishing lots to help preserve
rural livelihoods dependent on the inland fisheries sectors viability.
Further, policy reforms implemented over the past decade have significantly expanded local
communities access to freshwater fisheries, and instituted a system that establishes community-based
management. Yet despite the corresponding decline in large-scale commercial fishing activities in
Cambodias inland fisheries, the total catch from these vast waterways has increased substantially
from 395,000 MT in 2007 to 509,000 in 2012. It is therefore not surprising that small-sized fish (with
lower economic value) accounted for 85 per cent of the total catch in 2011.
Cambodias marine catch and aquaculture production have also increased since 2007 the former by
56 percent and the latter by 110 percent. However, both these sectors remain small in relation to the
overall total fish catch together accounting for 25 percent of Cambodias 682,000 MT catch in 2012.
The expansion of Cambodias aquaculture sector is widely seen as providing the best opportunity to
reduce fishing pressures on wild (inland and marine) stocks, while also providing future export
capacity. The opening of the Marine Aquaculture Research and Development Center (MARDeC) in
2012 may help the sector grow quickly over the medium term.
Overall, ongoing efforts to promote the sustainable use of Cambodias vast fisheries resources will
need to be supported by the development of a more export-oriented value chain. This will help
Cambodia achieve higher returns (through export earnings) from its overall fishing effort.

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Conclusion
The following SWOT analysis summarizes many of the factors reviewed in this chapter.
Strengths

Weaknesses

Cambodias vast water resources offer significant


economic opportunities for rural livelihoods
across floodplains, rivers and lakes, marine
fisheries, rice field fishery and aquaculture.
Cambodias freshwater fisheries are among the
most productive in the world due to the presence of
large floodplains around the Great Lake and along
the Tonle Sap and Mekong Rivers.
As a traditional sector with a long-history in
Cambodia there is a significant knowledge base of
fisheries species and habitats.
Freshwater fish is the largest source of animal
protein in Cambodia and figure prominently in
Cambodian nutrition.
Establishment of small producer associations in the
three main coastal provinces has been an important
first step in creating a better-organized marine
fisheries sector.
The practice of co-management of Cambodias
inland water resources through the use Community
Fisheries (CF) organizations has given greater
voice to small-scale fishers and enhanced the
sustainable use of inland water resources.
Since 2010 there has been a rapid growth in export
volumes (of mainly frozen shrimp) to one of the
largest and most high-valued markets for fish
Japan.
While most fish exports are unrecorded, it is likely
informal exports of inland fish are significantly
larger than those from marine resources.
Global fish trade typically faces very low (and
often zero) tariff barriers.

Lack of knowledge and/or compliance with SPS


requirements in high-value international markets,
including the EU, is a substantial barrier to
increased export earnings.
Lack of consistent supply constrains onshore
processors (including freezers) from expanding
output or seeking export markets.
Licensees are empowered to collect a 4 percent fee
on the value of fish exports, discouraging exports
or leading traders to seek informal trade channels.
Pressures on freshwater and coastal fisheries
resulting in catch of lower economic value.
Many of the larger and more valuable fish species
have declined significantly both in numbers and
size and are now in short supply in local markets.
A significant quantity of deep-sea catch is sold at
sea by Cambodian fisherman to larger Thai,
Vietnamese and Hong Kong vessels, bypassing
Cambodias markets and on-shore processing
facilities.
Poor roads and lack of electricity make the storage
and transportation of fish products difficult.
Highly unreliable trade data (especially for marine
fisheries) impedes policymaking and strategies for
export market development.
Little industry knowledge of international fish
markets, export practices or marketing.

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Opportunities

Threats

Greater access to international markets will have


significant welfare benefitsthe sector directly
employs 420,000 people while up to 6 million
people derive some form of livelihood benefit from
fisheries activities in Cambodia.
The Strategic Planning Framework for Fisheries:
20102019 and ongoing reforms to the
management of Cambodias fisheries provide the
current platform to drive private sector investment
in the fisheries sector and in exports.
Significant quantities of deep-sea catch could be
processed onshore in Cambodia.
Increased resources and capacity for Cambodia to
patrol and monitor its marine fish resources could
lower the significant quantity of fish currently
harvested by foreign vessels within Cambodian
waters.
Opening of the Marine Aquaculture Research and
Development Centre (MARDeC) in 2012 could
help the marine aquaculture sector grow rapidly.
Expansion of the aquaculture sector provides an
opportunity to reduce fishing pressures on wild
stock while also providing future export capacity.
Investment in harvest and post-harvest technology
to meet global market standards would provide a
catalyst for improved access to export markets.
Current efforts to turn the FiA into a Competent
Authority that meets EU requirement together with
parallel actions could help lift SPS capacity in the
sector.

Environmental degradation and habitat destruction


from damming, deforestation and conversion of
land for agricultural uses.
Widespread over-fishing of freshwater and marine
stocks due to increased demand, unregulated catch
limits and less efficient fisheries practices.
Key importing countries impose new and more
stringent SPS and TBT restrictions on Cambodias
fish exports.
No increase in institutional capacity for fish
inspection and enforcement of quality and food
safety standards would deny the sector any real
chance of a sustained increase in export earnings.
Disease outbreaks, especially in aquaculture.
Reluctance for government or industry to invest in
research and development would weaken efforts to
promote fish processing technology and minimize
post-harvest losses.

Recommendations
The export-led development of Cambodias inland fisheries, marine capture, and aquaculture sectors will
require significant investment from Government and industry. The RGCs approach of implementing
ongoing reforms to the management and utilization of Cambodias vast water resources is both prudent
and necessary. The environmental risks (such as upstream damming and over-fishing) to Cambodias
inland fisheries and marine resources are real, and introducing sustainable management practices coupled
with appropriate monitoring and enforcement should be a high priority. In this context, further expanding
Cambodias emerging aquaculture sector offers genuine scope to deliver increased export capacity over
the medium term. The RGC will need to work closely with the private sector to create an enabling
environment conducive to further investment in this sector.
More broadly, Cambodia will also need to improve the functioning of the post-harvest components of the
fish supply chain. A better-organized and well-coordinated supply chain will help drive private sector
collaboration, promote investment, and implement export-oriented industry reforms. This includes the
clear need to implement internationally recognized hygiene and health standards among fish processors to
improve supply chain integrity as well as opening up access to key export markets. Cambodias

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Fisheries Administration (FiA) should continue to pursue achieving accreditation as a Competent


Authority to facilitate exports to the high-value EU market.
Possible Actions to address some of the sectors current limitations and opportunities for further
significant progress are identified in the Trade SWAp Roadmap under Outcome #11.

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Chapter 12
MILLED RICE
Background
Rice is Cambodias most important agricultural export and a traditional crop of cultural and historical
significance. Following recent RGC policy changes, the Cambodian rice market is experiencing
significant transformation. This has been driven by a number of factors, including:

a more strategic, coordinated, and export-focused approach to the industrys development;


improvements and modernization of Cambodias milling capacity;
opportunistic gains in export market share due to preferential tariff advantages; and,
domestic policies of competitors that have disrupted export supply and opened the door for
Cambodias milled rice exporters to access new markets.

The underlying comparative advantage of Cambodias milled rice sector is that its primary input local
paddy rice has one of the lowest farm-gate costs of production in the world, approximately between 35
to 40 percent lower than those in Vietnam and Thailand.234 This provides a sound basis for Cambodia to
be a competitive exporter of milled rice. However, rice millers must contend with a lack of uniformity of
quality and consistency in the supply of paddy rice that is necessary for the milled rice sector in order to
enjoy sustained export growth. Further, low-cost advantages are partially negated by weak export
infrastructure, still insufficient modern milling capacity, and high milling costs.235
The Royal Government of Cambodia adopted a national Rice Sector Policy in July 2010.236The Policy
identifies quite comprehensively current bottlenecks in the sector and means to eliminate or mitigate
those. The strong export performance and growth in milled rice in recent years demonstrates the value of
implementing a coherent, stable, and investor-friendly sector policy.

234

Ministry of Commerce, Rice Sector Profile, Value Chain Unit, Trade Promotion Department, Ministry of Commerce, Phnom
Penh: MoC, October 2010.
235
See Chapters 3 and 4. Also, World Bank, Improving Trade Competitiveness in Cambodia: An Analysis Using TTFA, Phnom
Penh: World Bank, 2012.
236
Royal Government of Cambodia, SNEC, Policy Paper on the Promotion of Paddy Production and Rice Exports, Phnom
Penh: SNEC, July 2010.

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Export Performance
Export Value
Formal exports of Cambodian rice have increased sharply in recent years. This increase is primarily due
to the growth in milled rice exports to the EU and Russia. New investment in modern rice mills and
polishing factories has contributed also to a rapid growth in exports.
Table 12.1: Cambodian Milled Rice Exports (HS 1006), 2007-2012
Volume (thousand MT)
Value ($ million)

2007
4
1.2

2008
6
2.4

2009
16
11.0

2010
51
34.7

2011
146
106.4

2012
174
130.0

Source:Comtrade and TradeMap; GDCE


Calculating the volume and mix of informal rice trade needs to be approached with caution. Estimates of
Cambodias exportable surplus of paddy rice have grown from 3.2 million MT in 2010to 4.3 million MT
in 2012.237While such volumes equate to more than 2 million tons of milled rice, informal trade with Thai
and Vietnamese traders is overwhelmingly in paddy rice. More recently, the composition of informal
trade has shifted slightly toward some amount of milled rice reflecting attractive prices for milled rice in
the Thai market and the need for instant cash flow that informal trade offers some rice millers. Estimates
of the value of informal exports are shown in Chapter 1, suggesting a possible growth in value from $356
million to $581 million between 2007 and 2011.238
Type of Exports
There are three broad components to Cambodias rice exports: (i) informal (and unrecorded) paddy rice
exported to Thailand and Vietnam via land border crossings; (ii) informal (and unrecorded) milled rice
exported to Thailand via land border crossings; and (iii) formal milled rice exports that transit through the
ports of Sihanoukville or Phnom Penh. The variety, type and direction of Cambodias rice exports each
year is influenced largely by the prevailing prices and domestic policy settings in Thailand and Vietnam.
Current Export Destinations
Cambodias formal export of milled rice has grown rapidly since 2009. This is mainly due to tariff
preferences as well as investments in modern rice mills and polishing factories. Both the EU and Russia
permit duty-free milled rice imports from Cambodia. Cambodias main competitors do not enjoy similar
tariff advantage. These tariff preferences enable Cambodian exporters to avoid duties of $217/MT and 25
237

Royal Government of Cambodia, SNEC, Policy Paper on the Promotion of Paddy Production and Rice Exports, Phnom Penh:
SNEC, July 2010 and Tom Slayton and S. Muniroth, 2013, Turning Rice into White Gold, Phnom Penh: World Bank Working
Paper (Draft), 2013.
238
See Table 1.9

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percent in the EU and Russian markets respectively. As outlined in Table 12.2 below, these two markets
accounted for more than 85 percent of formal exports in 2011reflecting such significant competitive
advantage. Malaysia applies a 20 percent tariff to all rice imports originating within ASEAN including
from Cambodia below the 40 percent MFN applied tariff.
Table 12.2: Top 5 Export Markets
Cambodian Milled Rice, 2011
European Union (27)
Russian Federation
Malaysia
US
Togo

73.8%
12.7%
8.4%
1.2%
0.9%

Source:TradeMap
Potential Export Destinations
The major global importers of milled rice are African and Middle Eastern markets, which account for
seven of the top 10 rice importing countries. Other key rice importing markets are Indonesia, the
Philippines, and China where shorter transits could benefit Cambodia. However, global rice trade is
highly segmented with demand from key importing markets differing in terms of the rice variety, quality,
and processing method. Consequently, rice exported to one market is not easily substituted or exported to
another market.
In terms of export diversification, focusing on becoming an exporter of lower quality milled rice (with 25
percent brokens) to the Philippines and West Africa may be feasible in the short to medium term. As
Cambodias milling industry improves it should also be able to move up the quality scale to become a
supplier to other ASEAN markets such as Indonesia, as is already happening with Malaysia. Trial
shipments of Cambodian fragrant rice to China have also recently commenced following the conclusion
of a bilateral MOU on SPS. In light of reports of significant Chinese investment flowing to new
Cambodian rice mills, the prospects of establishing regular exports to such a large and important market
are encouraging.
Trade Balance
The total trade balance for rice products is overwhelmingly positive. While small quantities of imported
milled rice are recorded each year (principally from Thailand), imports typically represent less than 5
percent of the quantity of Cambodias milled rice exports.
Dynamism of Exports
While the cost of local paddy production is significantly lower than in Thailand and Vietnam, higher
milling costs severely curtail the competitiveness of Cambodias milled rice exports in most international
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markets. Recent increases in exports to the EU and Russian markets are almost exclusively due to
Cambodias access to tariff preferences combined with the disruption in supply from Thai and Indian
exporters that stemmed from domestic policy interventions.
In addition to high milling costs, Cambodias access to international markets is impeded by limited
capacity to produce large commercial and consistent quantities of uniform milled rice. As noted
previously, this is due to both inconsistent suppliesfrom rice farmers as well as insufficient modern
milling capacity.Cambodian rice millers are also relatively new to international trade and need to build
export market know-how and capacity. Further, as exports grow large millers will need to adopt proper
phytosanitary production methods that meet HACCP or GMP standards required by many importing
markets.
The supply chain is also geared toward containerized exports, while international practice is for milled
rice to be traded as bagged cargo on break bulk vessels. Nevertheless, progress on several of these fronts
combined with substantial investment in modernmilling capacity will position the sector to increase
exports and reduce reliance on the EU and Russian markets.
Export Prospect
Large rice importing markets with strong growth potential are on Cambodias horizon including
Malaysia (already growing fast), Indonesia, and the Philippines. Government-to-government agreements
might open up some of these markets. Cambodia also has particularly good prospects of exporting
fragrant rice to China following the signing of a bilateral MOU that facilitates SPS compliance. The
development of a national brand/logo would support efforts to establish Cambodia as a reputable supplier
of milled rice on international markets.
There is also scope to accelerate current efforts to simplify export procedures and reduce trade facilitation
costs. In addition, whereas a rice miller that exports directly is entitled to VAT-exemption, export of
milled rice via a third-party exporter is subject to VAT. Such discrepancy impedes the overall efficiency
of the supply chain and discourages specialization. Millers also complain about the de-facto CICC
monopoly in fumigation that keeps prices high.

World Market Conditions


Market Access Conditions
The world rice market is subject to significant government involvement, is highly segmented, and has
relatively few buyers and sellers, making prices highly volatile. Significant tariff and non-tariff barriers
(including SPS and milled rice specifications) also impede global trade in rice under scoring the
importance of Cambodias preferential tariff arrangements.

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There are very distinct international rice markets based on different rice varieties, qualities and processing
methods. As rice for each market segment cannot be easily substituted by rice from another exporter, it is
difficult to gain market share.In the world market, considerable emphasis is placed on grain length and on
the percentage of brokens as criteria of quality. In addition, the kernel shape (length/breadth), the
chalkiness, and the translucency are considered. Uniformity of quality is also important to rice buyers.
Major Competitors

Thailand and Vietnam have historically been the worlds No. 1 and No. 2 rice exporters. However, in
2012 India took the top spot for the first time, shipping 10.25 million MT on the back of strong
production increases and domestic policy settings in Thailand that resulted in local stockpiling and the
country falling to third spot behind Vietnam.239More broadly, global rice markets are often subject to
disruptions from domestic policy interventions in the major producer and exporter countries. Whether
Thailands ongoing domestic price support policy, or Indias recent export ban on non-Basmati rice (now
lifted), changes in the direction and regular flow of global rice trade can be sudden and unpredictable.
Consequently, it is important for emerging rice exporters such as Cambodia to be dynamic and respond
quickly to changing circumstances and new opportunities to take market share.
Over the next five to ten years, Myanmar could also emerge as a key competitor to Cambodias rice
exports as its economy modernizes and opens up to global trade. Significantly, Myanmar is likely to
benefit from the same duty-free preferences as Cambodia.
World Market Prospect
Global rice production was 468 million MT (milled basis) in 2012. Global rice trade reached a record
high of 39 million MT in 2012. The outlook for rice exports is positive, driven by expected strong
demand for rice from China and Africa.240This provides an ideal trading environment for Cambodia to
pursue export-led development of its milled rice sector and improve rural livelihoods through stronger
integration in the global rice markets.

Domestic Supply Conditions


Producers
As a traditional crop of cultural and historical significance rice production in Cambodia is extensive.
Strong growth in rice cultivation over the past decade has taken place across Cambodias vast lowlands as
farmland is brought back into production. There are an estimated 2.9 million rice farms in Cambodia
with an average land holding of 1.2 hectares.241
239

USDA, Foreign Agricultural Service, World Rice Trade by Calendar Year, Washington DC: US GPO, 2013.
USDA, Economic Research Service, World Rice Supply and Utilization, Rice Yearbook, Washington DC: US GPO, 2013.
241
USDA, Economic Research Service, World Rice Supply and Utilization, Rice Yearbook, Washington DC: US GPO, 2013.
240

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Production Capacity
Production of paddy rice increased 123 percent in the ten years from 2002 to 2011on the back of
encouraging increases in yield as well as expanded cultivated area.242There is scope to further increase
production capacity by converting land to rice productionand increased multiple cropping through
irrigation investment. Improved cultivation practices have led to a significant increase in rice yields
rising from less than 2 MT per hectare in 2004 to 3.2 MT per hectare in 2011.243However, unfavorable
global rice prices and inadequate finances to fund large-scale irrigation investment suggest historical
growth rates may be more difficult to maintain in the short-to-medium term. Further, the practice of
Cambodias rice farmers to mix varieties undermines the ability of exporters to provide a uniform product
to international buyers. This practice will need to change for Cambodia to continue to expand its exports.
Cambodia had a production surplus estimated at 4 million MT of paddy rice in 2012 indicating ample
supply of paddy for milling. Since 2009 the milling capacity of Cambodias larger mills has quadrupled
in size to an estimated 350 MT per hour and increased the supply of milled rice that meet the quality
demanded by export markets.
The number and size of new individualrice mills in Cambodia continues to increase dramatically.
Table 12.3 gives an indication of the scale of investment underway in Cambodias milling sector. In
2009, only two rice milling companies had a capacity of 20 MT per hour or higher, while most of the
larger companies had capacities of 10 to 12 MT per hour. There are now seven firms that have a capacity
of at least 20 MT per hour, including three capable of milling 30 MT per hour. There are on-going plans
to build even larger mills to accommodate the expected growth in exports. These will be in the 50 to 100
MT per hour range and involve substantial FDI.244
While these increases in milling capacity are encouraging for the sectors future export prospects, overall
milling capacity utilization remains very low. Many of Cambodia's larger rice mills are of comparable
size with those in Thailand yet the Thai mills usually operate 24 hours per day and six days per week
most of the year. In contrast, nearly all of Cambodia's larger mills only work a single 8 to 10 hour shift
and lack access to working capital to operate during the entire year.
Recent increases in Cambodias paddy rice production and investment in irrigation infrastructure to boost
dry season production may alleviate some of the working capital constraints facing the mills. It is
reported that some of the new mills being built are confident of having access to sufficient working
capital and plan to work three shifts per day. More widely, however, improved access to finance for the
mills may also help re-direct some of the paddy rice being sold informally over the borders toward
Cambodias competitors.

242

AFSIS: http://afsis.oae.go.th
AFSIS: http://afsis.oae.go.th
244
Tom Slayton and S. Muniroth, 2013, Turning Rice into White Gold, Phnom Penh: World Bank Working Paper (Draft),
2013 and World Bank, Improving Trade Competitiveness in Cambodia: An Analysis Using TTFA, Phnom Penh: World Bank,
2012.
243

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TABLE 12.3 Capacity of Large Rice Mills in Cambodia (MT rice paddy per hour)
Mill
As of mid 2009
As of mid 2011
As of mid 2012

Capacity
Milling
Polishing
95.5
72
244.5
201
322.0
305

Location

Comment

In Kandal; operational 2000; expanded by 20 tph February 2012


Operational 2010
Operational June 2011
Ea. Mill 4 tph; operational Takeo early 2011, Battambang January
Operational April 2012 with 12 tph; capacity doubled June 2012
Operational 2011
K. Speu; operational early 2009, JV Reunion
4 of 6 mills in PP; partner in Cavifood
Guangxi gov't; operational June 2012
Operational 2010
Built 2009 10 tph; expanded to 20 tph & added polishing capacity 20
tph September 2011
Built 1994 & then serially expanded; includes 30 tph polishing
operational February 2012
Purchased existing Naga Thom mill in Siam Reap & older mill in
Battambang
Built 2003, also polishes rice from its other 39 mills elsewhere
Operational May 2012
At two mills, built 2003
JV Malaysia
Built 2010
Operational July 2011
Following mill expansion, operational June 2011
Mill expansion, operational March 2011
2 mills; first started 2005

Angkor Rice (AKK)


Baitang
BVB
Canadia
Cavifood
Chhun Thom
Golden Rice
Green Trade
Guohong
Hoeur Chy
Lor Ngor Peng

30
20
30
8
24
10
20
10
8
8
20

20
30
30
5
12
6
20
8
5
6
20

Near PP
Battambang
K. Thom
Battam/Takeo
PP
Prey Veng
Near PP
PP +
K. Chhang
Siem Reap
K. Cham

Loran Import-Export

12.5

36

Battambang

Mega Green

10.5

10

25
10
8
12
12
12
15
8
8

24
10
6
10
10
15
12
10

Battam/ S.
Reap
PP +
SHV
Battambang
Pursat
K. Cham
K. Cham
Battambang
K. Cham
Battambang

262

174

Men Sarun
Mong Reththy
Phou Poy Rice
QQ Rice
Sour Keang QC Rice
Vinh Cheang
Yam Leoung
You Khim Rice
White Gold
Under
Construction/Planned
AMRU

12

various

CRK a/
BRIC b/
Canadia
CCAD c/
Chray Son
Eang Heng
Golden Rice
Hak Se
KVCL d/

20
30
44
20
18
6
20
15
12

20
15
8
20
10
10
20
9
8

Kampot
Battambang
Takeo
Battam/Takeo
Battambang
Battambang
Near PP
K. Cham
B.M.

Long Grain Co.

30

30

Near PP

Lor Ngor Peng


Loran Import-Export
Phou Poy Rice
White Gold

4
15
12
4

Battambang
Battambang
Battambang
Battambang

14
6

3 brown rice mills - K. Cham, Prey Veng & Battambang over next 3
years, ea 4-6 tph
Under construction, operational July 2013; phase 2 adds 20 tph July
Operational May 2013
Operational fall 2012; brings capacity to 52 tph & polishing 13 tph
Operational September 2013
Under construction; operational April 2013
Expansion of existing mill 4 tph to 10 tph; operational early 2012
Early 2013
Expansion of existing mill 6 tph to 21 tph; operational Nov 2012
Under construction; white capacity operational October 2012,
parboiled by November 2012
K. Speu - JV UK & India; under construction, operational Jan 2013;
phase 2 (incl 10 tph parboil) & phase 3 equal size in 1 yr intervals
Relocating from K. Cham, operational end 2012
Operational May 2013
Constructing new mill, operational end 2012
Expansion existing mill, operational end 2012; brings capacity 12 tph
milling

Rice Polishing
As of mid 2011
As of mid 2012

20
32

AMRU
Im Eang Kry
Khmer Foods

12
10
10

Under
Construction/Planned

PP
PP
PP

Operational April 2012


Built 2010
Built 2009; 22 tph by September 2012

44

CCAD c/
Khmer Foods
Mega Green

20
12
12

SHV
PP
PP

Operational September 2013


Under construction; operational end 2012
Under construction; operational August 2012

Rice Upgrading
Ying & Yang Rice

10

SHV

Built 2009, foreign company

Source:Slayton, T. and S. Muniroth, 2013, Turning Rice into White Gold

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In this regard, there is need to develop short-term lending products drawing on movable collateral
either paddy or milled rice. Similarly, insurance firms will need to be prepared to insure against such
collateral if such lending practices are to become available.245 Overall, access to short-term finance
products is vital to modernization of Cambodias milling capacity, without which, tasks such as
upgrading and expanding rice storage facilities have little prospect.
Quality of Product
Rice millers report poor paddy quality supplied by farmers and traders with low purity levels (mixed
varieties) and inadequate post-harvest handling (such as poor drying and storage facilities). This leads to a
higher percentage of broken grains in milled rice and a lower percentage of purity in aromatic variety.
Consequently, both profit margins and access to high-value export markets is reduced.
A key challenge is that rice farmers have limited access to quality seeds. Most rely on older seeds from a
past harvest. Coupled with traditional cultivation techniques, these result in lower yields, with smaller
grains lacking aroma, and, ultimately, a less valuable harvest. In parallel with other efforts to modernize
Cambodias rice industry, there is a clear need to accelerate farmers access to quality seed varieties that
suit the season, geography and the specifications of the market.
To ameliorate some of these problems, a small number of the larger mills sometimes purchase paddy
directly from growers associations or through contract farming arrangements. In this situation, mills are
concerned with quality and will provide funding for inputs and advise farmers on seed selection. This is a
relatively new initiative on the part of the millers and provides a good model for the future direction of
the industry.246
More broadly, the provision of extension services to farmers with the backing of both government and
the private milling sector would improve rice cultivation practices, increasing yields further and making
available stocks of uniform and higher quality grains for millers. Encouraging the establishment of rice
cooperatives to help organize farmers would also aid the delivery of extension services as well as
facilitate access to market information and finance. In addition, millers complain about CARDIs de-facto
monopoly over the supply of seeds and suggest opening the market to private sector competition.
Productivity
Strong growth in rice cultivation and improved yields has supportedbroader efforts to increase milled rice
exports through larger supplies of paddy rice. Table 12.4 outlines the improvements made to paddy rice
yields over the last two decades that, combined with increases cultivated area, has led to a surge in
Cambodias total rice production.
In 2011, Cambodias average rice yield reached a record 3.2 MT per hectare over a cultivated area of 2.77
million hectares (also a record.) This yield is comparable to Thailands, but below Vietnam paddy yields
245

Note the International Finance Corporation (IFC) is commencing a three-year project to develop short-term lending capacity
and products in Cambodias commercial banking sector.
246
World Bank, Improving Trade Competitiveness in Cambodia: An Analysis Using TTFA, Phnom Penh: World Bank, 2012.

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of 5.6 MT per hectare. This is partly due to Cambodias reliance on wet season crop production (rainfed), which results in lower yields but is cheaper to cultivate than irrigated rice production. Millers
therefore benefit from being able to source comparatively cheaper rice paddy although supply of paddy
rice is more abundant during the wet season.

Table 12.4: Production of Paddy Rice in Cambodia


Cultivated Area (million hectares)
Average Rice Yields (MT per hectare)
Total Production (million MT)

1990
1.85
1.35
2.50

1997
1.90
1.77
3.42

2004
2.10
1.98
4.17

2011
2.77
3.17
8.78

Source:ASEAN Food Security Information Service


Availability & Quality of Labor Force
While labor costs are lower in Cambodia relative to regional competitors, there is an acute lack of skilled
labor to service and manage milling and polishing operations. Many of the larger millers rely on foreign
operations managers and technicians. In the absence of qualified local technicians, large mills may
depend on technical support from equipment manufacturers from Japan, China, or even Vietnam.
Level of Processing and Storage Technology
Rice milling and polishing processes are capital-intensive. The majority of mills in Cambodia continue to
rely on old processing equipment from Vietnam and China and predominantly service the domestic
market. Older processing equipment, coupled with the use of mixed varieties of paddy rice, leads to a
higher proportion of broken grains and are not of a grade suitable for export.
The export potential of Cambodias milled rice sector rests with the recent investments in larger and more
modern mills that are now coming online. These mills will need to source reliable supplies of uniform
paddy rice to have the necessary working capital to operate 24-hour-a-day and achieve the necessary
efficiencies to be competitive suppliers of quality milled rice in international markets.
The sector is also in need of modern silo and other storage facilities to provide large mills access to a
more steady supply of paddy. Development of such facilities is partly linked to the development of
banking product to finance inventory.
Cost and Quality of Infrastructure
The cost of transporting rice in Cambodia is between two to three times the cost in Vietnam and Thailand.
Current estimates for transporting rice are estimated at $10 to $13 per 100 km, while comparable costs in
Vietnam are approximately $7 per 100 km and $5 per 100 km in Thailand.247 The higher transport costs in
247

Slayton, T. and S. Muniroth, 2013, Turning Rice into White Gold, World Bank Working Paper (Draft), 2013.

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Cambodiarelative to neighboring countries are due partly to the heavier reliance on significantly cheaper
river transport in these markets. Expanding access to Vietnams ports through inland waterways offers
the prospect of break bulk barging down the Mekong River.248 This could improve significantly the
competitiveness of Cambodias milled rice exports.
Cambodias reliance on road freight as the main domestic transport mode is also increasingly at odds with
urban sprawl and traffic congestion problems in major cities. For example, the decision by Phnom Penh
municipality to prohibit heavy road freight from the citys roads between 6am and 9pm in an effort to
alleviate traffic congestion is impacting exporters adversely, including rice millers. Such policy conflict
highlights the need for a more strategic approach to urban development planning and regulation as well as
the need for rail connections to be modernized. The re-launch of rail freight service between Battambang
and Phnom Penh, following the recent opening of scheduled rail service between Phnom Penh and
Sihanoukville should provide an alternative as well as healthy price competition to the trucking sector.
Efficiency of Domestic Support Industries
Cambodian rice millers pay significantly more for transport, electricity, diesel and port access compared
to competitors in Vietnam and Thailand. Insufficient access to finance forces local millers to compete
with Thai and Vietnamese buyers for paddy rice. The latter are able to purchase and pay Cambodian
farmers cash on-the-spot at the time of harvest. This practice has proved a major impediment to millers
and processors accessing sufficient working capital to operate effectively and has been identified in the
RGCs 2010 national rice policy Promotion of Paddy Production and Rice Export as a key area
requiring action.
The RGC is committed to improving the financing of paddy rice collection. This includes recapitalizing
with additional funds the Rural Development Bank (RDB) and Agriculture Development and Support
Fund (ADSF) and establishing a Credit Guarantee Scheme and Risk Sharing Facility to encourage
commercial banks to extend loans to paddy collectors, SMEs and agricultural processing activities more
generally.
Domestic Demand
Per capita consumption of rice in Cambodia is expected to remain at current levels (around 160kg per
person per year) over the next decade.249Coupled with increased yields and paddy rice production, this
should lead to higher exportable surpluses in future years and increase paddy supply to rice millers.
Prospect for Domestic Supply Conditions
Improved farm extension services and capacity building support would equip farmers with the market
information to match cultivation practices and yields with the needs of millers. In turn, millers will have
access to the appropriate mix of rice varieties and quality as demanded by international buyers. In

248
249

See chapter 3
World Food Program, Comprehensive Food Security & Vulnerability Analysis Cambodia, Rome: FAO, 2008.

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addition, continued expansion and modernization of Cambodias milling sector will increase output,
utilization of capital and reduce operating margins.

Policy and Regulatory Framework


Government Initiatives and Sector Policy
In 2010, the RGC launched Policy on the Promotion of Paddy Production and Rice Export. The policy set
a target of achieving one million MT of milled rice exports by 2015. While Cambodia already produces
sufficient paddy rice to meet this target, the quality and reliability of supply remain impediments as do a
number of logistical problems especially the lack of modern milling capacity of sufficient scale to accept
larger orders. While achieving the one million MT export target will significantly increase the value of
Cambodias rice exports significant gains can be equally achieved by increasing the quality of rice
exports. Both efforts require a restructuring of the inbound supply chains which are currently based on
small-scale operations. While the increase in exports of milled rice can be achieved through a short-term
strategy, the improvement in quality of the rice requires a longer-term strategy.250
To achieve the one million MT export target, the RGC Rice Policy establishes a clear action plan aimed at
(i) improving farm-level productivity and output; (ii) encouraging investment in modern rice processing
and milling capacity; (iii) facilitating trade by reducing costs and regulatory barriers impeding export
growth; and, (iv) export market development. Table 12.5 summarizes some of the key action items
addressing each of these components of the rice policy.
The RGCs Rice Policy has provided investors clear policy guidance and signaled the Government's
commitment to the milled rice sector. Significant progress on facilitating exports has occurred which can
be largely credited to the guidance and incentives provided by RGCs rice policy. This includes:

250

The investment pace in larger mills and rice polishers has accelerated;
A number of the new mills being built will have access to sufficient working capital that they
plan to operate three shifts per day, rather than the current single shift;
Overall costs associated with export procedures have declined compared to prior to the launch of
the rice policy (although these costs need to fall further to be comparable to regional
competitors);
A "one stop" office has opened, helping to reduce the number of days required to acquire export
permits;
The barging of non-containerized rice down the Mekong River has begun; and,
Recent investments in port facilities in Kampot should permit mid-stream loading of large vessels
by 2013 and, similarly, in Sihanoukville by 2015.

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Table 12.5: Cambodias July 2010 Rice Policy at a Glance

Quick-Wins

Medium/Long
Term

Quick-Wins

Medium/Long
Term

Main Issues (Selected Policy Measures)


Rice Production
Increase productivity by using high-yield seeds and
modern production techniques (facilitate import of
seeds and fertilizers, strengthen domestic seed
production, review Ag. extension services, etc.)
Continue to expand irrigation (strengthen small scale
irrigation schemes, irrigation maintenance, etc.)
Maintain rural road, develop rural feeder network
Promote micro-credit
Improve productivity and crop intensification (long
term water management plan, rehab of Ag. stations
and centers, R&D, etc.)
Implement national policy for rural electrification
Establish and strengthen capacity of farmer
organizations
Promote and implement policy on sustainable use of
Ag. land
Paddy Rice Collection and Processing
Encourage Private Sector participation in paddy
production and processing (continue implementation
of law on investment; improve as needed)
Improve financing paddy collection (recapitalize
RDB with additional $7 million; double ADSF
capital from $18 million to $36 million; develop
Credit Guarantee Scheme to guarantee loans from
commercial banks to rice sector; set up Risk Sharing
Facility for commercial banks to lend for Ag.
processing)
Provide treatment to Rice Miller Association similar
to that extended to GMAC
Create new financial instruments and leverage
existing financing mechanisms (implement laws on
secured transactions and financial leasing; develop
credit information; consider creation of Ag.
Development Bank)
Develop Open Paddy Market (develop contract
farming, promote market-driven rice production,
paddy-based collateral loans)
Lower electricity price and extend coverage
(accelerate diversification of rural energy sources,
improve EDC management, etc.)

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Responsible Institutions
MEF, MAFF

MoWRAM, relevant ministries


MRD, relevant ministries
MEF, NBC
MoWRAM, MAFF

MIH, relevant ministries


MAFF, relevant ministries
MLMUPC, MAFF, MoP,
relevant ministries
CDC, MEF, relevant ministries

MEF, NBC

RGC
MEF, MoC, NBC

MAFF, relevant ministries

MIH, EAC, EDC

Quick-Wins

Medium/Long
Term

Quick-Wins

Medium/Long
Term

Logistics
Enhance trade facilitation, reduce informal fees,
eliminate illegal check points (extend special
treatment similar to garment sector)
Implement single-stop service for export processing
(for issuance of SPS certificate, fumigation, grading
and quality, weights and measures, customs
declaration)
Address grading and quality standards in compliance
with internationally-recognized standards (define
standards, create internationally accredited certifying
body or encourage independent international
institutions, etc.)
Encourage construction of bonded warehouse at PP
port
Formulate strategic and legal framework with
emphasis on SPS (law on SPS, related Anukrets and
Prakas, establish clear division of responsibilities
among line ministries, strengthen human and
institutional resources, etc.)
Invest in infrastructure to reduce costs of exports (eg.
accelerate renovation of Poipet-PP and PPSihanoukville railways, etc.)
Facilitate financing for export(consider establishing
export-import bank)
Facilitate financing for infrastructure development
Marketing
Explore export opportunities in regional and global
markets (studies of potential import markets, lead
mission to potential markets, explore Philippines,
Indonesia, Brunei, etc.)
Explore establishing rice market intelligence unit
Strengthen domestic market information sharing and
monitoring
Prepare strategic plan for Cambodias rice sector to
compete in regional and global markets (define
objectives, identify markets, negotiate bilateral
agreements, etc.)

MEF/GDCE, MAFF,
MoC/Camcontrol, relevant
ministries
MEF/GDCE, MAFF,
MoC/Camcontrol, MIH/ISC,
relevant ministries
MIH/ISC, MAFF, MoC,
Private Sector

MPWT, MEF
MAFF, MoC, MoH, MIH

MPWT, relevant ministries

MEF, NBC
MEF, NBC
MoC, MFAIC

MoC, MAFF, Private Sector


MoC, MAFF, MoWRAM,
MRD
MoC, MFAIC, relevant
ministries

Source: Based on Policy Paper on the Promotion of Paddy Production and Rice Export, Council of Ministers,
July 25, 2010. From: Ministry of Commerce, Trade Sector Development and Aid for Trade in Cambodia,
Phnom Penh: MoC, July 2011

Business Associations
Many of the more medium-to-long-term actions identified in Cambodias national rice policy will require
regular and effective dialogue between industry and government. At present, Cambodias rice supply
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chain remains quite fragmented with many intermediaries involved from farm-gate to the export market.
Transforming Cambodia into a trusted and reliable supplier of quality milled rice in international markets
will require both close collaboration and a strategic approach across the supply chain and with
government.
No single national rice exporter association currently exists. Instead an array of fragmented associations
may often lead to competition rather than cooperation. This undermines the ability of the sector to speak
in a single voice.
The creation of a single national rice exporters association should be a key priority for both Government
and industry. By giving industry a stronger voice, it would facilitate more productive public-private
engagement as the national rice policy continues to be implemented. Similarly, it would allow exporters
to coordinate on important export market development initiatives such as export promotion, creating a
national brand/logo for fragrant rice exporters, and participating in international trade fairs. The recent
creation of the Federation of Cambodian Rice Exporters (FCRE) may help provide this single voice.
While a Working Group on Rice has been created under the RGCs GovernmentPublic Sector Forum
(GPSF) framework partly to support implementation of the Rice Policy, this particular Working Group
has not met for nearly two years. Clearly, it is not as effective as it ought to be. The private sector has a
role to play in making it a more effective mechanism by finding ways to speak in a single voice.

Socio-Economic and Environmental Impacts


Current Employment and Job-Creation Prospect
There are 2.9 million rice farms in Cambodia. As the sector becomes more integrated into the formal
global supply chain there is scope for the wider industrys returns to improve offering increased earning
potential for those rice farms with a tradable production surplus. The expansion of Cambodias milling
and rice processing sector will also offer future employment opportunities in a range of semi-skilled and
skilled positions.
Impact on Development of Disadvantaged Regions
Approximately 80 percent of the population resides in rural areas and 71 percent are estimated to be
solely dependent on agriculture largely cultivated rice for their livelihoods. In a typical season 40
percent of rice farmers generate a marketable surplus to trade. The majority of farm households are
engaged in rice production. The most important ricegrowing areasinclude the provinces of Prey Veng,
Takeo and Kampong Cham in the South East; Battambang, BanteayMeanchey, and Siem Reap in the
North West and Kampong Thom in the Centre (see Map 12.1). In normal years, theseprovinces account
for approximately 65 percent of the aggregate national production.251Increased participation in the global
251

FAO/WFP, Crop & Food Security Update Mission To Cambodia Report, Phnom Penh: FAO, April 2012

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rice market should improve industry returns, offering increased income potential for up to 2.9 million rice
farms.

Map 12.1: Main Rice Growing Regions


Regions in
in Cambodia,
Cambodia, 2012
2012

Source: Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry


Source:
Contribution to Skill Development
Expansion of the milled rice sector offers increased employment opportunities for operations managers,
machine technicians, marketing professionals and rice traders.
Energy and Water Constraints and Environmental Impact
The high cost of electricity impedes significantly the competitiveness of Cambodias rice milling sector.
Some millers report that energy costs in some provinces are up to ten times higher than in Vietnam.Most
rice mills use one diesel engine to power a single shaft, with belts attached to the shaft that drives all
milling equipment: transporters, shakers, threshers, and polishers. Modernization of a traditional rice mill
that is currentlypowered by a single diesel-burning engine requires a large investment and electricity
supply to drive its dozens of small electric motors.252
However, there is real opportunity to address high electricity costs through use of alternative, costcompetitive technology, such as the use of rice husk as biofuel. Backed by a $15 million multi-donor trust
fund, an International Finance Corporation-led program aims at developing energy efficiency in the
sector, by promoting rice-husk gasification technology that generates power from organic
252

IFC, Cambodia Biomass Gasification Technology Survey, Phnom Penh: IFC, December 2012.

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materials.Gasifiers could therefore contribute substantially to the savings of rice mills in the
future.However, this will require significant modernization of both the rice sector and Cambodias energy
regulations. For example, electricity generation based on biofuel from rice husks is not currently
economically feasible as generators need to run 24/7. But most mills operate only single eight-hour
shifts. They would need to sell extra production to EDC. However, Cambodias state-owned electricity
generator and distributor (EDC) does not buy-back electricity from small-scale producers at present.
Box 12.6: ASEAN & Regional Integration
As Cambodia pursues a rapid export-led expansion of its milled rice sector the ASEAN region
provides both competitive risks and important opportunities. The fact Cambodia is wedged between
two of the worlds top three rice exporters Thailand and Vietnam is a key reason so much of
Cambodias surplus paddy rice production is traded informally with these countries. Thailand is a
major competitor for aromatic rice exports, while Vietnam is a major competitor for non-aromatic
rice exports.
While Cambodia may have a competitive advantage in paddy rice production, local millers struggle
to compete with buyers in Thailand and Vietnam for the working capital on offer each season. The
RGC has enacted a number of measures to improve access to finance for collectors/millers and, as
Cambodias milling capacity increases, some of the outward flow of paddy rice are starting to
reverse.
Further, Vietnams river systems and the port of Ho Chi Minh offer an alternative transport and
export gateway that can improve significantly the competitiveness of Cambodias milled rice
exports.253 In this context, Thailand and Vietnam offer important benchmarks in terms of export
procedures and supply chain management that should serve as a useful guide for Cambodia as it
seeks to further increase milled rice exports toward its one million MT target. Closer regional
integration at both a Government-to-Government and industry-to-industry level will be a key
component of Cambodias success as a milled rice exporter.
More broadly, ASEAN is a major consumer of rice with large importing markets such as Indonesia
and the Philippines and a strong growth outlook. Cambodia already ships milled rice to Malaysia
and securing similar arrangements with other ASEAN partners will be an important step toward
expanding and diversifying Cambodias milled rice exports. Beyond ASEAN, Cambodia also has a
good prospect for increased exports of fragrant rice to the key market of China.

253

This will require break-bulk barging down the Mekong River (not containerized like most of Cambodias milled rice exports.)

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Conclusion
The main findings from this chapter are summarized in the SWOT analysis that follows.
Strengths

Weaknesses

Introduction of Policy on the Promotion of Paddy


Production and Rice Export in 2010 has
encouraged investors to significantly boost milling
capacity.
Rice is a traditional crop of cultural and historical
significance and production in Cambodia is
extensive and widespread.
Very low-cost paddy rice gives local millers an
advantage over foreign competition.
Strong growth in rice cultivation and improved
yields has supported efforts to increase milled rice
exports. Yield in Cambodia was 3.2MT/ha in 2012
(5.6MT/ha in Vietnam; 2.8MT/ha in Thailand)
Duty-free access granted to Cambodia by the EU
and Russia is a key driver of rapid export growth
since 2009.
Opportunistic in taking market share from
competitors when global trade is disrupted by
foreign government rice policies (e.g. India and
Thailand).

Low and inconsistent paddy quality and poor postharvest handling results in lower value milled rice.
Cambodian export procedures for milled rice
remain complex and costly: $11/MT compared to
$0.10/MT in Thailand and $0.05/MT in
Vietnam.The large number of government
agencies with overlapping bureaucratic mandates
adds to the cost of doing business and exporting
milled rice.
Few cooperatives exist to help organize farmers
(small land holders), limiting access to extension
services, market information, finance and reducing
bargaining power.
Insufficient capacity building support.
Inconsistent supply and working capital reduces
efficiencies and profitability of milling operations.
Inadequate access to finance forces local millers to
compete for paddy rice with Thai / Viet buyers.
Limited capacity of modern mills reduces the size
of exports that can be handled.
Lack of modern silo and storage facilities to
provide large mills a more steady access to paddy
supply
Cambodian rice millers pay significantly more for
transport, electricity, diesel and port access
compared to competitors in Vietnam and Thailand.
Difficult to meet international standards, including
milled rice specifications and SPS.
Lack of skilled labor to service and manage
milling and polishing operations.
Cambodian practice of mixing varieties
undermines ability of exporters to provide
consistent quality.

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Opportunities

Threats

Increased participation in global markets will


improve industry returns and offers increased
income potential for 2.9 million rice farms.
Provision of extension services to improve rice
cultivation practices can further increase yields
and available stocks of uniform and higher quality
grains for millers.
Global trade in milled rice is expected to remain at
near record volumes over medium term (at 30+
million MT per year).
Large rice importing markets with strong growth
outlook are nearby including Indonesia, the
Philippines, and China.
Continued expansion and modernization of
Cambodias milling sector will increase output and
lower costs.
Good prospects for increased exports of fragrant
rice to China.
Break bulk barging down the Mekong River
would significantly improve competitiveness of
Cambodian rice exports.
Significant opportunity to address high electricity
costs through use of alternative, cost-competitive
technology (use of rice husk as bio-fuel).

Myanmar likely to re-emerge as a large low-cost


rice exporter in next 5 years and will benefit from
similar duty-free preferences.
Historical growth rates in rice paddy production
become more difficult to maintain.
Thailand is a major competitor for aromatic rice
exports, while Vietnam is a major competitor for
non-aromatic rice exports.
Return of India and Thailand as dominant rice
exporters likely to weaken global prices.
Sales to EU market may have already peaked.
Global rice markets are unpredictable and often
subjected to significant government intervention.
Price volatility and variable climatic conditions
adds to risk and reduces returns on investment
Reliance on containerized rice exports is at odds
with global practices of trading in break bulk rice.
Without ability to reliably produce large quantities
of uniform milled rice access to international
markets will be restricted.
Increases in electricity costs could place millers
under further cost pressure.
Export of fragrant and non-aromatic rice exports
will continue to grow only if modern milling
capacity continues to expand and rice exporters
open new markets beyond their current main
targets (EU and Russia).
Emerging pest and disease threats.
Absence of pests and diseases surveillance system
might lead to bans by importing countries in the
event of infestation

Recommendations
The RGCs national rice policy has provided investors and industry stakeholders with clear guidance and
signaled the Government's long-term commitment to the milled rice sector. Already clear progress has
been made in implementing many of the key action areas identified in the rice policy, and this has been
evident in the strong growth recorded in formal milled rice exports since 2010. Much of these gains have
been opportunistic reflecting the quick-wins for government and industry that could be implemented
with immediate results. While Cambodias emergence in global rice markets has been impressive, its
future success is by no means assured.
Action is needed across the supply chain. Farmers need support to ensure the right rice varieties are being
sowed with appropriate post-harvest handling practices in place. For millers and processors, efforts need
to focus on meeting basic HACCP or GMP standards in order to promote Cambodia as a capable and
trusted supplier of milled rice in international markets. Similarly, the costs associated with exporting
milled rice places Cambodia at a disadvantage compared to regional counterparts and further reforms
relating to export procedures and trade facilitation are needed.
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These challenges will require close public-private sector cooperation to overcome and local rice exporters
will need to speak with a stronger unified voice to ensure initiatives to promote the sector are welltargeted and effective.
Possible Actions to address some of the sectors current limitations and opportunities for further
significant progress are identified in the Trade SWAp Roadmap under Outcome #12.

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Chapter 13
CASSAVA
Background
Once considered the food of the poor cassava has become a multipurpose crop that responds to the
priorities of developing countries, to trends in the global economy, and to the challenge of climate
change.254Cassava has many end-uses including for both human consumption and in animal food, and
increasingly in many industrial sectors, particularly in the form of starch. More recently, cassava has
emerged as a key input to ethanol production. Indeed, Chinas dominance of global cassava trade is
driven, in part, by domestic policies that place a priority on bio-fuel production. While cassava is
primarily grown for its roots, the full plant can be used: the wood as a fuel, the leaves and peelings for
animal feed, and even the stem as dietary salt. The plant shows good resistance to drought, diseases, and
pests and offers a very good yield.
It is these many attributes, coupled with favorable prices, which have seen Cambodias cassava
production increase exponentially over the last decade. Much of this improvement reflects the expansion
into new production areas where soils are relatively fertile, combined with the adoption of new higher
yielding varieties. In this context, cassava has now become an important cash crop for resource-poor
farmers in Cambodia while also supporting the development and expansion of a local processing sector.
This presents an important opportunity for the sector to more fully integrate with regional and global
markets, which will require close cooperation between Government and producers and processors to
address the key constraints to the sectors export-led development.

Export Performance
Export Value
It is difficult to assess the exact value of Cambodias cassava exports as most of it is sold as informal,
unrecorded cross-border trade with Vietnam and Thailand. However, formal exports of cassava exports
have been growing recently as production capacity increases. In 2011, total formal exports were $5.3
million with strong growth in fresh/dried cassava export volumes during 2007 2012 (see Table 13.1.)

254

FAO, Policy Brief Save and Grow: Cassava, Rome: FAO, 2013.

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Table 13.1: Cambodian Cassava Exports 2007-2012


2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

$ 0.6 m

22,289
$ 0.5 m

66,753
$ 0.9 m

24,000
$ 0.4 m

93,503
$2.3 m

23,629
$4.3 m

10,286
$ 1.6m

31,280
$ 4.8 m

13,723
$ 2.5 m

16,722
$3.0 m

$ 4.9 m

$ 2.1

$ 5.7 m

$ 2.9 m

$ 5.3 m

Fresh or Dried Cassava (HS 071410)


Volume (MT)
2,758
Value ($ million)
Cassava Starch (HS 110814)
Volume (MT)
Value ($ million)
TOTAL CASSAVA
EXPORTS ($ million)

Source:UN Comtrade and TradeMap


Given the large quantities of Cambodias fresh/dried cassava traded informally, it is difficult to accurately
compare the scale of local exports with international partners. However, a number of recent assessments
of the cassava sector have concluded that Cambodia is now potentially one of the top five global
exporters of fresh/dried cassava in the world.255 Some estimates put the value of informal cassava trade at
$200 $300 million each year.256Chapter 1 takes on a more conservative view and estimate informal
exports in 2011 at a value of $161 million (Table 1.9.)
Type of Exports
Cassava can be traded in two forms: raw (fresh or dried) cassava and as a processed starch. Freshly
harvested cassava root has a very short shelf life and is highly perishable. Consequently raw cassava can
really only be traded in dried form as either cassava chips or as pellets. Cassava starch is traded in
powdered form and can be used for human and animal consumption as well as a variety of industrial
applications. While, at first glance, Table 13.1 may suggest Cambodia specializes mostly in exporting
cassava starch this does not take account of the substantial informal trade in fresh/dried cassava.
Current Export Destinations
In recent years Cambodias formal cassava exports have been concentrated on just two markets
Thailand (for raw cassava) and Vietnam (for cassava starch). Historically, cassava exports have also been
recorded with Malaysia and China although not with regularity. Following the Memorandum of
Understanding (MoU) on SPS for cassava exports signed between Cambodia and China in 2010, formal
exports to the latter country are becoming more organized and consistent.257Although 47 cassava
processors are registered with MAFF to export to China, compliance with stringent SPS requirements for
this important market remains a key challenge for many processors.

255

Ministry of Commerce,Cassava Sector Profile and Strategy, Phnom Penh: MoC, 2012.
Zhi, C., Cambodia Launches Cassava Development Project under China-UNDP Support, Xianhuanet News, 21 May 2013.
257
China-Cambodia, Protocol on Phytosanitary Requirements for the Export of Tapioca from Cambodia to China, Beijing and
Phnom Penh: 2010
256

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Potential Export Destinations


China has become the principal buyer of cassava products on international markets. Since 2008, its share
of the global demand for fresh/dried cassava has more than doubled from 37 per cent of total imports to
84 percent in 2012 while the EUs share has declined dramatically from 32 percent to less than 2 percent
over the same period. In 2012, China produced 780million liters of bio-ethanol from 6million MT of
dried cassava.258
Table 13.2 below lists the top five global importers in 2012 for each of these products. While other
markets may appear relatively small in comparison they could still offer export opportunities for
Cambodian cassava exports. For cassava starch, markets in Asia account for most imports especially
China and Indonesia. Overall, there is scope for Cambodia to expand formal cassava exports to the major
global importers of both fresh/dried cassava and cassava starch.
Table 13.2 Top Global Importers Cassava, by World Share, 2012
Fresh / Dried Cassava
China
84.0 percent
South Korea
5.7 percent
Thailand
4.4 percent
US
3.1 percent
EU-27
1.5 percent

Cassava Starch
China
34.5
Indonesia
25.3
Taiwan
11.4
Malaysia
6.0
Japan
5.3

percent
percent
percent
percent
percent

Source: TradeMap
Trade Balance
Cambodia is consistently a net exporter of both fresh/dried cassava and cassava starch with zero imports
recorded in recent years.
Dynamism of Exports
Cassava production in Cambodia has significant potential to become a major source of export revenue for
Cambodia. Indeed, in many respects it already has, and is most likely now the second most important
agricultural crop after rice. However, Cambodias cassava export trade is heavily oriented toward
informal trade across land borders with Thailand and Vietnam, where it is further processed and most
likely re-exported.
In this context, informal cassava trade limits further export-led development of the sector in a number
ways. Firstly, by not being part of the formal economy it becomes very difficult for policymakers to
make informed decisions on how best to support export development. Secondly, while informal trade
may make good business sense for those conducting it, for the wider economy it represents both lost
value and a lost opportunity for additional economy activity to take place such as through formal
258

FAO, Policy Brief Save and Grow: Cassava, Rome: FAO, 2013.

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handling, processing and marketing channels. By way of comparison, the international price (FOB) for
cassava starch is $445 per MT at the time of this writing, while the international price of cassava chips is
$235 per MT.259 Further, Cambodias informal exports of both fresh cassava roots and dried chips would
sell at a significantly discounted rate to this international price.
Recent investments in processing facilities including by foreign investors may prove a turning point
for the cassava sector and encourage more production output to enter the formal supply chain. However,
most likely further efforts will be needed by both Government and producers and processors to support
the necessary structural changes within the sector, modernize the supply chain, and drive export-led
development.
Export Prospect
In recent years, Cambodia has experienced significant improvements in the production capacity of the
cassava sector. This is creating a substantial exportable surplus that is already supplying international
markets albeit mostly through informal channels via Thailand and Vietnam. With further growth
expected in Cambodias production capacity there is clearly scope for the local sector to become more
closely integrated in global markets and, particularly, more fully share in the dividends of Chinas
growing appetite for cassava.

World Market Conditions


World cassava production reached 282 million MT in 2012. This follows 14 years of successive
increases in global output, driven by increasing industrial applications of cassava in East and South East
Asia especially, ethanol and rising demand for food in Africa. However, despite the large and
growing volumes of global production, only 12 percent of total production is traded on world markets.260
In 2012, the global market for fresh/dried cassava ($1.8 billion) is larger than the market for cassava
starch ($1.3 billion) with global trade in both products having more than doubled in value during 20072012.261
Like many other raw materials, export prices for flour and starch in Thailand (FOB Bangkok - the
reference price) have increased, particularly during the second half of the last decade. Over the last eleven
years, they have increased threefold, from $146.15 per metric ton (MT) in January 2000 to $509.21/MT in
May 2011. An all time high of $630/MT was recorded in August 2010, following a bad harvest in
Thailand. Since then, prices range from $500 to $600/MT. Traditionally, starch export prices from
Thailand are competitive compared with corn, wheat, or potato flour.262

259
FOB Bangkok prices are regarded as the international reference price. Quoted prices obtained from Thai Tapioca (cassava)
Starch Association in September 2013.
260
FAO, Food Outlook Global Market Analysis, Rome: FAO, November 2012.
261
TradeMap Data.
262
UNCTAD, Infocomm Commodity Profile Cassava,Geneva: UNCTAD, 2012.

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The bulk of world trade in cassava is in the form of pellets and chips for feed (70 percent) and the balance
mostly in starch and flour for food processing and industrial use. Very little is traded in the form of fresh
root, given the products bulkiness and perishable nature.263
Market Access Conditions
Cambodia has relatively favorable market access conditions in a number of key importing markets. For
fresh/dried cassava Cambodian exporters enjoy tariff-free access in China, the EU, and US markets all
of which are major importing countries. Thailand enjoys similar tariff-free access, except for the EU
market where Thai exports face a 12 percent tariff.264
For cassava starch, global market access conditions are less favorable, reflecting tariff escalation
practices. While ASEAN, the US, and Hong Kong grant tariff free access for Cambodias exports, two of
the main global importers of cassava starch China and Taiwan impose duties of 10 percent and 7
percent respectively.265 Japan imposes a highly prohibitive tariff rate of 140 yen per kg (equivalent to
around $1,400 per MT).266
Major Competitors
Thailand and Vietnam are the dominant global exporters of both fresh/dried cassava and cassava starch.
In 2012, Thailand and Vietnam accounted for 58 percent and 31 percent respectively of global exports in
fresh/dried cassava; and 74 percent and 21 percent respectively of global exports in cassava starch.267
The ability of Thailand and Vietnam to service global demand for cassava products is undoubtedly
assisted by the supply of fresh/dried cassava imported (largely informally) from Cambodia. The challenge
for Cambodia is therefore to formalize these trade links so the cassava sector is able to better capture the
value of strong international demand for cassava.
In terms of Cambodia seeking to emulate Thailands rise to dominate cassava exports, the Thai cassava
sector is seen as having grown largely on the back of government policies in relation to trade and
processing as well as government support of R&D tailored to domestic conditions. For example,
Thailand actively supported the establishment of commodity-specific trade associations (such as the Thai
Tapioca Starch Association) and research institutions. These organizations promoted new varieties and
farmer training and participated actively in the national policy dialogue. The organizations also focused
on increasing yield andmarket access, attracting investors, and improving rural transport networks. With
strong government-industry collaboration, the Thai export market expanded tough reliable trade links
with the EU and China.268
263
FAO, Background Paper for the Competitive Commercial Agriculture in SubSaharan Africa (CCAA) Study Cassava:
International market profile, Rome: FAO, 2008.
264
WTO Tariff Analysis Database.
265
Ministry of Commerce (MoC) Cassava Sector Profile and Strategy, Phnom Penh: MoC, 2012.
266
Japan Customs Database (www.customs.go.jp/english). Note: to calculate tariff equivalency an exchange rate of $1= 100was
assumed.
267
TradeMap data.
268
Tijaja, J., The Evolution and Organization of Cassava Value Chains in Global Trade Landscape: Lessons for Africa from
Thailand, Bangkok: 2009.

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World Market Prospect


The outlook for international cassava markets is variable and influenced by a number of factors. In Asia,
cassava production is being guided heavily by highly competitive industrial utilization, including for
starch, alcohol, and fuel ethanol. Government policies in Thailand the worlds largest exporter such
as the use of price pledging schemes also influence world prices and trading conditions. Stockpiles of
cassava accumulate and are then price-discounted. Given the use of cassava in Asia for industrial
purposes, prices for cassava are also influenced by the price competitiveness of substitute products
especially corn, which is used in animal feed and ethanol production.
While these factors will all influence the international price for cassava products, the strong demand from
China is expected to continue. This demand is driven by two main factors: domestic policies that
encourage ethanol production; and, the need to feed an expanding middle class with consumer
preferences increasingly favoring meat (and hence supporting demand for animal feed). China will
therefore play a pivotal role in the export-led development of Cambodias cassava sector and current
efforts to forge closer links could provide an important catalyst.

Domestic Supply Conditions


Producers
While cassava grows well on marginal land and is generally considered a resilient, low-input crop,
constraints impede production worldwide. Disease, lack of access to improved seed and farm inputs,
weed competition, and high labor requirements all constrain production and impact yield.269Cambodias
reliance on poor quality imported (often through informal channels) plant seedlings from Thailand and
Vietnam expose cassava farmers to disease outbreaks and highlight the need for establishing reliable local
supplies of quality seedlings. Recent FAO studies have shown the availability and use of high quality
planting materials that maintain genetic purity and are free of diseases and pathogens are crucial to
intensified cassava production.270
In the absence of a formal seed production and distribution system Cambodia may need to look to
experiences elsewhere to determine how best to support the expansion and intensification of more
sustainable cassava production. For example, cassava development programs in Africa have used a threetier community based approach for rapid multiplication of seeds. At the top level, material from breeders
is multiplied in research stations and government farms to produce clean, disease-free foundation seed.
The secondary level involves further multiplication in farms often run by farmer groups and NGOs.
Certified material is then distributed to tertiary multiplication sites in farming areas.271
269

Evans School Policy Research & Analysis, Cassava Integrated Value Chain, EPAR Brief No. 223, Seattle: EPAR,
University of Washington, December 2012.
270
FAO, Save and Grow: Cassava A guide to sustainable production intensification, Rome: FAO, 2013.
271
FAO, ibid.

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The start of a JACA-funded project at the University of Battambang in 2014 aimed at developing diseaseresistant cassava seedlings is an important beginning in reducing Cambodias reliance on imported and
inferior plant material and could serve as basis for initiating more community-oriented extension services.
More broadly, this project highlights the need for a strong R&D approach to innovation and increase
productivity in Cambodias agriculture sector.
Cassava is the second most important agricultural crop (after rice) in terms of total productionin
Cambodia. Cassava production has increased significantly over the past decade due to a combination of
increased demand for both domestic consumption and export, and higher international prices. Cassava is
also often grown by farmers with other crops, such as corn and soybeans, as well as in rubber plantations
prior to tree maturity (though this practice is not advisable due to the adverse consequences on rubber
yields.) Consequently, it is difficult to determine exactly how many farmers in Cambodia produce
cassava though it is most likely several hundred thousand across all provinces.272
The average farm-size for cassava farmers is in the range of 2 to 5 ha, with some larger cassava farms of
50 ha and more. Cassava farming is labor-intensive in both the planting and harvesting season (usually
around 8 to 10 months apart) and can be a useful rotation crop, enabling farmers to respond to prevailing
market conditions. Fresh cassava root has high water content and is therefore highly perishable with
starch content decreasing rapidly after harvest. Accordingly, it needs to be processed (chipped and dried)
within a few days of harvest.
This processing can be done on-farm by hand, however, it is very labor intensive and poor quality
handling can reduce the quality of the dried cassava, including because it has been dried on unclean floor
space and/or has been contaminated with soil and dirt. Mechanized on-farm choppers are used in
Thailand and China, but are not yet commonly used in Cambodia.
Many Cambodia cassava farmers simply sell the fresh cassava root to collectors and traders. This
practice is driven by the needs of smallholder farmers to access instant cash, as well as the high cost of
labor required to conduct the chipping activities discouraging such value-adding activities on-farm.273
Once in dried chip or pellet form, cassava can be stored for long periods, enabling collectors and traders
to resell when prices are more favorable, which is often across the Thai or Vietnamese border.
In Cambodia, a number of small and large-scale cassava processing activities take place. Cassava chip
factories are usually small-scale family businesses located close to plantations with simple chopping
equipment. Processing of cassava starch can be done in both small-scale and large-scale facilities,
although sufficient working capital is needed to make the processing economical. Other processing
facilities (such as for animal feed or bio-fuel) have started to emerge in recent years and are often joint
ventures with Thai, Vietnamese, Chinese, or Korean investors. As of 2011 around a dozen large-scale
processors were operating in Cambodia each specializing in a specific product.

272
273

Ministry of Commerce, Cassava Sector Profile and Strategy, Phnom Penh: MoC, 2012.
Emerging Markets Consulting, Trade Project Cambodia: Cassava Industry Study, Phnom Penh: UNDP Cambodia, 2008.

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It will be important that Cambodias processing capacity keeps pace with the rapid increase in local
cassava production. In 2010 the total cassava processing capacity in Cambodia was estimated around
920,000 MT (fresh root equivalent) per year, when at the same time total cassava production exceeded 4.2
million MT.274 Given that cassava production has grown to around 6 to 7 million MT, significant
processing capacity is needed and should be encouraged by RGC.
In this context, a planned Cambodia-Thai joint venture to export 300,000 MT of dry cassava to China
yearly was announced in January 2012 after the launch of a cassava processing plant in Siem Reap.275
Similar investments are critical to driving export-led development of Cambodias cassava sector and
encouraging domestic value-adding activities rather than relying on informal exports. Importantly,
investments that target specific markets such as China are needed in order to build on expected growing
demand and to take advantage of the bilateral MoU signed in 2010.276
Production Capacity
Cambodias total area planted to cassava has expanded dramatically from around 16,000 ha in 2000 to
more than 345,000 ha in 2012. Consequently, annual production of fresh cassava has increased
exponentially from around 148,000 MT in 2000 to more than 6.8 million MT in 2012 (see Table 13.3.)
The drop in cassava production from a record high of 8 million MT achieved in 2011 corresponded with a
13 percent fall in planted area as lower prices for fresh cassava root encouraged some farmers to switch to
other crops (such as beans.)277
Table 13.3 Cassava Production & Yields

1995

Planted
Area (ha)
14,000

Harvested
Area (ha)
12,000

Production
(MT)
82,000

Yield
(MT/ha)
6.83

2000

16,000

15,000

148,000

9.87

2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012

109,000
180,000
160,000
206,000
391,714
346,594

109,000
180,000
157,000
202,000
369,518
n/a

2,215,000
3,676,000
3,497,000
4,249,000
8,033,843
6,860,000

20.32
20.42
22.26
20.98
21.74
21.70f

Year

Source: ASEAN Food Security Information Service (AFSIS). Note: yields


estimate for 2012 production year is an FAO estimate (FAOSTAT).

274

Emerging Markets Consulting, Trade Project Cambodia: Cassava Industry Study, Phnom Penh: UNDP Cambodia, 2008.
Bunthy, S., Cassava Processing, China Trade Planned, Phnom Penh Post, 12 January 2012.
276
China-Cambodia, Protocol on Phytosanitary Requirements for the Export of Tapioca from Cambodia to China, Beijing and
Phnom Penh: 2010
277
Reuy, R., Cassava production dropped in 2012, Phnom Penh Post, Tue, 5 February 2013
275

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There are a number of key factors driving this rapid increase in cassava production. These include the rise
in international cassava prices; new domestic processing facilities; the adoption of higher yielding cassava
varieties; and, the expansion into new production areas where soils are relatively fertile.278 This is evident
in the more than doubling of the average yield enjoyed to more than 20 MT per hectare one of the
highest yields for fresh cassava root reported in the world.279 Indeed, India and Thailand are the only
countries in the world that report higher average yields.
However, yields differ markedly across Cambodias provinces (see Figure 13.1.) This is because cassava
cultivation can have serious adverse impacts on soil quality with sharp decreases in yield usually
experienced after about three years of successive cultivation. Consequently, newly cultivated land will
typically generate very high yields, encouraging farmers to repeat the practice year-on-year, only to find
that in due course average yields decline quickly. This highlights the critical need for farm extensions
services that can improve crop management practices, such as through the use of natural fertilizers and
crop rotation.280

Map
Distribution of
of Cassava
Cassava
Map 13.1:Geographical
13.1:Geographical Distribution

Source: Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry


Source:

278

Sopheapa et al., Unveiling Constraints to Cassava Production in Cambodia: An Analysis from Farmers Yield Variations,
International Journal of Plant Production 6 (4), October 2012.
279
FAOSTAT Database.
280
Ministry of Commerce, Cassava Sector Profile and Strategy, Phnom Penh: MoC, 2012.

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Quality of Product
The heavy reliance of Cambodias cassava sector on informal trade links has a number of knock-on
effects that impede the sectors development. For example, Cambodias cassava farmers, processors and
exporters are facing enormous constraints,including price distortions in neighboring countries (principally
Thailand), a lack of information on price and quality criteria of importing markets and, for farmers, a lack
of access to technology.
In particular, as the sector still seeks to more fully integrate into the regional and global supply chain, few
local operators fully comprehend the marketing of cassava in international markets. Consequently, the
expectations of import markets in areas such as product standards and quality are not fully understood.
In this context, forging closer bilateral relations between the local sector and key export markets will be
important to achieving closer integration and meeting international standards. The signing of a bilateral
protocol on the export of Cambodian cassava to Chinain December 2010 was therefore an important step
forward in this regard. The protocol included a commitment by China to provide technical expertise to
Cambodias cassava sector including in the areas of environment sustainability of cassava cultivation and
improving the quality of fresh/dried and processed cassava to a standard acceptable for export to China.281
Availability & Quality of Labor Force
Cassava production involves a number of stages, namely planting and harvesting, that are relatively labor
intensive and is a considerable expense for smallholder farmers. The cost of hiring unskilled workers also
rises significantly during the peak planting and harvest season. While mechanized planting and
harvesting are available to the larger farms, such capital costs are beyond the reach of small-scale farms.
Processors require skilled labor for plant maintenance to operate machinery. With factory equipment
imported, often from Thailand or Vietnam, technicians and engineers are also generally sourced from
overseas. This is consistent with a general shortage of skilled labor across Cambodias export sectors,
and the need for a comprehensive Technical and Vocational Education Training (TVET) framework that
ensures trainees and graduates qualify with the skills needed by employers (see chapter 17.)
Level of Processing Technology
The mechanization of on-farm cassava chipping would significantly lower seasonal labor costs, reduce
wastage (from spoilage) and improve farmers profits margins though value added activities. However,
most farmers have limited or no access to on-farm technology, even where mechanization of on-farm
activities is cost-effective for small-scale farmers. This reflects the widely recognized need for
strengthened agricultural extension services in Cambodia including in relation to plant material
distribution systems, cultivation practices, and adoption of farm technologies.282 Ultimately it is likely
the private sector will need to be involved in the delivery of some farm extension services rather than
281

Zhi, C., Cambodia Launches Cassava Development Project under China-UNDP Support, Xianhuanet News, 21 May 2013.
CDRI, Agricultural Trade In The Greater Mekong Sub-Region: The Case Of Cassava And Rubber In Cambodia,Phnom Penh:
CDRI Working Paper Series No. 43, 2009.

282

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leaving such responsibility solely to MAFF. Private sector involvement such as cassava processors
will also ensure direct linkages between the specifications of the market and the on-farm practices of
cassava producers.
Off-farm processing of cassava is also important due to the highly perishable nature of fresh cassava roots
and the absence of adequate post-harvest handling on-farm. Cambodias relatively liberal FDI regime has
encouraged strong growth in cassava processing enterprises, especially through joint ventures operations.
Foreign investor interest in the sector has been driven by rapidly increasing local cassava production and
the opportunities to market processed cassava in the region.For example, plans for an ethanol plant
backed by Japanese investors have been formalized with MAFF. Following a three-year pilot phase, the
plant will source cassava from 2,000 contract farmers across 15,000ha. Investments such as these
underscore the importance of producing consistently large supplies of cassava of reliable quality.
Cost and Quality of Infrastructure
Roads connecting main cassava productioncenters to major urban areas are poor. This makes transportand
transaction costs very high, especially as fresh/dried cassava is a bulky item with a relatively low value
per MT compared to other agriculture commodities. High-cost infrastructure therefore discourages
cassava production entering the formal supply chain.Renovation of the Battambang Phnom Penh rail
link and resumption of freight service between the two cities would go along way to improving transport
logistics and associated costs for the cassava sector.
Poor quality roads also impedeCambodias processing factories (located in urban areas) fromcompeting
effectively with foreign traders in purchasing fresh/dried cassava. This is because local processorshave a
higher cost of access to the area of production. Consequently, farmers have limited choice in terms of
who to sell to, placing them in a weak bargaining positionwith little abilityto influence price.283
Efficiency of Domestic Support Industries
There is very limited access to finance due to unfavorable credit conditions, especially for small-scale
cassava farmers. This impedes efforts to encourage local farmers to expand production and/or utilize
modern cultivation techniques. More broadly, the lack of established marketing channels, poor
infrastructure,poor market information, and erratic supply and quality of cassava material has been among
themain factors constraining trade in cassava.284The lack of working capital is a particular constraint to
expansion of Cambodias cassava processing capabilities.Overall, there is an urgent need to implement a
national export development strategy for the cassava sector. The export strategy should be backed by
RGC, the private sector and RDB and will need to target each of the key constraints to further export
development.

283

CDRI, Agricultural Trade In The Greater Mekong Sub-Region: The Case Of Cassava And Rubber In Cambodia,Phnom Penh:
CDRI Working Paper Series No. 43,2009.
284
FAO, Background paper for the Competitive Commercial Agriculture in SubSaharan Africa (CCAA) Study Cassava:
International market profile, Rome: FAO, 2008.

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Domestic Demand
It is estimated between 20 to 30 percent of cassava starch produced in Cambodia is consumed
domestically, especially for animal feed.285 There is little processing capacity to value-add to the
remaining locally produced starch, which is subsequently exported to Thailand or Vietnam. In this
context, Cambodias cassava starch processors would benefit from the further development of a local
food processing industry given the many end-uses starch offers, such as in bakery products, noodles,
confectionary and glucose. Similarly, expansion of Cambodias livestock sector would also improve
domestic utilization of locally produced cassava starch.
Prospect for Domestic Supply Conditions
There is no significant local industry for farm inputs, such as fertilizer and pesticides, in Cambodia. This
leads to a dependence on either high-cost imported products or illegal low-quality imported products.
Improved farm extension and support services would help to reduce the risk to farmers of utilizing lowquality inputs, many of which are fake or diluted.
The export-led development of a number of agricultural industries in Cambodia, including rice and
cassava, may also provide the necessary catalyst for local investors to commence import-substitution
production and, at least in part, reduce the lost earnings resulting from import dependence.

Policy and Regulatory Framework


Government Initiatives and Sector Policy
The strong growth recorded in cassava production in recent years provides an important opportunity for
Government and stakeholders to take a strategic approach to export-led development of the sector. The
competitive advantage of Thailand poses a daunting challenge to countries such as Cambodia wishing to
more fully integrate with the international cassava market. However, in many respects, the path taken by
Thailand provides a useful example of how to promote export development of agricultural industries.
Thailands success was founded on close public-private sector collaboration, investment in R&D,
pursuing market access opportunities and implementing government programs to ease constraints to
export development (such as infrastructure.) This template is useful basis for Cambodias cassava sector.
A national cassava industry association is needed (see below) to promote industry coordination and
engage effectively with government. This should form the catalyst for developing and implementing a
national policy platform focused on export development of the cassava sector.
The approach taken by RGC for Cambodias rice sector demonstrates that coordinated and strategic
action by Government and sector stakeholders can be successful in driving export development. To this
285

Ministry of Commerce, Cassava Sector Profile and Strategy, Phnom Penh: MoC, 2012.

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end, the national policy and action plan should include the roll out of farm extension and support services
to ensure cassava farmers have an opportunity to improve operations and cultivation practices. The
policy will also need to address important cross-cutting issues, such as FDI, the environment, trade,
infrastructure, energy, and vocational training.
In terms of trade and market access, the bilateral MoU between Cambodia and China will form an
important basis for improving the industrys standards and aligning the supply chain toward the worlds
largest and most important importer of cassava.
Business Associations
While a Working Group on Agriculture & Agro-Industry does convene under the Government-Private
Sector Forum (G-PSF), no national association specific to the cassava sector exists in Cambodia either at
the processor or farm-gate level. Due to the pressing need to establish a national policy platform and
strategic action plan to drive and coordinate export-led development of Cambodias cassava sector, a
national farmer and processor association is warranted and would serve as a useful mechanism for publicprivate sector dialogue and collaboration, including the formulation of a national policy. This would also
help overcome the fragmented nature of farming as well as the weak supply chain linkages.
A national association would enhance significantly the prospects of Cambodias cassava sector and
should be a key priority for both Government and stakeholders. A national association would also help
better organize stakeholders and identify opportunities for cooperation, including through vertical
integration. This could include, for example, encouraging contract farming where the relationships
between farmers and processors and formalized, enabling farmers to access market information and
support services while improve processors access to better quality fresh/dried cassava in reliable
quantities.

Socio-Economic and Environmental Impacts


Current Employment and Job-Creation Prospect
Possibly hundreds of thousands of farmers grow cassava. Very few numbers are available on employment
among processors and traders. As the cassava sector becomes more integrated into the global supply
chain there is scope for the industrys returns to improve. This would offer the prospect of increased
earnings for cassava farmers. The expansion of Cambodias cassava processing sector will also offer
future employment opportunities in a range of semi-skilled and skilled positions.
Impact on Development of Disadvantaged Regions
Cassava is grown in every province in Cambodia though there are two main production corridors.
Battambang, Bantey Meanchey, and Pailin, along the Thai border, accounted for 38 percent of total
cassava production in 2011. Kampong Cham, bordering Vietnam, is the single largest cassava-producing
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province and accounted for 31 percent of total production. However, the importance of these production
corridors has diminished in recent years as cassava production has become more widespread.
Consequently, the export-oriented development of the cassava sector would have significant welfare and
poverty reducing benefits across Cambodia.
Contribution to Skill Development
Expansion of Cambodiascassava-processing sector offers increased employment opportunities for
operations managers, machine technicians, marketing professionals and cassava collectors and traders.286
Energy and Water Constraints and Environmental Impact
Electricity prices in Cambodia are considered the highest in the ASEAN region. This is a major deterrent
to foreign investors and undermines Cambodias ability to compete with neighboring countries such as
Thailand and Vietnam, including in the export of processed cassava products. Given that one of the many
end-uses of cassava is in bio-fuel (ethanol) production, there may be scope for local processors in
Cambodia to reduce reliance on the national electricity grid and adopt more cost-competitive and
renewable energy sources.This is likely to be viable only where surplus electricity can be sold back to
the national grid by relatively small processors a practice currently prohibited by Cambodias stateowned electricity provider EDC.
A key environmental consequence of poorly managed cassava cultivation is the way in which the root
exhausts the soil, depleting its nutrients. However, cassava can be farmed sustainably in Cambodia if
farmers are given access to the right tools and information to introduce more optimal cultivation practices.
In particular, if farmers knew about the risks of mono-cropping, much of the actual harm to future soil
viability could be avoided.287 Similarly, recent expansion of cassava cultivation into the hillsides in North
East Cambodia is leading to significant soil erosion and highlights the need for targeted farm extension
services.
Cassava processing, especially in areas where the sector is highly concentrated, can also be regarded as
polluting and be a burden on the environment and natural resources. Some forms of processing,
particularly for starch, arewater intensive yet often located in areas of water scarcity. Cassava processing
for starch extraction produces large amounts of effluent high in organic content that if left untreated can
have adversely affect the local environment, especially if starch waste water enters local waterways.288
Consequently, given Cambodias vast and valuable waterways, it should be a requirement of investing in,
and establishing, cassava-processing facilities that approved waste management systems are installed and
monitored.

286

See Chapter 17 for a broader discussion of skill development in Cambodia.


Emerging Markets Consulting, Cassava Industry Study, Phnom Penh: UNDP Cambodia, 2008.
288
FAO, Impact of Cassava Processing On The Environment, Rome: FAO, 2001.
287

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Box 13.1: ASEAN & Regional Integration


The rapid expansion in Cambodias production of cassava presents an ideal opportunity for the sector to
reduce its heavy reliance on informal export channels and more fully integrate with the region.
Importantly, Cambodias increased production capacity has enabled a local processing sector to emerge,
drawing on the many end-uses for cassava and favorable international prices. These processing plants
relate to drying cassava, animal feed, starch production, biofuel and alcohol providing a strong basis
on which to further develop value-added activities and exports.
While Cambodia should continue to pursue development of processed cassava products, the strong
demand and government-to-government agreement with China provide an important opportunity for the
sector to secure access to the worlds largest cassava importing market. To achieve this, cassava
farmers, collectors, and processors need to change practices and improve standards in order to meet the
SPS and quality requirements of the Chinese market.
More broadly, the lack of established marketing channels, inadequate infrastructure, weak market
information, unreliable supply, and quality of cassava are among the main factors that are still impeding
closer trade integration with Asia. Significant investments by both Government and industry will
therefore be needed to modernize the cassava supply chain in Cambodia. Ideally, this process should be
overseen by a national cassava industry policy and export market development strategy.

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Conclusion
The main findings from this chapter are summarized in the SWOT analysis that follows.
Strengths

Weaknesses

Cassava is adaptable to diverse climates and soil


varietiesoffering potential income source to
farmers on marginal land.
Inexpensive source of carbohydrate and can be
substituted for rice during shortages, offering
important food security to the rural poor in Asia.
Cambodia has some of the highest yields for cassava
roots in the worldaverage 20 MT/ha.
Cassava can be grown as a single crop or intercroppedoffering an additional income source.
Rising prices have encouraged increased plantings
and improved returns to farmers.
Cassava offers farmers the flexibility to time harvest
with suitable market conditions.
Low labor cost makes intensiveness of planting /
harvesting cassava manageable.
Cassava has many end uses and is widely used in the
global food, animal feed, bio-fuel, and semiindustrial sectors.
Substitution of corn for cassava in Chinese bio-fuel
industry has opened up a new market offering
attractive returns for dried cassava.
Attracting FDI from South Korea and China to
establish large commercial plantations and dedicated
processing facilities (for bio-fuels).
Cambodias cassava exports enjoy tariff preference
advantages in ASEAN, EU, and China.

Raw cassava roots are highly perishable and need to


be quickly processed (chipped and dried.)
Weak investment in R&D and inadequate extension
services to support use of higher yield varieties or
improve crop management practices.
Exports are mainly fresh tubers or dried chips traded
informally across the Thai and Viet borders and are
subject to high cross-border fees.
Significant disease in new seedlings, low quality
cassava plantings, and poor post-harvest handling
make it difficult to maintain yields or meet export
specifications in higher-value markets.
Inconsistent supply in term of quantities
Poor preparation, drying,and storage of cassava
chips reduce quality and value.
High cost of credit impedes efforts to improve postharvest handling and farm-gate returns.
Low investment in processing facilities, despite
sectors growth and new export opportunities.
Competition from Thai and Viet traders for raw
cassava limits available stock for local processors
and undermines sectors profitability and growth.
Lack of skilled labor to operate and manage
processing facilities.
Limited experience in marketing, supply chain
management and exports.
Difficulty in meeting SPS standards for key markets
such as China

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Opportunities

Threats

The poorest rural families often farm cassava and


opportunities to earn higher returns will have
significant welfare enhancing benefits.
Mechanization of on-farm cassava chipping would
significantly lower seasonal labor costs, reduce
wastage from perished stock and improve farmers
margins.
Development of local processing capacity near main
production areas would increase competition for
cassava crop and improve farm-gate prices.
Increase in local processing capacity would
significantly boost sectors overall prospects and
support parallel agro-processing sector.
Scope to diversify exports of processed cassava to
other Asian marketsespecially China, Korea,
Indonesia and Malaysia.
CambodiaChina MoU offers an important platform
to facilitate technical exchanges and exports of up to
one million MT of dried cassava per year.

Deforestation from increased cultivation.


Rising cost of agricultural inputs and labor shortages
during planting / harvesting.
Maintaining poor cassava farming practices can lead
to serious depletion of soil quality, erosion, falling
yields and lower farm profits.
Unpredictable border closures (such as with
Thailand) and limited access to credit to finance
increased production.
Continued dominance of Thai and Vietnamese
traders impedes efforts to shift production to more
local channels for value adding and generating
higher returns to rural communities.
Limited market information leading to farmers
continued acceptance of lower farm-gate prices
despite higher regional and international prices.
Exposure to future changes in Chinese Government
bio-fuel and import policies.
General reluctance by government and private sector
to invest significantly in cassava industry.

Recommendations
The cassava sector in Cambodia has undergone significant expansion over the past decade to become one
of the most important agricultural sectors in the economy. Strong growth in production capacity has
helped support the expansion of local cassava processors, generating important value-added activities and
income. This provides a strong basis for export-led development of the cassava sector.
However, closer integration in the regional and global economy will not be easy. Thailand is the
dominant exporter in the world with strong trade linkages to the major markets. Similarly, Cambodia will
need to overcome significant barriers to expand formal exports and take advantage of opportunities for
vertical integration with the processing sector. In particular, the standards and quality of production must
improve both at the farm level and at processors. Internationally recognized practices and processing
methods will need to be met, including improved SPS compliance and adoption of more modern
cultivation techniques. The bilateral MoU between Cambodia and China provides a useful basis for the
local cassava sector to expand exports to this important market, while also taking advantage of the
technical assistance the agreement provides for.
Overall, a national cassava industry policy is needed to drive export-led development and modernization
of the supply chain. Possible Actions to address some of the sectors current limitations and opportunities
for further significant progress are identified in the Trade SWAp Roadmap under Outcome #13.

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Chapter 14
RUBBER
Background
The cultivation of rubber in Cambodia can be traced back to the 1910s, with the countrys climate, soils,
and pest and disease profile presenting favorable conditions for rubber plantation. In recent years the
sector has undergone a significant transformation that still has some way to run. The rubber industry has
strong government backing and has been identified as a priority sector help drive export-led development
in Cambodia.
Since 2005, total rubber planted area has increased almost five-fold from 60,000ha to more than
280,000ha. As these new plantings come into production in coming years, total rubber output is set to
increase rapidly. This provides an important opportunity to align the rubber supply chain with
international markets, by adopting best practices in rubber cultivation, modernizing processing plants, and
promoting production of higher-quality rubber products that meet designated international standards.

Export Performance
Export Value
Cambodia exported 54,520 MT of natural rubber in 2012, valued at approximately $175 million.289 This
is consistent with the clear upward trend in export volumes and values over the last five years, as outlined
in Table 14.1 below. The decline in value of natural rubber exports in 2012 corresponded with a sharp
decline of 30 percent in international prices.290This highlights the volatility of international prices for
rubber products in general and is one of the risks associated with rubber production worldwide.
Table 14.1: Cambodian Natural Rubber Exports
Volume (MT)
Value ($ million)

2007
20,359
$ 40.7

2008
11,881
$ 31.1

2009
31,469
$ 48.6

2010
27,031
$ 82.7

2011
44,443
$ 190.8

2012
54,520
$174.8

Source: TradeMap for 2007-2011 data; MoC and GDR for 2012 data.
289

Export volume data was provided by the Ministry of Commerce, Phnom Penh. Export value data are quoted from the General
Directorate of Rubber, Annual Report 2012, Phnom Penh: MAFF/GDR, 2013.
290
International Rubber Study Group, Statistical Summary of World Rubber Situation 2010-2012, Singapore: International
Rubber Study Group, 2013.

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Note that significant quantities of natural rubber are exported informally, particularly to Vietnam. This
trade is unrecorded and is not captured in the data presented here. According to theinternational
Association of Natural Rubber Producing Countries (ANRPC) of which Cambodia became a member in
2009 there were seven rubber exporting companies operating in Cambodia in 2011.291
Type of Exports
While rubber products can be traded in many forms, natural rubber accounts for almost all of Cambodias
formal rubber exports. Small quantities of other rubber products are recorded, including vulcanized
rubber (used in garment manufacturing) and rubber pneumatic tires. In 2011, exports of these products
were $1 million (73 MT) and $0.18 million (106 MT) respectively.292
Current Export Destinations
Vietnam accounts for the majority of Cambodias natural rubber exports, followed by China and
Malaysia. Table 14.2 lists the top five export destinations for Cambodian rubber products. Vietnams
position as the leading export destination for Cambodian rubber is partly due to the large number of
rubber estates located in close proximity to the Cambodia Vietnam border. Other factors include the
willingness of Vietnamese traders to purchase lower-quality natural rubber than might otherwise be
accepted on international markets, and the fact Vietnam has suitable facilities to process natural rubber
imported from Cambodia.
Typically, Vietnamese rubber traders will import natural rubber, process, and re-export to third-country
markets (especially China.) Cross-border trade also offers the advantage of avoiding the costs associated
with transport and logistics that would be incurred in direct sales to other markets, such as China or
Malaysia.293
Table 14.2: Top 5 Export Markets for
Cambodian Rubber Products, by Value, 2011
Export Market

Vietnam
China
Malaysia
Singapore
South Korea

Value
($ million)

Share of Total
Exports (%)

$ 111.2
$ 39.8
$ 23.2
$ 5.8
$ 3.7

58 %
21 %
12 %
3%
2%

Source: TradeMap (formal exports only)

291

ANPRC, Directory of Natural Rubber Exporters in ANRPC Member Countries, 2011.


TradeMap Data
293
Ministry of Commerce, Rubber Sector Profile, Value Chain Unit, Phnom Penh: MoC, 2012.
292

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Over the past five years Vietnams share of total Cambodian exports has declined from a high of
87 percent in 2007, down to 80 percent in 2010, and, subsequently, 58 percent in 2011. This reduced
reliance on the Vietnamese market has occurred as exports to other markets have grown rapidly
especially to China and Malaysia.294The ability to diversify export markets has been made possible from
significant investment in, and expansion of, Cambodias rubber production capacity. This expansion is
likely to continue over the medium term.
Potential Export Destinations
China, the US, Japan, and Malaysia are the main global importers of natural rubber products, followed by
South Korea and Germany (see Table 14.3.) While, in comparison, Indiamay still be a relatively small
importer, it has a very strong growth record with imports increasing almost five-fold from $229 million in
2008 to $967 million in 2012.295Each of these markets offer significant export potential if Cambodia can
continue to boost production and develop an export-oriented supply chain that can service international
markets.
Table 14.3: Key Global Importers of
Natural Rubber Products, $ Billions, 2012
Importing Market

China
US
Japan
Malaysia
South Korea
Germany
India

Value
($billions)

$ 6.8
$ 3.5
$ 2.5
$ 2.5
$ 1.4
$ 1.3
$ 0.97

Source:TradeMap

Trade Balance
Cambodia is overwhelmingly a net exporter of natural rubber products, although is a net importerof other
rubber products. These imports, valued at $60 million in 2011are mainly from Chinese Taipei and China
and are mostly vulcanized rubber goods used in the manufacturing of clothing apparel and accessories.
Local demand for these imports is from Cambodias large and global garment and footwear
manufacturing industries.296Given the value of these imports and its links to large export-oriented industry

294

TradeMap Data
TradeMap data. Note: While Malaysia is a significant importer of natural rubber products, it is still a net exporter and
competes with Cambodias natural rubber exports on regional and global markets.
296
TradeMap data
295

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in Cambodia, the potential opportunity for local rubber processors to pursue import-substitution
production could be explored further by RGC and the private sector.
Dynamism of Exports
The RGC enacted new export tax arrangements for Cambodias natural rubber exports in December 2010.
The effect was to increase the export taxes applied to Cambodias natural rubber products based on the
prevailing export prices. Prior to these changes, most natural rubber exports were subject to a $50/MT
levy.297 Table 14.4 below outlines the tiered export tax arrangements that came into effect in December
2010.
Table 14.4: Export Tax on Natural Rubber
Export Tax Rate
$ 50 / MT
$150 / MT
$ 200 / MT
$ 300 / MT

Conditions
if export price is < $2,000 / MT
if export price is between $2,000 - $3,000 / MT
if export price is between $3,000 - $4,000 / MT
if export price is > $ 4000 / MT and above

Source: RGC, Anukret (Sub-Decree) No 172, 29 December 2010.


While export tax arrangements on natural rubber products have been in place in Cambodia for more than
a decade, the changes implemented in December 2010 might well exacerbate problems associated with
informal exports. In general, higher taxes and related charges create an added incentive for tax avoidance
and appear at odds with the broader government strategy of export-led development of Cambodias
rubber sector.
The tiered export tax also goes against efforts to encourage local value-adding and/or improve product
quality that would attract a higher international export price and, consequently, a higher export tax
imposition. Further, given the high volatility in international prices for natural rubber products it is
difficult for exporters to anticipate likely export tax liabilities, adding to the overall investment
uncertainty in a sector that is, by its very nature, relatively risky.
Other factors impacting the export performance of Cambodias rubber sector is the difficulty of meeting
international standards. Until recently, the lack of an internationally accredited testing and certification
laboratory in Cambodia impeded broad market access for the sector, which instead relied on sending
samples to international laboratories in order to secure certificates (an expensive and time-consuming
process). Since 2011, the international accreditation of the National Specific Laboratory House (NSLH)
in the Cambodia Rubber Research Institute (CRRI) has helped ease the burden of export certification for
rubber exporters. However, the Cambodian Specified Rubber (CSR) grading system/standards remains
relatively obscure in international markets and significant government and industry effort will be needed
to promote the standard to ensure CSR becomes more widely accepted.
297

Phalla, Ly, Director General of GDR, interviewed in the Phnom Penh Post, Rubber smuggling concern, February 2011.

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Export Prospect
As recent rubber plantations mature and come into production, average yields and export capacity will
increase significantly. The recent accreditation of Cambodias natural rubber testing laboratory should
allow for broader market access and enable local processors to take greater advantage of increased natural
rubber production that can be certified domestically against international standards. Further, a number of
large rubber importing countries especially China are located in close proximity to Cambodia,
providing an opportunity to divert current semi-processed exports to Vietnam in favor of exports of
higher-value products to more lucrative markets. In this context, Cambodia will need to improve the
quality of rubber processing to meet the demands of Chinas market at competitive prices. Strategic
investments in processing capacity coupled with modernization of the local supply chain will be needed
to ensure Cambodia makes the most of this opportunity to boost significantly its exports of natural rubber
products.

World Market Conditions


Trade in natural rubber products exceeded $25 billion worldwide in 2012, with the industrys fortunes and
supply chains heavily geared toward the global auto industry.298Trade in natural rubber products can be
differentiated by the form in which it is manufactured. Technically specified natural rubber (TSNR)
accounts for almost two-thirds of global trade in natural rubber and is graded by technical standards (as
opposed to visual standards) such as the levels of dirt and content present, as well as plasticity and color.
The other categories of natural rubber trade smoked sheets, latex, and other forms each account for
roughly 10 per cent of global natural rubber trade. Again, these products are graded although often by
visual inspection. Each of these categories has wide-ranging end-use. Lower quality grades are often
acceptable to the tire manufacturing industry, while high quality grades can have various industrial,
medical, and consumer good uses.
Market Access Conditions
Cambodiabenefits from tariff-free access for natural rubber exports to China, the US, EU, Japan,
Malaysia, and Korea all major global importers.299 However, this does not equate to any meaningful
tariff preference as the major global exporters of natural rubber products enjoy the same tariff free access
in these markets. India applies a tariff of 19.2 percent to Cambodias natural rubber exports (in TSNR
form), representing a very marginal tariff preference over exports from key competitors Thailand and
Indonesia that are subject to a 20 percent tariff.
Overall, tariff duties are not a significant barrier to Cambodia increasing its exports of natural rubber
products. Rather, the needs to meet international standards and promote Cambodian Specified Rubber
298

TradeMap data
TradeMap Market Access Map data: assuming trade is conducted in Technically Specified Natural Rubber (TSNR) form,
which is the form in which most natural rubber is traded globally.
299

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(CSR) as an internationally accepted certificate for natural rubber exports are key factors in sustaining
Cambodias future export growth. In addition, the imposition of an export tax of $50 $300 per MT on
Cambodias natural rubber products, in effect, acts as a universal tariff as high as 7.5 percent (AVE) on
all exports.300 The continuation of this export tax regime should therefore be reviewed in light of wider
government efforts to promote export-led development in Cambodias rubber sector.
Major Competitors
The main exporters of natural rubber are in South East Asia. Thailand and Indonesia, in particular,
dominate global tradewith $8.8 billion and $7.8 billion worth of exports in natural rubber products
respectively in 2012. This represented more than 64 percent of total world trade in this category.301Other
key exporters include Malaysia, Vietnam, and Cote dIvoire.
However, both Thailand and Indonesia operate in different segments of the global rubber market and so
do not necessarily compete directly with each other. Thailand is the dominant exporter in three natural
rubber categories: natural rubber latex, natural rubber in smoked sheets, and natural rubber in other forms.
Conversely, Indonesia is the worlds largest exporter of technically specified natural rubber (TSNR),
which is the largest segment of global rubber trade.
World Market Prospect
Overall, the outlook for global natural rubber trade is strong and is backed by growing demand from
global auto and tire manufacturers. China and India in particular will continue to support global demand
for natural rubber with each having ambitious plans to expand respective auto sectors.302 This will not
translate necessarily to higher international prices, with the peak natural rubber prices enjoyed in 2011
forecast to continue a steady decline out to 2025.303 Consequently, it is important that investment
decisions take a long-term view toward future export growth in Cambodias rubber sector especially as
new rubber plantations take six to seven years before maturing and coming into production.

Domestic Supply Conditions


Producers
In Cambodia there are three categories of rubber producers: private-owned plantations, economic land
concessions (ELC) companies, and smallholder rubber plantations. Table 14.5 provides a snapshot of the
current industry structure of natural rubber production in Cambodia.

300

An export tax of $300 per MT is applied on natural rubber exports where export prices are $4,000 per MT and above. This
specific duty represents a 7.5 percent ad valorem equivalent (AVE): $300 /$4,000 = 7.5 percent.
301
TradeMap Data
302
International Rubber Study Group 2012.
303
World Bank, Commodity Price Forecast Update - January 2013, Washington DC: World Bank, 2013.

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Table 14.5:Cultivation and Production of Natural Rubber in Cambodia, 2012


Type of
Producers
Private

Mature
area (ha)

Immature
area (ha)

Total
area (ha)

Production
(MT)

Export
(MT)

Export
($)

Avg
$/MT

24,062

30,146

54,209

28,531

29,917

87,760,129

2,933

118,449

118,449

Smallholders

31,298

76,398

107,696

35,993

30,000

87,000,000

2,900

Total

55,361

224,994

280,355

64,524

174,760,129

2,917

ELC

59,917

304

Source: GDR,Annual Report, 2012

Privately-owned plantations include the seven previously state-owned rubber estates that were privatized
by the RGC in 2008-09. In 2012, there were ten privately-owned plantations in operation with more than
24,000 ha of rubber trees available for tapping, with production reaching 28,500 MT. With more than
30,000 ha of immature trees already in the ground, the production capacity of privately owned plantations
is set to more than double over the next few years. These private plantations typically have processing
plants co-located on the plantation estate.
The RGC has provided areas no greater than 10,000 ha as economic land concessions (ELCs) to local and
foreign investors to develop rubber and other industrial crops. As of 2012, 94 ELC companies had planted
close to 120,000 ha of rubber trees, but these were not yet mature for tapping. When these plantations
come into production the next few years, Cambodias natural rubber production will increase
dramatically.
Household-owned rubber plantations have been operating in Cambodia for more than two decades and,
more recently, have increased significantly in number due to the RGCs policy of providing parts of stateowned plantations to farmers. The tapped area by smallholders in 2012 was 31,000 ha representing
more than half of Cambodias current total tapped area. Most rubber smallholders have plantations of one
or two plots, averaging 2.8 ha in size.305According to GDR, there are more than 21,000 smallholder
families in Cambodia producing an estimated 36,000 MT of natural rubber in 2012.
Smallholder producers typically transform liquid latex into a coagulated dry rubber on the farm using
chemical additives (usually acid.) This helps preserve the latex, making it easier to store and handle.
Smallholders then sell coagulated latex to intermediary collectors and traders who typically pay spot
prices in cash, take ownership of the coagulum, and resell to processors.306
In the past, many of the processors on former state-owned rubber estates (now privately-owned)
processed almost exclusively liquid latex. As a result, there has been for a long time an over-capacity for
processing latex and an under-capacity to process the dry rubber coagulum sold by smallholder
304

Note GDR estimates for natural rubber exports are slightly higher (at 59,917 MT) than those provided by the Ministry of
Commerce (at 54,520 MT). For the purposes of this report and to ensure, as far as possible, consistency of data sources, MoC
data is been quoted as official export data.
305
Hing V. & V. Thun.,Agricultural Trade in the Greater Mekong Sub-Region: The case of Cassava and Rubber in Cambodia,
Phnom Penh: CDRI Working Paper Series No. 43, 2009.
306
Ministry of Commerce, Rubber Sector Profile, Value Chain Unit, Phnom Penh: MoC, 2012.

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plantations.307These processed latex products are relatively high-grade and suitable for light-colored
consumer articles such as elastic bands, teats for baby-bottles, bottle stoppers, and sports shoes. In global
terms, the market for these products is relatively small and competition is intense with trade favoring
established exporting countries with sophisticated marketing practices.308Conversely, the dry rubber
coagulum produced by smallholder plantations is well suited to processing for low and mid-grade TSNR
which accounts for the overwhelming majority of global trade in natural rubber products with strong and
growing demand for end-use in the tire manufacturing industry.
In short, therehas been an historical disconnect among the dynamics of the global natural rubber trade, the
structure of Cambodias rubber processing facilities, and production by smallholder plantations. Current
efforts to modernize Cambodias rubber supply chain should lead to a structural realignment across each
of these participants. However, it is likely smallholder plantations in particular will need additional
support to integrate into a more export-oriented supply chain. Overall, the diverse interests and capacities
of each of these producer groups will need to be carefully managed by RGC in supporting export-led
development efforts of Cambodias rubber sector.
Production Capacity
Cambodia currently has 225,000 of immature rubber plantations coming into production in the next few
years and this will lead to an exponential growth in natural rubber production.Table 14.6 outlines the
upward trend in production capacity over the 2005 to 2012 period and, importantly, also shows
improvements in overall yields. The total planted area in Cambodia is expected to continue growing,
particularly as Cambodias relatively open FDI environment with lower cost (and more available) land are
attractive attributes compared to traditional rubber exporters such as Malaysia.

307

Ministry of Commerce, Rubber Sector Profile, Value Chain Unit, Phnom Penh: 2012.
Agricultural Development International, Key Regulatory Constraints in the Marketing of Processed and Unprocessed Rubber
in Cambodia, Prepared for Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, Phnom Penh: MAFF, 2007.
308

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Table 14.6:Trend in Natural Rubber Production & Yields


in Cambodia, 2005-2012
Year

Total
planted
(ha)

Immature
area
(ha)

Mature
area
(ha)

Production

Yield

(tons)

(kg/ha)

2005

60,406

30,004

30,402

29,464

960

2006

69,994

37,604

32,390

32,077

991

2007

82,059

51,568

30,491

32,975

1,082

2008

108,510

74,197

34,313

37,050

1,082

2009

129,920

95,785

34,135

37,380

1,097

2010

181,433

143,027

38,406

42,466

1,099

2011

213,104

167,942

45,162

51,339

1,135

2012

280,355

224,994

55,361

64,524

1,094

Source: MAFF,Annual Reports, 2011 and 2012; GDR,Annual Report, 2012


Rubber trees usually take six to seven years from planting to maturing and yielding rubber latex.
However, once mature, rubber trees typically offer reliable yields for 25-30 years, subject to proper
plantation management and disease control. Table 14.7 below compares natural rubber production yields
in 2007 and 2012 in Cambodia with other natural rubber producing countries. A number of countries,
such as Thailand, Vietnam, and India, enjoy yields that are 50 percent higher than Cambodia.
Cambodia can expect its average yields to improve as recent plantations mature in coming years (yields
are usually higher in the first few years after maturing). However, there is still scope to further improve
yields most likely through improved selection of seedlings and better utilization of fertilizers and
pesticides.
Table 14.7: Average Natural Rubber Production Yield, in kg/ha, 2007 and 2012
Year

Cambodia

China

India

Indonesia

Malaysia

Philippines

Thailand

Vietnam

2007
2012

1,082
1,094

1,168
1,242

1,767
1,815

993
1,159

1,420
1,520

1,567
1,324

1,723
1,636e

1,603
1,707

Source: GDR,Annual Report, 2012


Adopting best practice in tapping and general plantation maintenance would also support efforts to
improve yields and Cambodias overall production capacity. Overall, extension or other training services
at the plantation-level are likely to be needed to achieve these improvements especially for family-run
smallholder plantations that do not have access to the same level of external assistance and technical
support as larger operations. Facilitating stronger linkages between the rubber processors and smallholder
plantations may be a means of improving extension and support services.
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Quality of Product
The quality of Cambodian exports of natural rubber and potential export earnings are directly
correlated to the quality of each of the production factors that make up the supply chain. Starting at the
plantation level, cultivation techniques (e.g. selecting seedlings, utilizing fertilizers and pesticides, relying
on intercropping), tapping, and post-harvest handling practices (e.g. minimizing tree damage,
contamination, and water content) all impact yield and latex quality. Smallholder plantations in particular
have limited access to market information on best practices in rubber cultivation or latex handling and
would benefit from government and private sector initiatives to improve potential returns.
Improving the quality of latex and dry rubber products supplied by plantations will also benefit rubber
processors. However, it is important processors are familiar with international trade practices and are
able to meet the designated technical standards sought by international buyers. Importantly, now that
Cambodia has an internationally accredited testing and certification body the National Specific
Laboratory House (NSLH) there is increased scope for the local supply chain to re-align production and
processing methods to meet international demand. To support these efforts, a monitoring system to
register quantities of natural rubber produced by grade and prices received for corresponding exports
would help encourage the production of higher value products for export markets. Overall, continued
investment in the quality of Cambodias natural rubber products would significantly add to the sectors
profitability and export capacity.
Availability & Quality of Labor Force
No current estimates of employment in Cambodias rubber sector are available, although a 2007 study
concluded, at the time, that the sector employed around 27,000 people directly and up to 40,000 indirectly
when taking into account seasonal workers and sub-contracted workers.309However, given the significant
expansion in production capacity and exports since 2007, it is likely these estimates under-estimate the
current size of the sectors workforce.
Cambodias relatively low-cost labor is a significant competitive advantage for local rubber plantations
considering that tapping and collecting latex are labor-intensive activities. However, an expected shortage
of experienced and skilled labor may constrain the industry particularly as more plantations mature and
come into production. For example, rubber tapping requires training and is a delicate process by which
latex is collected from a small incision made in the bark of a rubber tree. Consequently, a shortage of
skilled tappers could lead to rubber plantations being left untapped. Conversely, the use of
inexperienced or unskilled tappers could result in damage to the bark of the tree leading to a fall in
yield.310
In this context, efforts by both government and the private sector to boost production of natural rubber
need to take account of the likely increase in demand for labor. This should include a strategy for
309
Economic Institute of Cambodia Export Diversification and Value Addition for Human Development, Phnom Penh: EIC,
2007.
310
Ministry of Commerce, Rubber Sector Profile, Value Chain Unit, Phnom Penh: MoC, 2012.

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harnessing semi-skilled labor such as tappers whose efficiency and competency can have a profound
effect on the productivity of a rubber plantation.
Level of Processing Technology
The level of processing technology for natural rubber production is very limited in Cambodia. This is due
to a lack of investment in modern processing facilities that can process natural rubber products in
sufficient quantity and at an acceptable standard for export. The high cost of energy also acts to deter
investment in processing facilities and contributes to the current situation where semi-finished products
(e.g. dry rubber coagulum) is exported to Vietnam for onwards processing and then re-exported to key
markets especially China.
There are emerging reports, however, of new investments in Cambodias rubber processing capacities.
For example, a new processing plant was recently opened in Stung Treng province. It was funded by a
$7million investment by a local ELC operator and has the capacity to process eight tons of dry rubber per
hour.311 Such investments are encouraging and it will be important for government and the private sector
to collaborate to ensure smallholder plantations are able to benefit from having access to the sectors
growing processing capacity and closer integration with export markets.
Cost and Quality of Infrastructure
Many Cambodian rubber plantations and processing plants are located in remote areas far from major
urban centers. Access to reliable infrastructure whether road and rail infrastructure, information, or
communication technology is important to lowering logistics costs and facilitating closer integration
with regional and global markets. Given the overall importance of infrastructure services and costs to
developing an export-oriented rubber supply chain, a more strategic approach to supporting the sectors
export-led expansion is required. In this context, improving access to infrastructure should be considered
as part of the formulation of a national policy platform for the rubber sector.
Efficiency of Domestic Support Industries
Limited access to institutional finance for many of Cambodias smallholder rubber plantations impedes
efforts to encourage export-led development. Unfavorable credit conditions such as high interest rates,
limited loan size, and onerousconditions prevent many smallholders from purchasinghigher-quality inputs
or expanding and investing in rubber production.312
Sector-wide, limited access to finance is compounded by the risky nature of the industry: strong price
fluctuations, large upfront costs, and a long term investment with little prospect of meaningful income for
at least five to seven years after planting. Given the priority the government has attached to the
modernization and development of the sector, government and the private sector should assess the

311
China ASEAN Legal Cooperation Center, Cambodian PM Inaugurates Rubber Processing Plant in far Northern Province,
May 2013.
312
Ministry of Commerce, Rubber Sector Profile, Value Chain Unit, Phnom Penh: MoC, 2012.

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potential for introducing innovative financial schemes and lending instruments that are tailored to the
dynamics of the rubber industry.
Domestic Demand
While precise estimates of domestic demand are not available, there is currently very little domestic use
in secondary or tertiary industries for Cambodias natural rubbers products.313However, other rubber
products (such as vulcanized rubber goods) are utilized in the garment and footwear manufacturing
industries in Cambodia and there may be scope for local rubber processors to target an import-substitution
production strategy to supply these large and growing industries. See discussion in Chapter 8 (Footwear.)
Prospect for Domestic Supply Conditions
Nearly all inputs for both rubber plantation and processing are imported into Cambodia. At the plantationlevel, fertilizers, pesticides, tools and bowls for tapping are all imported mostly from Thailand and
Vietnam. Similarly, inputs for processing natural rubber are imported. For example, coagulation
chemicals are imported from Vietnam, while capital equipment such as processing lines is often sourced
from Malaysia.314 Demand for these inputs is set to rise in parallel with the significant production capacity
for natural rubber that is set to come online in the next few years. While it is not realistic for Cambodia to
become self-sufficient across the rubber supply chain, in light of the expected strong growth there might
be opportunities for some import-substitution production to be development locally to help minimize
outflows from the sector.

Policy and Regulatory Framework


Government Initiatives and Sector Policy
The RGC has set a national target of reaching 290,000 MT of dry rubber production by 2020. To achieve
this target, the RGC plans for the total area of rubber plantation to reach 400,000 hectares by 2020, with
300,000 hectares being tapped. In recent years, the RGC has also enacted a series of reforms including
the privatisation of state-owned rubber plantations. The overall aim has been to help stimulate
Cambodias natural rubber industry, create employment opportunities in rural areas, and promote poverty
alleviation through export-led development of the rubber supply chain.315
According to the General Directorate of Rubber (GDR), a division of the Ministry of Agriculture,
Forestry and Fisheries, a number of key strategies have been identified to promote the development of the
rubber sector over the 2011 2020 period.316 These strategies include: providing improved farm
313

According to the ANPRC,Statistical Profile of Rubber Industry in Cambodia, there has been no domestic consumption of
natural rubber products from 2009-2011.
314
Development Alternatives Inc, Cambodia SME Development in Selected Agro-Sectors/Value Chains, Final Scoping and
Design Report, Washington: July 2008
315
H.E. Mr Phalla, Ly, Opening Remarks,Global Rubber Conference 2011, Phnom Penh: November 2011.
316
MAFF, Annual Report for Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries 2010-2011, Phnom Penh: MAFF, 2011

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extension services and rubber seedlings; assessing the suitability of land for rubber cultivation; examining
opportunities for providing tailored technical support and access to finance for smallholder plantations;
granting economic concessions and incentives to encourage development of smallholder plantations in
proximity to large private estates; and, promoting product quality across the rubber supply chain.
While this strategy by GDR provides a possible framework for developing Cambodias rubber sector, a
national policy platform and action plan for export-led development is urgently needed.
The successful implementation of other sector-specific policies including in relation to garments,
tourism and, most recently, rice underscores the value of developing policy platforms backed by strong
public-private sector engagement. For Cambodias rubber sector, a sector-specific national policy is
needed to drive export-led development. This policy will need to address important cross-cutting issues
relevant to both large-scale commercial estates as well as the needs of smallholder plantations. This
should include issues such as the overarching FDI regime (particularly in relation to rubber processors),
environmental impact, farm extension services, access to finance, disseminating export market
information, training guidelines for tapping rubber trees and maintenance of plantations, promotion of
Cambodian Specific Rubber (CSR) standards, and access to reliable and cost-effective infrastructure and
energy.
The formulation of a more cohesive and strategic national approach to export-led development in
Cambodias rubber sector should also take account of ongoing regional collaboration efforts. Specifically,
the three governments of Cambodia, Laos, and Vietnam (CLV) have agreed to work together to accelerate
economic growth, poverty reduction, social and cultural progress in the CLV Development Triangle Area.
This area encompasses 13 border provinces, four of which are in Cambodia: namely Mondulkiri,
Ratanakiri, Stung Treng and Kratie.317
Recently, the three governments agreed to make the development of the rubber industry in the CLV
Development Triangle Area a priority.318 A joint taskforce has been charged with undertaking a detailed
study and preparing an action to promote rubber production in the Development Triangle Area. To
support the broader goals of economic growth, poverty reduction and social inclusion in area,
improvements in cross-border infrastructure and logistics will needed in order to ensure large-scale
processing and value-adding activities also take place in the region thereby maximizing the welfare and
social benefits of rubber production. Efforts to promote the recruitment and training of local populations
should also be prioritized in establishing the rubber Development Triangle Area.
Business Associations
A Working Group on Agriculture & Agro-Industry does convene under the Government-Private Sector
Forum (G-PSF). However, no single national business association currently exists in Cambodia that
represents the full rubber supply chain. The Phnom Penh-based Association for Rubber Development of
Cambodia (ARDC) might serve as a useful platform for launching a suitable public-private sector
317

Each of these provinces, and the adjoining provinces in Laos and Vietnam, are significant rubber productions zones.
Joint Declarationon Strengthening Cooperation in the Cambodia - Laos - Vietnam Development Triangle Area, 7th CLV
Leaders Summit, Vientiane: 12th March 2013.

318

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discussion forum for the sector. The ARDC is a member of the International Rubber Association and, in
this context, actively monitors and engages industry on developments in global rubber markets.
As the private sector in the industry gets structured, it will be particularly important that any national
sector association is able to represent also the interests of the thousands of family-run smallholder
plantations that have a stake in the sectors future.

Socio-Economic and Environmental Impacts


Current Employment and Job-Creation Prospect
The most recent estimate of employment in the rubber industry was 27,000 direct employees, and a
workforce of up to 40,000 when taking into account indirect employment such as seasonal workers and
sub-contractors.319However, these estimates date from 2007 and given the industrys expansion
especially in tapped area the current size of the workforce is likely to be significantly higher. Rubber
plantations are labor-intensive operations and the sectors future expansion could lead to significant
employment creation. Increased exports of natural rubber products will make the sector an even more
important contributor to poverty alleviation in rural communities.
Impact on Development of Disadvantaged Regions
Rubber production is a major agricultural activity in six provinces: Kampong Cham, Kratie, Ratanakiri
Stung Treng, Kampong Thom, and Mondulkiri. Kampong Cham in particular is a major rubber
production province, with more than 90,000 ha of rubber plantations in 2011.320 In addition to the rural
employment opportunities the rubber sector provides, the prevalence of family-run smallholder
plantations is a key attribute of the sector and contributes to important rural development and poverty
reduction outcomes. As the sector continues to expand, it will be important that the interests of larger
commercial rubber estates are not pursued at the expense of smallholder interests. Instead, the industrys
export-led development should seek to maintain the current diversity of producers groups in order to
further contribute to poverty reduction and rural development goals.
In addition, smallholder plantations should be encouraged to take full advantage of the opportunity to
intercrop with newly planted rubber trees as an additional source of income and to help offset high setup
costs. However, it is important that smallholder owners are well informed of the appropriate crops to use
for intercropping. For instance, the widespread use of cassava for intercropping should be discouraged
given its adverse and potentially long-term impacts on rubber yields.321 As part of farm extension
services, information on more appropriate crops to use for intercropping, such as rice, maize, banana, and
pineapples, should be disseminated to smallholder plantations.
319

Economic Institute of Cambodia, Export diversification and value addition for human development, Phnom Penh: EIC, 2007.
MAFF, Annual Report, Phnom Penh: MAFF, 2011.
321
Cassava crops leach substantial quantities of nutrients and water from the soil, delaying rubber tree reaching maturity and pose
potential disease risks to the plantation.
320

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Map
14.1: Main
Main Rubber
Rubber Areas,
Areas, 2012
2012
Map 14.1:

Source: Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry


Source:
Contribution to Skill Development
Efforts by both government and industry to boost production of natural rubber need to take account also
of the likely increased demand for labor especially in rural areas on plantations. This should include a
strategy for harnessing semi-skilled labor such as tappers whose efficiency and competency can have a
profound effect on the productivity of a rubber plantation. Similarly, empowering owners of rubber
plantations, especially smallholders, with the right tools to access and interpret market information and
identify new opportunities will need to be a key component of Cambodias strategy for export-led
development of the rubber sector. For processors, access to skilled labor such as technicians and
managers to oversee plant operations will also be important to developing an efficient supply chain
capable of competing effectively on international markets.
Energy and Water Constraints and Environmental Impact
Electricity prices in Cambodia are considered the highest in the ASEAN region.322 Consequently, the
price of electricity is a major deterrent to foreign investors and undermines Cambodias ability to compete
with neighboring countries such as Thailand and Vietnam. Bilateral electricity supply agreements with
Vietnam and Laos have, to some extent, alleviated pressure on Cambodias more remote electricity

322

Sotharith, Chap, Industrial Readjustment in Cambodia, BRC Research Report No.7, Bangkok Research Center, Bangkok:
IDE-JETRO, 2012.

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network, and provided access to more affordable and reliable energy supplies for some of the rubberproducing provinces.
It will be important that Cambodias continued expansion of rubber plantations is met with strong
government oversight. In particular, conversion of forestland to rubber cultivation when unchecked can
lead to significant long-term environmental damage, including on Cambodias vast waterways. In this
context, it is also important that cultivation practices on plantations are best practice in terms of fertilizer
and pesticide utilization.
Box 14.1: ASEAN & Regional Integration
The ASEAN region is renowned for as large producer and global supplier of rubber products. Of the top
five global exporters of natural rubber, four are ASEAN countries Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia, and
Vietnam.323 A number of countries within the wide Asia region are also key global importers of natural
rubber including China, India, Malaysia, Japan and South Korea. Consequently, there are strong robust
natural rubber trade links firmly established on Cambodias doorstep.
While in comparison to these countries Cambodias rubber sector is still in its infancy, the potential for
Cambodia to emerge as a significant producer and exporter is real. More than 200,000 ha of immature
plantings will start yielding rubber latex in coming years offering considerable scope for Cambodia to
significantly increase export volumes. Cambodias key partners within ASEAN can therefore offer real
insights into how to structure the local rubber supply chain in order to improve product quality and
strategically position itself as a reliable supplier of natural rubber on world markets.
More broadly, it is important that export-led development of Cambodias rubber sector benefits rural
livelihoods and poverty reduction efforts in a lasting way. In this context, the Cambodia-Laos-Vietnam
(CLV) Development Triangle Area encompasses 13 provinces: including four in Cambodia, four in Laos,
and five in Vietnam. The four Cambodian provinces included in the CLV Development Triangle Area
are Ratanakiri, Stung Treng, Kratie and Mondolkiri all of which are major rubber producing provinces.
The purpose of the CLV Development Triangle Area is for the three respective governments to
collaborate and accelerate economic growth, poverty reduction, social and cultural progress in the area.
Closer regional integration of Cambodias rubber supply chain within the CLV Development Triangle
Area could act as a catalyst toward achieving these economic and social objectives. As such, the
formulation of a national policy platform by RGC for the rubber sector in Cambodia should take into
account how the development of a CLV rubber triangle can contribute to wider poverty reduction and
social inclusion goals in the region.

323

TradeMap data 2012.

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Conclusion
The main findings from this chapter are summarized in the SWOT analysis that follows.
Strengths

Weaknesses

Sector has strong government backing with


Cambodias climate, soils and pest and disease
profile presenting favorable conditions for rubber
plantation.
Employed 40,000, mostly in rural communities, in
2007 (possibly double that number by 2012).
An estimated 21,000 smallholder families provide
the bedrock of Cambodias rubber sector.
Mature rubber trees typically offer reliable yields
for 25-30 years, subject to proper plantation
management and disease control.
Option of intercropping between newly planted
rubber trees as an additional source of income and
to help offset high setup costs.
Cambodias LDC status affords it tariff-free access
for natural rubber exports to the EU, US, Japan,
Koreaall major importers.
As recent plantations mature and come into
production, yields and export capacity will increase
exponentially.
Attractive FDI environment with lower cost (and
more available) land compared to traditional rubber
exporters such as Malaysia.
Relatively low cost labor a competitive advantage.

High entry barriers to industry given large financial


outlay over several years with leadtime of 5-7 years
before trees mature and begin to yield latex.
Limited knowledge of modern cultivation
techniques, pest management and post-harvest
handling leading to low yields and quality.
Majority of smallholder rubber plantations rely on
25+ year old trees with poor yields
Weak R&D, absence of extension services and poor
access to market information inhibits farmer's
capacity to make informed decisions in an
inherently risky business.
Reliance on imported inputs often leads to
shortages of fertilizers and pesticides.
Shortage of skilled tappers, while use of unskilled
labor damages trees.
Vulnerable to price fluctuations and limited access
to credit to re-invest in sector.
Rubber processing industry is overly focused on
latex productsrepresenting a highly competitive,
yet very small, segment of the global rubber trade.
Cambodian Rubber Standards (CRS) not trusted by
international buyers, often requiring exports to be
independently tested by Singapore laboratories.

Opportunities

Threats

This is a labor-intensive sector leading to large


employment creation. Increased exports of natural
rubber products will make the sector an even more
important contributor to poverty alleviation in rural
communities.
Strong outlook for global natural rubber trade
backed by reliable and growing demand from
global auto manufacturers.
Close proximity to Chinaworlds largest importer
of natural rubber products.
Improving the quality of processed rubber would
significantly add to the sectors profitability and
farm-gate prices.
Encouraging processors to diversify away from
latex to other natural rubber forms may create new
market opportunities.
Recent accreditation of Cambodias rubber testing
laboratory should allow for broader market access
and domestic export certification against
international standards.

Serious long-term environmental issues if


expansion of industry dependent on deforestation.
Fluctuating world prices for natural rubber makes
investment decisions difficult and risky.
Shortage of skilled tappers in a period where the
number of mature trees is increasing rapidly,
leading to substantial losses from untapped
hectares.
Increasing cost of landespecially where close to
main arterial roads.
Cambodias industry overshadowed by regional
competitors that dominate global production and
trade in natural rubberThailand, Indonesia,
Malaysia, China, and India.
Limited experience in marketing and export.
Failure to significantly increase yields despite
recently planted areas reaching mature age.
Continued perceptions of Cambodia as a supplier of
low grade, poor quality natural rubber products.

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Recommendations
Cambodias impending boom in rubber production presents the local sector with an important
opportunity to restructure toward a more export-oriented supply chain. More than 200,000 ha of
immature plantings are set to come into production over the next few years resulting in an unprecedented
increase in the overall size of the industry.
In this context, it is important the supply chain is well-organized to take full advantage of the increased
production capacity and takes a strategic approach to more closely integrating with global markets. A
national policy platform backed by both RGC and private sector would provide the much needed
framework and action plan to facilitate export-led development. This will require close public-private
sector collaboration. It will be important the interests of all relevant stakeholders (both large and small)
are considered.
The significant increase in production capacity also provides an opportunity for the rubber sector to
further diversify its export markets, with diminishing reliance on Vietnam, and improve the quality of
natural rubber products. This will require all stakeholders (producers, processors and exporters) to have a
better understanding of the dynamics of global rubber trade and recognize the importance of meeting
designated technical standards in the production chain.
Possible Actions to address some of the sectors current limitations and opportunities for further
significant progress are identified in the Trade SWAp Roadmap under Outcome #14.

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Chapter 15
TOURISM
Background
Tourism is a leading source of employment and economic growth in Cambodia, contributing around 9.6
percent of GDP in 2012. A strong tourism sector contributes in multiple ways to the development of the
local economy.It raises national income, improves the countrys balance of payments, and encourages
investment in related hospitality (hotel, restaurants, leisure services, and sporting facilities), transport, and
finance sectors. Tourism revenue also has important social benefits for Cambodia and can help preserve
historical, cultural, and environmental assets.
Cambodia is ideally placed to draw on the strong growth in international tourism, particularly in the
Southeast Asia region. The UNESCO World Heritage site Angkor Wat is renowned internationally and a
major draw card for Cambodia. Tourism revenues are generated primarily around the Siem ReapPhnom
PenhSihanoukville triangle, though there are signs of early diversification towards other regions of the
country.

Export Performance
Export Value
International tourist arrivals in Cambodia increased from 290,000 in 1998 to 2 million in 2007 and nearly
3.6 million in 2012.324 The Ministry of Tourism estimates that tourism generated export earnings of $2.2
billion in 2012, equivalent to approximately 20 percent of total export earnings.
Types of Services
Cambodias tourism sector is overwhelmingly reliant on the holiday and leisure market, with business
visitors accounting for less than 5 percent of international arrivals in 2012. The temple experiences of
Cambodia particularly at the UNECSO World Heritage site Angkor Wat are unique and
unquestionably the major national tourist draw-card. Cambodias coastal resorts and casinos are also
popular although compete directly with similar offerings from elsewhere in the region. While Cambodia
may present a lower-cost option, this is often at the expense of the quality of tourism services being
offered, including in areas such as sanitation, infrastructure including transport infrastructure, and
customer service.
324

Ministry of Tourism, Tourism Statistics, Phnom Penh: MoT, several years

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4.00

3.5

3.50

3.0

3.00

2.5

2.50

2.0

2.00

1.5

1.50

1.0

1.00

0.5

0.50

TOURISM REVENUE (USD Billions)

TOTAL INTERNATIONAL VISITORS (Millions)

Figure 15.1: International Visitors & Tourism Revenues


4.0

0.0
1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012

Source:
Source:M
Ministry of Toourism, Tourissm Statistics Annual
A
Reportt 2012

Currentt Export Deestinations


Camboddia has been aable to attracct a mix of viisitors from both
b
distant and regionall source coun
ntries (see
Table 155.1). The traaditional sourrce markets of
o North Am
merica, Europpe and Northh Asia remain
n important,
accountiing for 39.8 percent
p
of viisitors in 20112, but downn from 53.3 percent
p
in 20007. Slower growth
g
in
visitor arrivals
a
from these countrries has beenn offset by strrong growth in arrivals frrom GMS co
ountries
(primariily Vietnam and
a Laos) ass well as Chin
na. These markets
m
accouunted for 34 ppercent and 9 percent of
internatiional visitorss respectivelyy in 2012, up
p from 12.3 ppercent and 5 percent resppectively in 2007.
Attractinng international visitors from
f
these em
merging marrkets helped Cambodias tourism secttor weather
external shocks from
m the global economic
e
doownturn of 20008-2009. However,
H
it allso exposes Cambodias
C
w-down. In adddition, it is a likely conttributing facttor to the
tourism to a possiblee regional ecoonomic slow
i visitors aaverage lengtth of stay.
decline in

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Table 15. 1: Selected Tourist Source Markets


Visitor Numbers
(Share of Total Intl Visitors)
Greater Mekong Sub-Region (GMS)

2007

2012

250,092 (12.3%)

1,218,580 (34%)

101,590 (5.0%)
125,422 (6.2%)
23,060 (1.1%)

201,422 (5.6%)
763,136 (21.3%)
254,022 (7.1%)

Europe

410,643 (20.4%)

611,359 (17.1%)

South Korea

329, 909 (16.4%)

411,491 (11.5%)

China

118,417 (5.9%)

333,894 (9.3%)

North America

171,547 (8.5%)

220,905 (6.2%)

161,973 (8%)

179,327 (5%)

2,015,128

3,584,307

Thailand
Vietnam
Lao PDR

Japan
Total International Visitors

Relative
Change

Source:Ministry of Tourism, Tourism Statistics Annual Report 2012

Potential Export Destinations


While there is some scope to diversify further the source countries for inbound tourist arrivals, there is
substantial opportunity to generate increased tourism revenue by changing the mix of visitors. This
could include attracting high-spending business visitors as well as encouraging longer leisure stays by
offering more diverse tourism products beyond the traditional Siem ReapPhnom PenhSihanoukville
triangle. Attracting higher-spending visitors will be challenging given the associated higher expectations
with regard to personal safety, hygiene, comfort, and customer service.Regions identified as future tourist
draw-cards include the expansive waterways of Tonle Sap and the Mekong River, the North East as an
ecotourism base, and the southern coastal zones.
Trade Balance
Outbound Cambodian tourists were estimated at around 790,000 in 2012 compared with 3.58 million
international arrivals. Overall, tourism is an important net contributor to foreign exchange earnings and
national income for Cambodia.
Dynamism of Exports
Cambodias tourism sector is seasonal with the number of international arrivals falling as much as
30 percent from the December-January high season. Cambodia is generally perceived as a low-cost
destination. While this can be positive in attracting budget travelers, it can impede efforts to grow
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premium tourist services. There are several five-star internationally branded hotel chains operating in
Cambodia, however many report very low occupancy rates and rely on heavy discounting. As a result,
return on investments (ROI) can be close to 20 years for international hotel chains leasing local facilities.
This compares to a ROI of ten years in other markets.
Cambodia is often seen as a side-visit to tourists visiting neighboring countries. There are also a large
number of short-stay visitors from the GMS region who principally visit casinos. While the revenue from
such visits tend to be very localized, casino tourism is a highly competitive (and potentially lucrative)
segment of the ASEAN tourism market and it is important that Cambodia ensures it can offer quality
services that attract such casino visitors in addition to mainstream tourists. The potential risks
associated with casino operations should also be understood and mitigated, particularly in relation to
possible criminal activities that can emerge alongside casinos.
Growth in tourism revenue has not kept pace with growth in international arrivals. From 2007-12,
international arrivals increased 78 percent while tourism receipts grew by just 58 percent. Had revenue
growth kept pace with arrivals, the tourism sector would be generating an additional $280 million in
potential revenue each year. This is reflected in the decline in average daily expenditure per tourist from
$107 in 2007 to $98 in 2012 as well as the decline in visitors average length of stay from 6.5 days to 6.3
days over the same period. These trends are, at least in part, due to the changing mix of international
visitor profiles and the rising portion of visitors from GMS countries. While it is important for Cambodia
to be an attractive destination for visitors from within its own region, offering new world-class tourism
products will also be important to reverse the trends in average length of stay and average expenditure.
Export Prospect
Southeast Asia remains one of the fastest growing inbound tourist markets in the world. Growth in
international arrivals is likely to continue to rely on regional markets, especially GMS, China, North Asia,
and ASEAN visitors. However, stronger revenue growth will require a concerted effort to target higherspending business travellers as well as encouraging leisure tourists to stay longer. This will require
improvements in the tourism products being offered especially in relation to the quality of tourism
infrastructure as well as a diversification beyond from the traditional Siem ReapPhnom Penh
Sihanoukville visitor triangle. It is more than adding destinations; it is also about developing service
infrastructure: sporting facilities such as golf or tennis, hiking facilities, kayaking, scuba diving,
restaurant business, circuits to visits pagodas (a very rich, largely unknown and unadvertised resource),
eco tourism, etc.

World Market Conditions


International travellers surpassed 1 billion for the first time in history in 2012, with total tourism receipts
exceeding $1,075 billion. Fuelled by intra-regional travel, Southeast Asia was the best performing region
with tourist arrivals increasing 9 percent in 2012 to 88 million.325

325

World Tourism Organization, Tourism Highlights 2012, Madrid: UNWTO2012.

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Market Access Conditions


Increased number of regional low-costs airlines flying to Cambodian airports and the simplification of
visa procedures has encouraged growth in international tourist arrivals. No substantial external barrier
exists preventing further growth in international tourist arrivals. The proposed common ASEAN visa for
non-ASEAN visitors would greatly enhance business mobility and tourism.
Major Competitors
Neighboring South East Asian markets such as Thailand and Vietnam are the principal competitors to
Cambodias tourism sector, drawing larger number of tourists who stay longer and spend more.
However, these markets are also complementary as visitors incorporate Cambodia into a broader GMS
itinerary. Despite strong growth in international arrivals, Cambodia attracts just 4 percent of the total
number of visitors to South East Asia each year.
The challenge for Cambodia is to attract visitors that will spend more and stay longer. Compared to
Thailand and Vietnam, Cambodias Meeting, Incentive, Conference, Exhibition (MICE) sub-sector is
largely under-developed and missing out on opportunities for growth in the arrivals of higher-valued
business travellers. In addition, Cambodia needs to be mindful of emerging competitors in Southeast
Asia. Myanmar experienced a surge in arrivals of 52 percent in 2012, equivalent to 200,000 more tourists
from the year before. Interest in this destination has risen greatly across all major source markets as the
country modernizes and opens up with political, economic, and administrative reforms.
World Market Prospect
The global tourism sector is expected to remain strong with growth forecasts of 3 to 4 percent over the
medium term. This is despite the uncertain global economic conditions and relatively high
unemployment in many developed countries. The sectors resilience is driven in large part by the rising
purchasing power of the growing middle class in many developing economies. By 2020, the total number
of international travellers worldwide is expected to reach 1.6 billion. At the regional level, tourism in
South East Asia is expected to grow even more strongly, typically at around 6 to8 percent per year.326

Domestic Supply Conditions


With Cambodia forming part of a regional itinerary for many visitors, the quality of local tourism
products and services are easily compared to neighboring markets, especially Thailand and Vietnam.
Drawing on the World Economic Forums Travel &Tourism Competitiveness Index, Cambodias relative
strengths in the tourism sector relate to: the prioritization of the sector in government and industry; the
price competitiveness of the sector, and; the overall openness of the sector. Areas where the sector scores

326

World Tourism Organization, Tourism Highlights 2012, Madrid: UNWTO, 2012.

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poorly include: the regulatory environment; health and sanitation; human resources, and; tourism
infrastructure.327
Tourism Infrastructure
Cambodia is best known for the temples of Angkor, a UNESCO World Heritage site. There are
additional though lesser-known temple sites mostly concentrated in the North and North West of the
country. Cities and towns like the capital Phnom Penh and Battambang in the North West also retain
some historical and colonial sites. The southern coast boasts beaches and the South West and North East
of the country still have vast areas of dense jungle, home to endangered flora and fauna. The Mekong
River cuts through the country entering from Laos in the north, winding its way south and then east
through Vietnam.
Siem Reap (the gateway to the temples of Angkor), the capital Phnom Penh, and the coastal town of
Sihanoukville are the most accessible and developed centers from a tourism perspective. As of 2009,
around 60 percent of all hotel rooms and guest houses in Cambodia were located in Siem Reap.328 While
the coastal area and tracts of the Mekong are accessible, tourism infrastructure like hotels and restaurants
is more limited. Other areas of the country are harder to access and, as of today, have very limited
tourism infrastructure. Conversely, in Siem Reap unprecedented investment in tourism infrastructure is
leading to over-crowding and over-development. The temples of Angkor Wat are close to reaching visitor
capacity and if not carefully managed will lead to significant damage to the UNESCO World Heritage
site. In this context, the narrow focus of tourism activities on Siem Reap is not sustainable.New
destinations are needed such as beach resort and eco-tourism.
Equally important is the need to address Cambodias hotel and restaurant infrastructure, particularly in
regards to food hygiene and sanitation. A new ADB program will draw on experiences from similar work
in the region to improve food safety in Cambodian through training for the private sector, government
officials, and food safety inspectors, as well as by promoting GHP and GMP on the basis of an enterpriselevel scorecard and grading system. These efforts will be complemented through a new PPP initiative to
establish the Royal Academy of Culinary Art (RACA) to train Cambodian chefs and staff in food
preparation and cooking. Central to the school curriculum will be training in and adoption of best practice
in food hygiene and sanitation in the hotel and restaurant sectors.329
As identified in CambodiasTourism Development Strategic Plan 20122020, these challenges reflect a
clear need to diversify product offerings by opening up these new destinations with supporting
infrastructure and services that meet international standards and are of suitable quality for international
tourists. The strategic plan suggests a wide range of short-term and long-term measures to help address
some the challenges facing the tourism sector and will need strong public-private sector collaboration to
achieve the RGCs goal of 8 million international arrivals per year by 2020.

327

World Economic Forum, Travel &Tourism Competitiveness Index, Davos: WEF, 2012.
Ministry of Tourism, Tourism Statistics Annual Report 2010, Phnom Penh: MoT, 2010
329
ADB, Kingdom of Cambodia Trade Facilitation: Improved SPS Handling in GMS Trade Project, Project Administration
Manual, Phnom Penh: ADB, June 2012 and Ministry of Commerce, CEDEP II Project Document Submitted to the EIF Board,
Phnom Penh: MoC, May 2013.
328

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Box 15.1: MICE Tourism


The MICE (Meetings, Incentives, Conventions, and Exhibitions) segment of the international tourism
market is worth hundreds of billions of dollars each year. For example, according to the global Incentive
Research Foundation (IRF), the median group size for incentive events worldwide is around 125
participants with average per-person expenditure of $2,600 in 2012. Further, the global corporate meeting
sector was valued at $31.8 billion in 2010.
Singapore leads the MICE sub-sector in ASEAN followed by Malaysia and Thailand, reflecting the need
for large conference and event facilities, ample accommodation choices, world class ICT, well
coordinated ground transport and frequent, as well as direct and cost-effective air travel connections.
While Cambodia has hosted some regional conferences and summits, its ASEAN partners tend to be
preferred destinations for major large-scale international MICE events.However, Cambodia does offer an
attractive mix of cultural and historical sites in close proximity to premium hotels, urban centers and
international airports and has an increasing capacity to target hosting small-to-medium size conferences.
Cambodia is also able to target the Incentive market, which can be accommodated through the use of
existing high-end leisure facilities.
To achieve the RGCs goal of attracting 8 million international visitors per year by 2020, an expansion of
Cambodias MICE capabilities will be critical. This will also require significant investment in transport
infrastructure and urban development as means of reducing traffic congestion around major cities and
improving travel connections between airports, tourist attractions, conference and exhibition centers and
hotels.
Labor Force
Tourism is a labor-intensive service sector activity with strong sub-sector linkages to a large number of
other service industries, such as accommodation, restaurant, banking, and transport services. The
tourism sector is estimated to employ directly around 620,000 people in 2012.330 While wages in
Cambodia are lower than the competing markets of Thailand and Cambodia, many hotels, restaurants, and
tour operators see this as being offset by the lower level of skilled labor and weaker productivity.The
relatively large number of public holidays in Cambodia further weighs heavily on labor productivity and
makes it harder and more costly for operators to offer services with a full complement of staff during
holidays. In addition, the lack of staff during holidays forces many services (e.g. restaurants, sightseeing
sites, others) to close down during holidays, which goes against the needs of tourists.
The strong growth of the tourism sector over the past decade has placed significant pressures on the
availability and quality of skilled labor able to service the sector. As a result, important attributes such as
customer service, food quality and safety in Cambodia lag behind regional competitors and inhibit efforts
to attract higher-spending visitors. To counteract this, many of the major hotels are recruiting
management and mid-level staff from elsewhere in the region including the Philippines and Malaysia.
This shortage of skilled personnel affects business confidence and limits the expansion of Cambodias
tourism industry. In particular, it inhibits efforts by both government and tourism operators to diversify
330

World Travel and Tourism Council, Travel& Tourism Economic Impact 2012 Cambodia, London: WTTC, 2012.

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the sectors product offerings. For example, hotels have reported reluctance by staff to re-locate from
major urban centers to more remote areas where new tourism facilities are being established. Such a lack
of mobility within the labor force adds to the pull factors whereby Cambodian businesses rely on migrant
labor to secure skilled workers.
Despite the many higher-education training programs available, there is a need to strengthen curriculums
to improve employment opportunities in the sector and reduce reliance on sourcing skilled labor from
offshore. Insufficient skilled labor is a critical bottleneck in the hospitality and restaurant industry at the
moment and efforts to address this key need will help improve Cambodias tourism competitiveness.
There is a clear need for Cambodia to invest heavily in Technical and Vocational Education and Training
(TVET) programs that meet international standards and ASEAN Minimum Competency Standards for
Tourism. This will require close collaboration between RGC and the private sector, such as through PPP
investments in hospitality training and hotel management.
Transport Infrastructure
Air and road transport infrastructure is crucial to the quality of tourism products Cambodia can offer and
the diversity of experiences available to visitors. As seen in Table 15.2, more visitors arrive in Cambodia
via land border crossings compared to international airports. This reflects the practice of tourists
combining Cambodia with a wider regional visit as well as the growing importance of Vietnamese,
Laotian, and Thai tourists in the Cambodian market. Road infrastructure and traffic congestion, are
therefore inextricably linked to the visitors overall experience and length of stay. Every moment a visitor
is delayed is a lost opportunity for Cambodia to increase tourism revenue.

Table 15.2: Mode of Arrival, 2012


Siem Reap International Airport
(SRIA)
Phnom Penh International Airport
(PPIA)

20 percent
28 percent

Land Borders

50 percent

Waterways

2 percent

Source:Ministry of Tourism, Tourism Statistics Annual Report 2012

Upgrades to Siem Reap and Phnom Penh international airports have improved visitor experiences and the
introduction of e-visa arrangements has simplified arrival procedures. Cambodia has not been able to
retain long-haul air carrier services and instead many visitors rely on connections from regional hubs.This
particularly impedes Cambodias ability to market itself in the package tour segment despite being 10
percent less expensive (excluding airfares) than neighboring countries.331Attracting a European or Middle
Eastern air carrier that services Cambodian airports would lower the perceived costs and inconvenience to
air passengers from these important markets.
331

Ministry of Tourism, Tourism Development Strategic Plan 20122020, Phnom Penh: MoT, 2012.

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Despite recent advances in competition, airfares to/from Cambodia remain expensive compared to other
regional destinations especially during the high season. This has been identified in the RGCs Tourism
Development Strategic Plan 2012-2020 as a particular barrier to Cambodia hosting large conferences,
exhibitions and fairs, and other premium business events more regularly. The proposed launch of a
second national airline would increase competition on both domestic and regional routes and attract both
business and holiday visitors. The reliance on charter flights (instead of scheduled air services) between
Phnom Penh and Sihanoukville is an example of where higher cost and less reliable transport linkages
undermine efforts to further expand Cambodias tourism sector and increase visitors average length of
stay.
Efficiency of Domestic Support Industries
The hotel and restaurant sectors are highly competitive and contribute to Cambodia being a low-cost
destination. In the absence of regular inspections and enforcement of regulations, issues around the
quality of mid-range accommodation and concerns relating to food hygiene and sanitation will
persist.332The absence of a robust and independent star-rating system makes it harder for premium hotel
and accommodation operators to charge premium prices and also makes it harder to manage visitors
expectations due to self-rating by accommodation providers. Growing traffic congestion, especially in
Phnom Penh and Siem Reap, and inadequate transport infrastructure also adversely affects visitor
experiences.The transport sector, including domestic aviation, is a significant competitive disadvantage
for Cambodias tourism sector. Leakage of tourism revenue is estimated to be around 25 percent due to
the reliance on imported inputs including agro-food products.333
Private sector development has long been a key priority for the RGC. To enhance export-led, pro-poor
growth through trade diversification, Cambodia has liberal FDI policies in relation to the tourism sector
although scores poorly on a number of Doing Business indicators relevant to tourism operators
including in the areas of starting a business, enforcing contracts, registering a property and dealing with
construction permits.The investment climate in Cambodia is generally positive although low occupancy
rates for five-star hotels discourage further investment in high-end accommodation and conference
facilities. Overall, total investment in the tourism sector accounts for 14 percent of total national
investment in 2012.334
Prospect for Domestic Supply Conditions
The diversification of Cambodias tourism products beyond the traditional Siem Reap-Phnom PenhSihanoukville triangle would help to ease the pressure on existing infrastructure. Diversification is a
central theme of Cambodias Tourism Strategic Development Plan 20122020 (see below) which looks to
improve the overall product quality and offerings that international visitors experience.

332

See chapter 4 for additional discussion.


Ministry of Tourism, Tourism Development Strategic Plan 20122020, Phnom Penh: MoT, 2012.
334
World Travel and Tourism Council, Travel & Tourism Economic Impact 2012 Cambodia, London: WTTC 2012
333

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Policy and Regulatory Environment


Government Initiatives
The success of the Cambodia: Kingdom of Wonder marketing campaign has contributed to strong growth
in tourist arrivals. RGC recently launched the Tourism Strategic Development Plan 20122020, which
prescribes the development of new destinations to deepen the tourism product offering, encourage longer
stays, and increase Cambodias competitiveness. The RGC has set a target of 8 million international
tourists by 2020 and recognizes significant reforms and modernization will need to take place to reach
this target.
In particular, the national strategy identifies diversification of tourism products as being a major priority.
This will be achieved partly by enlarging the tourism footprint around the three main urban centers (Siem
Reap, Pnom Penh and Sihanoukville) including by establishing new destinations within easy reach of
these cities (such as day-trips to villages and less explored temples.) However, major new tourism
development in the North West provinces (e.g. eco-tourism) and along Cambodias vast waterways (e.g.
Tonle Sap and the Mekong River) will also encourage both longer visits and increased international
arrivals to Cambodia.
The RGC has also identified issues such as transportation infrastructure and related services (both road
and air) as needing further investments to facilitate development and expansion of the tourism sector.
Urban infrastructure will also need development and improvement, including to alleviate traffic
congestion. Similarly stronger consumer protection laws and consumer safety (including in relation to
sanitation and food hygiene) also need to be raised to international standards to improve the overall
quality of Cambodias tourism services. This will require major investment in hospitality and training as
well as stronger monitoring and enforcement of agreed standards.
Given the highly competitive tourism sector in the ASEAN region, the RGC recognizes a clear need to
better market and promote Cambodia both to holiday/leisure tourists as well as the premium business
traveller segment. In addition to targeting tourists from neighboring ASEAN markets, other major source
markets such as India, China, Russia and the Middle East will also be targeted along with the traditional
North American and European travelers.
Business Associations
Cambodias tourism sector is highly fragmented from small family run businesses to major international
chains and crosses over to many other sectors of the economy, especially transport. While some
industry associations do exist, such as the Cambodia Hotels Association, the Cambodia Restaurants
Association,or the newly form Cambodia Tourism Council, they tend to represent larger establishments.
The private sector still has difficulties to speak with a unified voice, articulate priorities, and influence
government decision-making. In this context, a reliable public-private sector forum will be needed to
both aid industry collaboration and ensure public sector agencies work together in support of a
competitive, diversified and modern tourism sector in Cambodia.
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The private sector has a key role to play to support the effective implementation of the Tourism
Development Strategic Plan 20122020 and long-term development goals of the sector. But to be
effective, the private sector must strengthen its coordination and be more pro-active in engaging directly
with the Government to achieve common objectives. Ongoing discussions among MoT, private sector
associations, and Development Partners to establish TVET institutions on a PPP-basis to support skill
development in the hospitality sector are an important move in that direction.

Socio-Economic and Environmental Impacts


Current Employment and Job-Creation Prospect
The tourism sector is estimated to employ around 620,000 directly and 1.5million indirectly in 2012.
Employment growth in the tourism sector is estimated at 2.5 to 3 percent per year over the next
decade.335While there is no reliable data available on women employed in Cambodias tourism sector, the
majority of people employed in tourism worldwide are women.336Consequently, tourism has the potential
to contribute to greater gender equality and the empowerment of women in Cambodia through incomegeneration and entrepreneurship.
Contribution to Skill Development
The tourism sector demands semi-skilled and skilled professionals, ranging from chefs, hotel managers,
ICT technicians, accountants, travel guides, drivers, or interpreters. In general international language and
customer-oriented service skills are in high demand. Forecast growth in international arrivals will further
increase demand for skilled labor in the hospitality and travel industries. At present, several local
universities provide training in hotel management while training at the vocational/technical level is very
limited. At most 200 to 300 trainees graduate each year from vocational programs operated by NGOs,
focusing mainly on kitchen staff and other hotel services. However, most such NGOs programs focus on
providing training and employment to school drop-outs or youths from a very poor background and most
graduates still lack the levels of qualification required to be employed in quality hospitality
establishments. Absent some drastic steps being taken to remedy the lack of formal TVET to support the
sector, the current shortage of skilled labor is likely to increase.
The recent initiative by the RGC and the private sector to establish the Royal Academy of Culinary Art
(RACA) to train Cambodian culinary staff is an important milestone and will help Cambodia meet one of
the fast growing needs of the sector. The public-private partnership approach chosen for RACA may also
serve as a template for similar training and skill development initiatives elsewhere in the sector, including
ongoing discussions with the private sector and AgenceFranaise deDveloppement (AFD) to create a
TVET program to target other skills in the hospitality sector. In addition to addressing current skill
shortages, the goal must be to improve the overall quality and standards of the sector.
335
336

World Travel and Tourism Council, Travel& Tourism Economic Impact 2012 Cambodia, London: WTTC, 2012
World Tourism Organization, Background on Gender and Tourism, Madrid: UNWTO2012

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Impact on Development of Disadvantaged Regions


Tourism activity is heavily focused around the three major urban centers Siem Reap, Phnom Penh and
Sihanoukville with linkages to the rural poor predominantly achieved through income remittances from
urban employment. While this is an important means of ensuring at least some wealth distribution from
Cambodias tourist sector reaches rural areas, more formal linkages between rural communities and
tourism activities would be ideal.337This underscores the importance of diversifying Cambodias tourism
products and destinations beyond the three major urban centers to create a more resilient sector and
provide more broad-based and geographically dispersed poverty reduction benefits.
The social risks associated with increased tourism also need to be understood and addressed.
The tourism and hospitality sector, by nature, is a large buyer of fresh fruit and vegetable produce to
supply hotel kitchens and restaurants and can give rise to a robust, domestic horticultural sector to meet
such needs. Cambodian restaurants and hotels, however, remain very dependent on fresh fruit and
vegetable produce imported from Vietnam and Thailand. Opportunities to develop such a domestic
supply chain remain under-developed and further improvements are needed.
Efforts by some boutique hotels to invest in organic fruit and vegetable plantations in Cambodia as a
means of becoming self-sufficient for produce needs highlights the value and importance of being able to
reliably source quality local produce for international tourists. Overall, there are strong backward
linkages opportunities between the tourism sector and primary industries, including horticulture and silk
handicrafts, many of which have a production base in disadvantaged regions in Cambodia. This
underscores the importance of reducing the leakage of tourism revenue due to an unnecessary reliance on
imported inputs and the potential benefits that can flow to other sectors and regions from tourism
expenditure. Further, the tourism sector can serve as a useful test market to gauge whether locally
produced products are export-ready.
Energy and Water Constraints and Environmental Impact
The high cost of electricity for tourism operators and frequent brown outs in major tourist centers weighs
heavily on the sectors competitiveness. The concentration of tourism activities in a few areas
(particularly Siem Reap) leads to significant congestion and amenity issues (water shortage.)
As far as energy consumption is concerned, Cambodia is endowed with perfect sun exposure to encourage
use of passive solar energy for production of hot water in hotels or photovoltaic for production of
electricity.338 Much greater incorporation of sustainable energy resources by hotel investors could be
written in Cambodias Building Code and/or be made a condition of investment project approvals by
CDC or provincial authorities.

337

UNDP, Tourism and Poverty Reduction Strategies in the Integrated Framework for LDCs, Geneva: UNDP, 2011
Production of hot water is one of the largest, if not the largest, source of energy consumption in the hotel and restaurant
sectors.
338

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Box 15.2: ASEAN & Regional Integration


Tourism is a priority sector for ASEAN.
For several years, ASEAN has been the best performing region in the world in terms of growth in
international visitors. In 2012, international arrivals to ASEAN destinations reached 88 million (an
annual increase of 9 percent.) Almost half of these visitors originated from other ASEAN countries.
Intra-regional trade is therefore vital to growth in ASEAN tourism and is a key factor in growth rates
in international arrivals to the region forecast to reach about 6 to 8 percent over the medium term,
roughly double the global average. The introduction of the proposed common ASEAN visa for nonASEAN visitors should enhance greatly business mobility and promote tourism in the region.
ASEAN Member States have also signed the ASEAN Mutual Recognition Arrangement (MRA) on
Tourism Professionals, which is a key ASEAN initiative to support the establishment of the ASEAN
Economic Community in 2015. The purpose of this MRA mechanism is to facilitate mobility of
tourism professionals within ASEAN and improve the quality of services delivered by tourism
professionals.
Box 15.3: Skill Gaps & Skill Issues
The tourism sector demands semi-skilled and skilled professionals, ranging from chefs, hotel
managers, ICT technicians, accountants, travel guides, drivers, or interpreters. International language
and customer-oriented service skills are in high demand. Employers in the hospitality sector in
Cambodia report difficulties in securing qualified staff. As a result, important attributes such as
customer service and food quality and safety in Cambodia lag behind regional competitors. This
shortage of skilled personnel affects business confidence and limits the growth of the Cambodian
tourism industry.
Despite the many higher-education training programs available, there is a need to strengthen
curriculums to improve employment opportunities in the sector and reduce reliance on sourcing skilled
labor from offshore. The proposed free flow of services and skilled labor under the ASEAN
Economic Community presents further challenges for managing Cambodias labor force. To minimize
the risk of leaking skilled labor to higher-wage countries elsewhere in the region, there is a clear need
for Cambodia to invest heavily in Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) programs
that meet international standards and ASEAN Minimum Competency Standards for Tourism. This
will require close collaboration between RGC and the private sector such as through PPP
investments in hospitality training and hotel management.

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Box 15.4: Progress Since 2007


Followingthe 2009 global financial crisis, the world economy endured significant turmoil leading to
higher rates of unemployment and low levels of consumer confidence in many developed economies.
This turmoil led to contraction of the global tourism economy in 2009, which saw the number of
international arrivals drop 4 percent and total tourism receipts fall by almost 10 percent.339
During that time, strong growth in visitors from within ASEAN contributed to Cambodia bucking the
global trend with international arrivals still growing by a modest 1.7 percent. The changing mix of
arrivals and the fall in arrivals from North America and Europe, however, did lead to total tourism
receipts falling 2.1 percent in 2009. Subsequently, the sector has recovered strongly, with arrivals and
revenue increasing by an average of 19 percent and 12 percent respectively over the period 2010
12.340
While investments in modernizing Cambodias international airports and the simplification of visa
procedures has improved access for some international visitors, the primary source of growth in the
tourism sector has come from increased arrivals from the Greater Mekong Sub-Region (GMS).
Because of the nature of demand from such visitors, growth in tourism revenue (58 percent) has not
kept pace with growth in international arrivals (78 percent) over the 2007-12 period. Had revenue
growth kept pace with arrivals, the tourism sector would be generating an additional $280 million in
revenue each year.
Visitors from GMS are typically short-stayers and often dont travel beyond border regions. This is
evident in the decline in the average length of stay by visitors from 6.5 days in 2007 to 6.3 days in
2012. Strong growth in visitors from one region should therefore not be viewed as a substitute for
slowing growth in visitors from another region.
Looking ahead, the RGC has a target of attracting 8 million international arrivals by 2020. To deliver
a lasting development impact with widespread poverty-reduction benefits, it is important to be mindful
of the need to target higher-spending visitors including business visitors, high-end leisure tourists,
and longer stays through more diverse product offerings.

339
340

World Tourism Organization, Tourism Highlights 2012, Madrid: UNWTO, 2012.


Ministry of Tourism, Tourism Statistics Annual Report 2012, Phnom Penh: MoT, 2012.

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Conclusion
The main finings of this chapter can be summarized in the SWOT table that follows
Strengths

Weaknesses

Tourism is a leading source of economic growth


and employment in Cambodia.
The UNESCO World Heritage site Angkor Wat is
high profiled, internationally renowned and a
unique draw card for Cambodia.
Tourism revenue encourages the preservation of
historical, cultural and environmental assets.
Success of Cambodia:Kingdom of Wonder tourism
marketing campaign has contributed to strong
growth in tourist arrivals.
Southeast Asia remains one of the fastest growing
tourist markets in the world with Cambodia also
benefiting from side-trips from Thailand and
Vietnam.
Strong growth in regional tourists from Asia has
more than offset slower growth in tourist arrivals
from traditional markets (especially Europe and
North America).
Increased number of regional low-cost airlines
flying to Cambodian airports and the simplification
of visa procedures has encouraged tourist arrivals.
Modernization of major airports has enhanced
arrival/departure experience.

Shorter average stays than Thailand and Vietnam.


Cambodia perceived as a low cost destination
making it harder to encourage growth in premium
tourist services. Average daily expenditure per
tourist was $107/day in 2007; $98/day in 2012.
High concentration of tourism activities in few
areas (particularly Siem Reap) leading to
significant congestion and amenity issues.
Higher-spending business stays accounted for just
5% of total international arrivals in 2012.
Low occupancy rates for 5-star hotels discourage
further investment in high-end accommodation and
conference facilities.
Weak consumer protection laws and no policing to
prevent false advertising of hotel accommodation,
particularly in relation to Internet sales.
Weak food hygiene and sanitation
Despite recent advances in competition, airfares
to/from Cambodia remain more expensive than
other regional destinations.
Severe skills shortages across the hospitality sector,
including in culinary and hotel management.
Limited infrastructure and very limited domestic air
connections further exacerbates concentration of
tourists in small areas.

Opportunities

Threats

Strategic marketing and promotion campaigns to


target specific sub-sectors of international arrivals.
A national marketing campaign to attract business
to the largely under-developed Meeting, Incentive,
Conference, Exhibition (MICE) sub-sector.
Interest from Gulf carriers in servicing Phnom Penh
airport would assist in attracting international
arrivals from Middle East and European markets.
A proposed common visa scheme for ASEAN
would facilitate increased international arrivals.
Proposed launch of second national airline would
increase competition on both domestic and regional
routes and attract both business and tourist arrivals.
Increased skilled labor in the hospitality and
restaurant industry would help solve a current
bottleneck
Development of new destinations within the
country, as prescribed in Cambodia Tourism
Strategic Development Plan 2012, as well as a
deepening of the service offering would add to

Forecast growth in international tourist arrivals will


further increase demand for skilled labor in the
hospitality industry.
Tourism sector exposed to downturns from global /
regional economic and political crises, natural
disasters and outbreaks of pandemic diseases.
Over-emphasis on attracting large volume of
tourists rather than targeting more valuable tourists
with higher expenditure and longer stays.
Failure to attract highly-prized medium-large size
business events under the MICE sub-sector where
the cost and availability of airfares is a key
determinant in selecting host city.
Income-generating benefits of tourism activities not
being dispersed more evenly across Cambodia.
The free flow of services and skilled labor under
the ASEAN Economic Community may effect the
availability of skilled labor in Cambodia given the
higher wages available elsewhere in the region.

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Cambodias competitiveness and encourage longer


stays.
Diversification of tourism products and destinations
would not only create a more resilient sector but
provide more broad-based poverty reduction
benefits.

Recommendations
Tourism has been a strong contributor to Cambodias economic development over the past two decades
and recent shifts toward attracting more and more regional tourists has helped buttress the sector for weak
global economic conditions. Despite the impressive record of growth and export earnings, Cambodias
tourism sector faces a number of headwinds.
In such as competitive regional tourism market, Cambodia will need to invest heavily in modernizing its
tourism infrastructure and laying the framework for delivering tourism services that meet future consumer
expectations, including in areas of sanitation, food hygiene, and customer service. Significant investment
in human resources will be required including by offering vocational courses and training programs of
international standards. This will likely require ongoing public-private co-investment over the medium
term in order to create a workforce that can sustainably service the sector.
In addition, Cambodia will need to diversify its tourism product offerings beyond the Siem Reap Phnom
Penh Sihanoukville triangle to ensure the industry remains relevant and competitive to international
travellers. It will also require a more sustained effort to target and attract high-revenue business travellers
to Cambodia including through successfully implementing a MICE sector strategy.
The launch of Cambodias Tourism Development Strategic Plan 20122020 was an important moment in
identifying the key challenges currently facing the sector and laying down a strategy to ensure tourism
continues to help drive economic development and poverty reduction. In this context, possible Actions to
address some of the issues and opportunities identified in the chapter are shown in the Trade SWAp
Roadmap under Outcome #15.

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Chapter 16
HIGH VALUE SILK PRODUCTS
Background
Silk production in Cambodia dates from the 13th century when villagers started to breed silkworms along
the banks of the Mekong and Bassac rivers. Villages now breed a yellow silkworm variety that feeds on
mulberry tree leaves for threeweeksand then spins a golden cocoon. The silk yarn that forms the
cocoons is washed, dyed and eventually woven.
Silk yarn production and weaving are important village-based activities offering significant rural
employment, especially for women and individuals with disabilities. Breeding of silkworm requires
particular skill and knowledge and the sectors existence supports the preservation of important traditions
passed on from generation to generation. In addition, weaving utilizes traditional handloom techniques
and maintains practices of historical and cultural importance to Cambodia.
The industry now directly contributes an estimated $25 million to GDP each year, with current efforts to
modernize the supply chain offering significant potential to increase export revenue, rural employment
and national income.341

Export Performance
Export Value
Cambodias silk sector is domestic-oriented, with exports of finished silk products estimated to have
increased from $4million in 2004to $7million in 2012.342Exports have been gaining strength in recent
years, accounting for up to 30percent of silk product sales according to some estimates.343
Type of Exports
Finished silk products that are exported include hand-loomed plain silk fabric, scarves, ties, handbags,
cushions and other accessories. Table 16.1 below indicates the type of silk yarn used for each market
segment and highlights the sectors dependence on imported silk yarn.
341

International Trade Center, Institutional Aspects for Silk Promotion in Cambodia, Geneva and Phnom Penh: ITC, 2011.
International Trade Center: Sector-wide strategy for the Cambodian Silk Sector, Geneva and Phnom Penh: ITC, 2006, and
interview with International Trade Center Interview, Phnom Penh: May 2013.
343
International Trade Center, Activity Completion Report: Cambodian Sector-Wide Silk Project, Phnom Penh: ITC, 2012.
342

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Table 16.1: Silk Products Market Segments


Market Segment
Local Khmer
Low-end Tourist
High-end Tourist
Boutique Exports

Type of Yarn
Almost 100percent made from imported yarn.
Mostly imported silk from Thailand and Vietnam and
occasionally mixed with synthetic yarn.
A limited number of Golden Khmer Silk yarn products
available, with the rest made from imported white silk yarn.
A limited number of Golden Khmer Silk yarn products exported
in small volumes to high-value export markets, all other exports
made from imported silk.

Source:Cambodian Sericulture Stock Taking Report, 2008

Current Export Destinations


Key markets for current exports include the US, EU (mainly France, Italy, Germany and Switzerland),
Singapore, and Australia. Distribution channels for exports include local retail, internet sales, as well as
exports to individual foreign retailers. Direct sales to international visitors, predominantly through local
markets and retailers in Phnom Penh and Siem Reap, are also important sources of export revenue.
Potential Export Destinations
Those markets that offer the highest earnings potential for Cambodias silk industry are those already
open to Cambodian exportsalbeit in very small quantities. This includes the EU, US, Japan, and South
Korea. Substantial investment in boosting export capacity, product design, meeting international
standards and understanding consumer preferences will be required to compete in these major markets in
the future.
Trade Balance
Cambodia is a significant net importer of raw silk and silk fabric products equivalent to approximately
400 MT each year (valued at $10million.) These inputs are sourced from China as well as Vietnam(with
imports from the latter often being informal.)In total, 99 percent of Cambodias silk products are
manufactured from imported white silk yarn.344Other inputs, such as dyes are also imported, mostly from
Thailand.

344

International Trade Center, Activity Completion Report: Cambodian Sector-Wide Silk Project Phase II, Phnom Penh: ITC,
2012.

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Dynamism of Exports
Cambodian silk products are known for their fine handmade quality and are sold in both domestic and
export markets. International visitors to Cambodia account for the majority of export sales.345 The tourist
market can be divided into two segments: low-end tourist markets and high-end tourist markets. Tourists
in the high-end segment buy Cambodian silk products from boutiques in Phnom Penh and Siem Reap,
while those in the low-end segment buy mostly cheap silk imports at Phnom Penh markets.346
Export Prospect
Increasing both the volume of locally produced (Golden Khmer Silk) yarn and overall weaving output
(including from imported silk fabric) would greatly improve the export prospects of Cambodias silk
sector. To avoid being over-shadowed by the larger silk producers and exporters in the region, Cambodia
will need to invest heavily in improving the availability and quality of its silk products, as well as in
product design and marketing, in order to expand export markets. Better organized and more formal
supply chains especially in relation to imported silk yarn will improve the overall traceability of
Cambodias silk products and facilitate greater access to high-value markets that require Country of
Origin certificates.

World Market Conditions


A large portion of worldwide silk production is consumed domestically, although there is significant trade
in each of the components of the global silk supply chain. For instance, silkworm cocoons are exported to
producers of silk yarn, silk yarn is exported to producers of silk fabrics, and silk fabrics are exported to
producers of garments. Most large producers of silk products, with the exception of China, import silk
yarn.347
Market Access Conditions
There are few tariffs or other import restrictions imposed directly on global silk trade, although trade in
finished garment products can often be subject to tariffs and quota restrictions. However, Cambodias
handmade silk exports often enjoy duty free access (as handicraft instead of garment and textile) into
many key markets including the EU, US, Singapore, Hong Kong, Australia, and Japan.
In addition, as international visitors account for a large portion of Cambodias silk product exports, many
of the conditions and transaction costs associated with global trade(such as freight packaging, export
finance and customs processes) are bypassed by the sector. However, as the sector looks to increase
export revenue, greater knowledge in branding, marketingand international trade practices will be needed.
345

International Trade Center, CEDEP I Analysis Of Company Survey Data, Phnom Penh: ITC, 2013.
Ministry of Commerce, CEDEP I Project Document, Phnom Penh: MoC, 2011; Cambodian Silk Value Chain
(www.cambodiasilksector.org)
347
World Bank, Value Chain Study Cambodia, Phnom Penh: World Bank, 2012.
346

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Major Competitors
Global production of raw silk averages 120,000/130,000 MT per year, with China and India accounting
for about 70 percent and 20 percent of world production respectively.348Vietnam and Thailand are also
significant exporters of silk products with Thailand competing directly with Cambodias traditional
handloom silk products. China and Vietnam also compete with Cambodias silk products through massproduced machine-made silk garments, fabrics, and accessories.In this context, Cambodias silk exports
face competition in both the high-end segment and, in particular, the mass-market consumables.
World Market Prospect
The global sericulture industry is in general decline with raw silk production falling around 15 percent
over the past five years.349While this is partly due to the global garment industry favoring cheaper
substitutes such as cotton and synthetic textiles it also reflects the fact that silk is used increasingly for
high-end, boutique garments, fabrics and accessories. As such, silk is a high value, low volume product
totaling 0.2 percent of the worlds total textile production.350Global trade in silk (including yarn and
fabric) was estimated at around $2.5 $3billion in 2012.351

Domestic Supply Conditions


The silk supply chain includes a number of productive activities such as sericulture, processing, external
sourcing of inputs, product design and marketing (as shown in Table 16.2). The first three tasks are
conducted at the village-level either by individuals or cooperatives. These are concentrated in the North
West of Cambodia where local yarn is weaved and incorporated into the final product. In the South East,
imported yarn issourced for weaving.

348

International Sericulture Commission,Statistics Database, 20072011.ISERCO, 2012


International Sericulture Commission,Statistics Database, 20072011.ISERCO, 2012
350
Karnataka Global Agribusiness & Food Processing Summit 2011
351
TradeMap & Comtrade
349

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Table 16.2
1
Silk Sup
pply Chain
Acctivity

Exxternal Sourccing

Exam
mples of Tassks
S
Skill Requirred
Mulbberry Cultivaation, Raisingg Silkwormss, Cocoon
F
Farmer/Breed
der
Produuction
Sorting, cooking,, reeling, warrping.de-gum
mming,
A
Artisan
bleacchingand dyeeing
Impoorting Raw Silk
S
IImporter

Fabbric Production

Weav
ving

A
Artisan

Finnished Goods

Cut, Make, Trim (CMT)


Produuct Designs
Sellin
ng to Marketts

S
Semi-skilled
d labor
D
Designer
E
Entrepreneurr

Serriculture
Proocessing yarnn

Maarketing

Source: The W
World Bank, Improving
I
T
Trade
Compeetitiveness in Cambodia. 22012
Given thhe small scale of the locaal sericulture industry, thee principal paarticipants inn the silk suppply chain
are impoorters and suuppliers of sillk yarn, weavvers, traders (both pre- annd post-weavving), firms that
t producee
finished goods, locall retailers andd local buyerrs for exportt markets.Ovverall, the silkk supply chain in
Camboddia is particullarly fragmennted and bettter coordinattion has beenn recognizedd as a key detterminant of
the sectoors future prrospects.
The prod
duction of most
m finished goods for exxport take plaace at factoriies near Phnoom Penh wh
ho also take
responsiibility for dessign and marrketing. The challenge foor these manuufacturers is to produce designs
d
that
highlighht the uniquenness of Cambbodias silk handicrafts w
while also offfering styless that appeal to
internatiional buyers.. A number of
o local distriibutors and exporters
e
(suuch as Artisann dAngkor) have soughtt
to createe unique brannds that buildd on Camboddias silk herritage while coordinating
c
g outbound suupply
activities such as dessign and marrketing. How
wever, Camboodia will neeed to producee larger volu
umes of silk
d
productss in order to bbe of interesst to large intternational reetailers and distributors.
Produceers
While doomestic prodduction of muulberry and silk
s yarn is centered
c
mosstly in the Noorth West of the country,
Camboddias relativelly large weavving sector is based mosttly in the Souuth. It is the weaving secctor, with
approxim
mately 20,0000 silk weaveers, that offerrs the scope in the short and
a medium terms to booost export
earningss.
w
secttor, cooperattion among weavers
w
and across the suupply chain
To support the expannsion of the weaving
is being encouraged through the establishmennt of purchassing units. Thhese purchassing units aree villagebased annd are run byy weavers to help ease some of the coonstraints thaat many face in accessing
g reliable
suppliess of raw mateerials (such as
a yarn, dyes and chemicaals) at complletive prices.. Purchasing
g units are
able to link directly with
w supplierrs of raw maaterial and buut in bulk, ennabling weavvers to bypass the need too
w
source smaller quanttities throughh an intermeddiary trader. This has ledd to real cost--savings for weaving
r
purcchasing unitss have been able
a to reducce weavers imported
i
communnities. For exxample, it is reported
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silk yarn costs by 5-10 percent from bulk purchasing activities.352 Purchasing units also facilitate
collaboration between weaving communities to fulfill larger orders.
It is important for purchasing units to be managed by skilled weavers with appropriate training in
business management to ensure they remain profitable village entities. In 2012, 14 purchasing units were
operational across Cambodia and are expected to continue to enhance the independence of weavers,
increase their number, as well as strengthen their negotiating power.353 This will require continued public
and private investment in the silk sector supply chain, including through ensuring purchasing units have
access to adequate finance in order to increase each units purchasing power and long-term viability.
Similarly, the value of vertical integration between weavers and exporters is being recognized in order to
improve the overall quality, design, and consistency in silk production. While some individual private
companies (such as Artisan dAngkor) are taking a lead o this by coordinating the outbound supply chain
internally, there is a need for greater market awareness across the supply chain. The Government is
planning the formulation of a Silk Sector Export Strategy and a corresponding Action Plan to help the
sector position itself better in the competitive global silk market. To support both the formulation and
the implementation of the sector strategy, the Government is also planning to create a Silk Board
comprising Government officials and industry representatives to organize sector stakeholders as well as
help implement the export strategy and coordinate the supply chain effectively.
Production Capacity
Sericulture is a very small industry in Cambodia with just 1 MT of high-value golden silk produced in
2012 from 40 hectares of mulberry plantations.354No white silk was produced locally in 2012. The small
size of the sericulture industry stems from a protracted decline in production and is in stark contrast to the
1940s when annual production typically averaged 150 MT from 6 000 hectares of mulberry plantations.
The decline in Cambodias production of silk yarn is due to a number of factors: the limited supply of
healthy silkworm eggs;outdatedsilkworm-breeding activities at the farm level; and, susceptibility to
disease and heat stress that have resulted in silkworm mortality rates of around 50 percent and smaller
cocoons. Recent FAO-backed initiatives to breed and distribute more robust hybrid varieties of silkworm,
combined with training workshops on silkworm rearing, might help reverse the long-term decline in
sericulture production. Realistically, however, expanding yarn production is a long-term challenge that
may take many years and will be influenced in part by issues of land utilization and international market
prices.
Consequently, much of the strategic focus of government and industry has, and should be, on increasing
the scale of the Cambodias weaving sector by sourcing high quality imported yarn. This approach could
service increased domestic demand from population growth as well as grow export capacity especially
where Cambodias silk exports can be marketed as unique, high-quality handicrafts through the use of
352

ITC, Mid Term External Evaluation Cambodia Sector-Wide Silk Project (Phase II), Geneva: ITC, 2011.
ITC, Cambodian Sector-wide Silk Project: Khmer Silk Village (KSV). Final Report, Phnom Penh: ITC, 2012.
354
Interview with Mey Kalyan, Project Manager for FAO Cambodian Silk Program, in Cambodia on the Rise, Textiles World
Asia, June 2013.
353

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handlooms in villages. An advantage of targeting this high-end segment is that consumers are likely to be
less price-sensitive. In addition, this would avoid direct competition with the low-cost mass-produced
silk exports from Vietnam and China.
Quality of Product
Golden Khmer Silk products are produced from the yellow silkworm that is traditionally found in
Southeast Asia and particularly in the Northwest provinces of Cambodia. Golden Khmer Silk products are
recognized as having superior qualities to the mass-produced white silk products from China and
Vietnam. Current efforts to increase the supply of Golden Khmer Silk yarn could greatly improve export
earnings and provide an opportunity for Cambodia to market itself as a supplier of high-value fine quality
silk products. In the short-term, the silk weaving sector can boost the integrity and reliability of its supply
chain by sourcing high quality imported silk yarn that meet the international standards and Country of
Origin requirements of key export markets. This would also enable Cambodias weavers to produce more
premium silk products that attract higher prices.
Availability and Quality of Labor Force
As the silk industry supply chain is heavily organized around village-level yarn production and weaving
enterprises, there is an ample supply of labor to support the sector. As the silk industry supply chain is
heavily organized around village-level yarn production and weaving enterprises, there is a reasonable
supply of labor to support the sector. However, the higher wages offered in neighboring Thai provinces
encourages labor emigration and weakens the workforce available to support export development in
Cambodias weaving operations.
Furthermore, under-skilled workers lack the capacity to offer consistent products and product quality that
meet market specifications. There is also a shortage of design capabilities and capacity to translate new
design into production. In this context, Government initiatives and support to industry will need to focus
on downstream activities of the value chain, specifically marketing, design, and export promotion, and on
ensuring the weaving communities become export-ready.
Level of Processing Technology
Cambodias sericulture and weaving sector continue to rely on traditional and manual production
methods. While golden silk yarn production is unique to Cambodia and highly valued, the silk
processing and weaving industry competes directly with large regional producers that utilize modern and
more efficient technologies. For example, reliance on manually reeling silk yarn in Cambodia typically
leads to a courser silk fabric, which does not typically meet the standards of high-end or luxury silk
markets.355
Investment in more modern silk processing technologies that complement the unique qualities of
Cambodias silk heritage could aid efforts to open markets for high-value silk exports.

355

FAO Fact Sheet, Supporting Sericulture Rehabilitation in Cambodia, Phnom Penh: FAO, 2012.

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Cost and Quality of Infrastructure


With the sericulture and weaving components of the silk sector predominantly located in rural areas
access to quality and affordable infrastructure is paramount to modernizing the supply chain. Future
investments in transport infrastructure and energy supply would greatly enhance the prospects of the
industry. Village-level infrastructure and access to community services (including health and education)
are also important to retaining skilled labor in rural areas.
Efficiency of Domestic Support Industries
Silk yarn producers and weaving enterprises often have limited access to competitive finance to cover
operating expenses and lack access to capital to expand production scales. Current initiatives that seek to
demonstrate Cambodias potential as a high-value silk producer may spark greater interest in the sector
from investors and credit providers.In particular, access to micro-finance may support entrepreneurship
by weavers and enable village-based operations to expand and develop.
Domestic Demand
While the local silk industry is heavily reliant on imported inputs, Cambodians maintain a strong
preference for purchasing locally woven silk products. Domestic demand from locally woven silk
products is therefore expected to increase in line with population growth. However, modernizing the
supply chain will still be important and will help the local silk industry remain cost-competitive
(compared to important finished products) in order to maintain this advantage in the domestic market.
Prospect for Domestic Supply Conditions
Theexpansion of existing capacity building initiatives and the development and implementation of exportled growth strategies will greatly enhance the future prospects of Cambodias silk sector. While a
sericulture industry of any significant scale built around the unique attributes of Golden Khmer Silk
should be a long-term objective, there is real scope to increase exports of Cambodian silk handicrafts over
the short-to-medium term by drawing on imported supplies from the region. This will require increased
investment in training initiatives for rural weaving communities as well as a more strategic approach to
how the outbound supply chain designs and markets the finished products.

Policy and Regulatory Framework


Government Initiatives & Sector Policy
The Royal Government of Cambodia has identified silk as one of ten priority export sectors to receive
focused attention over the next five years. In 2010 the Government acted to support the growth of the silk

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sector by suspending import and value-added taxes on imported silk yarn equivalent to a 7 percent to 10
percent cost saving for Cambodias silk weavers.356
Further development of the Cambodian silk value chain will require strong engagement of the
Government particularlyin the form of a sector roadmap and policy framework. In the absence of a
national policy the sector is likely to develop haphazardly.Consequently, the formulation of a National
Sericulture and Silk Sector Policy by RGC is seen as a necessary catalyst for the sectors export growth
and expansion. Similarly, an appropriate public-private mechanism such as the National Silk Board
under discussion seems warranted given the need to drive a closer partnership between the sectors
stakeholders.
Business Associations
There are no formal industry organizations that engage with the Royal Government of Cambodia on silk
policy matters. There are, however, community associations that work at the village-level to promote
rural livelihood through skills development and trade. For example, Khmer Silk Villages (KSV) was
established in 2005 and has a membership base of 700 silkworm farmers/breeders in the North West and
800 weavers in the South. The KSV association focuses on enhancing technical skills and improving the
production of breeders and weavers by linking international buyers with local community products.357
While such community-based programs are certainly valuable and should be supported, the fragmented
nature of the silk supply chain continues to undermine the Royal Government of Cambodias policy
objective of export-led development. Current efforts to establish a National Silk Board should be
prioritized. A Board would help drive much needed public-private dialogue on modernizing Cambodias
silk supply chain, formulating a national silk policy and export strategy and would enable the sector to
speak with a stronger, more unified and representative voice.

Socio-Economic Factors
Current Employment and Job-Creation Prospect
Cambodias silk sector in Cambodia accounts for over 1,000 silkworm breeders and over 20,000 weavers.
The vast majority of weavers are women in rural areas who carry out the craft on a part-time basis. It is
estimated that a further 25,000 additional jobs could be created if Cambodia reduced its dependence on
imported silk yarn.358This underscores the importance of current efforts to modernize Cambodias silk
industry supply chain from silkworm breeding, to weaving, design, and marketing.

356

UNESCO, Operationalizing the Rectangular Strategy for Growth: Towards Better Business Processes, Presentation of
Findings SNEC, Phnom Penh: UNESCO, February 24,2011
357
Khmer Silk Villages (www.khmersilkvillages.org).
358
ITC, Institutional Aspects for Silk Promotion in Cambodia, Phnom Penh: ITC, 2011.

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Impact on Development of Disadvantaged Regions


Mulberry trees are typically planted on small family-run lots of 0.5 to 2.5 hectares and can be intercropped with other agricultural activities, such as with rice cultivation, providing a supplementary source
of farm income. The most famous area for golden silk is Phnom Srok (in Banteay Meanchey Province),
on the hills above Tonle Sap in Northwest Cambodia.
Weavers are largely located in the following nine provinces: Siem Reap, Takeo, Prey Veng, Banteay
Meanchey, Kampong Cham, Kampong Thom, Kandal, Phnom Penh and Stung Treng. Weaving is the
sole source of income for many rural families.
Overall, an expansion of the silk yarn production and weaving industries is likely to be welfare enhancing
for many rural communities in Cambodia and, especially, for women. A recent survey found that women
accounted for two-thirds of workers in the Cambodias sericulture sector and 98 percent of silk
weavers.359
Contribution to Skill Development
Cambodias silk sector currently relies on traditional silkworm breeding and manual weaving skills.
Current efforts to boost the technical skills and production capacity of the sector will need to continue to
create a sustainable and profitable silk sector that offers important new income-generating opportunities
to many of Cambodias rural communities. These skills will need to be complemented by developing
important downstream value chain attributes such as product design, marketing, and export promotion
in order to make the sector export-ready. Private retailers and cooperatives that interface with
international consumers and distributors will need to continue to be prepared to co-invest in such skill
development. Given the priority the RGC has placed on securing the silk sectors future, private investors
and retailers should be given the necessary confidence and backing to make these important investments.
Energy and Water Constraints and Environmental Impact
High-cost electricity undermines efforts to automate many aspects of silk processing in Cambodia. The
use of chemicals and dyes in silk production also poses risks to Cambodias environmental assets and
waterways. The sector has, however, sought to introduce higher-quality dyes, including through phasing
out the use of azo (synthetic) dyes that are a major pollutant and still in use worldwide.360These steps
toward more environmentally friendly production processes have also helped to maintain duty-free access
to the key EU market, which prohibits use of synthetic azo dyes in consumer goods.

359
Survey conducted as part of the Cambodian Export Diversification and Expansion Program I and published by the
International Trade Centre in April 2013.
360
ITC, The Export-led Poverty Reduction Program in Cambodia A Case Study, Phnom Penh: ITC, 2006.

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Box 16.1: ASEAN & Regional Integration


While today more than 60 countries in the world produce silk, most production is located in Asia, which
accounts for around 90 percent of mulberry silk production and almost 100 percent of non-mulberry
silk.361 The prevalence of silk production in the Asia region presents both a competitive challenge to
Cambodias relatively small silk industry as well as an opportunity to position itself as a supplier of
high-quality premium silk products. As a first step, Cambodias silk sector will need to re-assess where
it fits in the regional silk supply chain and what strategy is needed to drive its export-led growth in the
sector.
Currently, a collector based in Vietnam typically aggregates silk yarn (often of mixed quality) while a
trader receives an order from a Cambodian wholesaler. The yarn is shipped informally across the border
to the wholesaler in Cambodia who stores the yarn and then sells it to weavers. There is a clear
opportunity for Cambodia to become more closely (and formally) integrated into the silk supply chain in
the region especially in relation to sourcing quality inputs such as yarn, fabrics and dyes and bypass
intermediaries that only add to inefficiencies in silk production. A better organized and more formal
supply chain will also improve the overall traceability of Cambodias silk products and facilitate greater
access to high-value markets that stipulate Country of Origin certificates.
Cambodia will need to look to the region in modernizing its silk supply chain and increasing production
efficiencies while identifying and preserving its silk heritage traditions that attract a premium price from
international consumers.
Box 16.2: Progress Since 2007
Significant effort has been made since 2007 to improve the future prospects of Cambodias silk sector.
Wide ranging training opportunities have been provided to weavers from warping preparation and
installation, advanced natural dyeing, fly shuttle loom weaving, and semi-automatic weaving, to using
digital scales and calculating unit measurements to aid accuracy and conformity with international
standards.
Similar training programs have been provided to enhance traders understandings of the silk market,
including in areas such as quality assurance, enterprise management and export requirements. The
purchasing units established in many villages are run by weavers and have helped to ease some of the
constraints that many communities face in accessing raw materials such as yarn, dyes and chemicals.
Purchasing units link directly with suppliers of raw material and buy in bulk, enabling weavers to bypass
the need to source smaller quantities through an intermediary trader. This has led to real cost-savings for
weaving communities including a reported reduction in imported silk yarn costs by 5 percent to 10
percent from bulk purchasing activities. These costs-savings are in addition to those secured in 2010
when the Government suspended duties and value-added taxes on imported silk yarn equivalent to a 7

361

World Bank, Value Chain Study Cambodia, Phnom Penh: World Bank, 2012.

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379

percent to 10 percent cost saving.


Further cost-savings, supply chain efficiencies and skills development will be needed to modernize and
secure the future of Cambodias silk sector.

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Conclusion
Information analyzed in this chapter can be summarized in the SWOT table that follows.
Strengths

Weaknesses

Yarn production and weaving is an important


village-based activity offering significant rural
employment especially for women and individuals
with disabilities.
In some households weaving is the sole source of
income for many rural families.
Utilizes traditional handloom techniques and
maintains practices of historical and cultural
importance to Cambodia.
Preservation of traditional techniques passed on from
generation to generation.
Village-based and hand-woven silk production is a
natural complement to growing tourism sector.
Characteristics of native golden silk yarn are well
suited to differentiating finished product from
competition.
Strong consumer preference in domestic market for
locally woven silk fabrics.
Sericulture can offer farmers higher per hectare
revenue than cassava or rice cultivation.

Small-scale yarn production and lack of


recognition of Cambodia as a quality supplier in
international markets.
Returns from sericulture perceived as being too
low by Cambodian farmers to encourage increased
silk yarn production.
Tiny portion of locally produced silk products is
exported.
Tourists cannot easily access information on local
silk sector or observe looming and weaving
practices.
Smaller silk producers constrained by cost and
availability of high-quality yarn.
Lack of interest from investors constrains growth
in sericulture production.
Lack of export market experience.

Opportunities

Threats

Increasing the volume of yarn and weaving


production at village level likely to be welfare
enhancing.
Scope to develop high-value local product using
golden silk yarn.
Improvements in the quality and availability of
finished silk products will open markets.
Few tariffs or other import restrictions imposed in
global silk trade.
Village life and hand looming and weaving processes
could be marketed to tourists.
Growth in production of silk fabrics using imported
yarn.
Growth in production of high-end fabrics using
Golden Khmer Silk targeting high-value consumers
(both tourists and for export).
Creation of national Silk Board may improve
sectors capacity to coordinate production chain and
develop a uniform supply structure.

Increasing prices of imported inputs, such as yarn,


dyes and processing materials.
Key suppliers of imported silk yarnsuch as
Vietnamcutting production, exposing
Cambodias weaving sector to silk yarn shortages.
Domestic demand for silk fabric likely to stagnate
due to changing consumer preferences and
availability of substitutes.
Global sericulture production in general decline.
Significant competition in international markets
from Thailand for traditional hand-woven silk
products.
Cambodia fails to improve the quality and
availability of finished silk products.
Cambodia fails to preserve production of local
golden silk yarn (just 1 MT produced in 2012).
Capacity to market Cambodias silk product
exports may be overshadowed by the larger silk
suppliers in the region.
General reluctance and lack of interest to maintain
or support local sericulture sector.

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Recommendations
Cambodias silk industry is at a cross-road. Sericulture output is in decline and, in the absence of a
national silk export strategy, silk weavers and retailers are wedged in a region dominated by large silk
producers, manufacturers and exporters. The silk industrys future requires strong public-private sector
engagement backed by a roadmap and a national policy framework to guide investment in both sericulture
and silk production. Capacity building and technical support across the supply chain is also required to
ensure Cambodia emerges as a reliable supplier and exporter of quality silk products to the world.
Given the fragmented state of the silk supply chain, a national body such as the proposed Silk Board
is a much needed mechanism to drive closer collaboration between the sectors stakeholders. The
establishment of purchasing units in key weaving communities has proven to be a useful model for
sourcing inputs and lowering costs for weavers. However, greater integration in the regional supply chain
is needed to ensure traceability of finished products and to target high-value export markets.
Possible Actions to address some of the sectors current limitations and opportunities for further
significant progress are identified in the Trade SWAp Roadmap under Outcome #16.

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Chapter 17
SKILLS FOR EXPORTS
Introduction
The Youth Employment Challenge
Cambodia has a young population. Nearly 60 percent of the population is younger than 25. With an
estimated 300,000 to 400,000 young job seekers entering the Cambodian work force each year, the size of
Cambodias labor market might nearly double in ten years. While up to date and accurate unemployment
and under-employment data are hard to come by, it is quite likely that youth unemployment (15 24
years) is significantly higher than overall unemployment and that under-employment is likely significant
across all age ranges. Clearly, ensuring youth have access to good jobs with solid wages to young people
is possibly the most significant challenges for Government in the coming years. In the words of a Senior
Government Official, We are entering a new phase in Cambodia. Young people dont want decent jobs.
They want good jobs and high wages. We need strategies that are sustainable and relevant to
Cambodia.362 To ensure that young people can compete in the new workplace and in the ASEAN
Economic Community, Cambodias education system must make sure it prepares youth with both the
occupational qualificationsthey need in their future job and the foundation soft/core skills, including
literacy, numeracy, communication, team work, and other skills that will enable life-long learning. Lifelong learning is critical to maintaining a competitive workforce as a whole and to ensuring that each
individual can grow in the workplace.
Skill Shortages and Skill Gaps
Despite this large new labor supply, paradoxically Cambodian employers and investors are facing labor
shortages (also referred as skill shortages or occupational shortagesin this chapter.) Employers
are often hard-pressed to find and recruit enough individuals with the set of occupational skills required
for the jobs they need to fill. This is compounded by high labor turnover rates in industries, in particular
in low and medium skilled jobs. There is increasing competition among employers to find workers.
While competition should inherently lead to better wages and working conditions to fill the shortage of
labor and, in turn, lead to a lowering of labor turnover, this does not appear to be happening
systematically. This suggests that wages are simply being raised slightly to attract workers, in the
absence of considering broader challenges and the need to retain workers. Employers also refer to
attractiveness of industry, work place environment, and working schedules as a challenge to attract
workers to their industry. This suggests a lack of information as well as vulnerability of individual
sectors to general news and publicity on sectors and their stability.

362

SNEC-UNDP Roundtable, Phnom Penh: UNDP Cambodia, August 2013

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383

In addition to labor (or skill) shortages, firms are confronting a skill gap. The skill gapis simply
the distance between the skills brought by the individual recruited by the firm or already employed by the
firm and the skills demanded by the position the individual occupies. This skill gap reflects the mismatch
between the full set of skills required from the individual to master his or her job and the set of hard
(occupational) skills the individual has acquired through technical/vocational or higher education
training or simply on the job as well as the foundation soft/core skills acquired through education, from
earlier work experience, or even from life experience. In that regard, robust, hard (occupational) skills are
a challenge, but foundation soft/core skills e.g. problem solving ability, ability to use common sense
and take initiative, work ethics, intrinsic motivation, numeracy, literacy, communications, etc. are
possibly even more of a challenge. Cambodian employers stress that soft/core skills, in particular, are
those that enable the workforce to flourish in an industrial environment. While these skills are essential
in high skilled jobs (supervisory and management positions, etc.) where problem solving and decision
making have a direct impact on business, they are found lacking also even at lower rungs of the labor
market. Absent those, the ability of employers to train individuals in occupational skills they may lack
and to promote young people into more senior positions will be limited. Soft/core skills are the key to
life-long learning and training.
Education and Training
Cambodias workforce starts out with what can be described as an improving, but still weak educational
foundation. To truly compete in a global and ASEAN environment, Cambodia needs to take both a
medium term and long term view of skills building. It must ensure versatility of the workforce including
addressing health and nutrition challenges. As a priority, the focus on ensuring continued improvement
in primary and secondary education is essential including improving foundation soft/core skills such as
literacy and numeracy, communications and team work skills, or language skills. This will have a
marked impact on employability of young people and their ability to be trained and retrained in the future.
In addition, access to relevant training and diversified education pathways are very much needed and
currently largely lacking. This is true both before entering the labor market and once in the labor market.
Traditionally, employers have built their workforce through on the job training and internal training
mechanisms and have not relied on public or private training services whether higher education or others,
to provide them with a supply of trained workers. The workforce has gained experience and skills as
industries have grown. However, this leaves workers at a disadvantage in terms of skills flexibility and
adapting to new industries and technologies, as they are limited to the industry or enterprise they work in.
There is a need to make available and disseminate new and more diverse training institutions and
providers more broadly to industry.Furthermore ensuring quality of those new and more diverse training
institutions and providers is critical. ASEAN standards should be used as benchmark for a minimum
level of quality that should be expected from new TVET institutions or from strengthened university,
TVET, or grade-school educational institutions in Cambodia.
As suggested in the previous chapters, Cambodias export sectors are among the leading job-creator
sectors. Going forward, the challenge to ensure their continued development is to make sure they are not
held back by skill shortages and skill gaps and that they can indeed create the good jobs and high
wages demanded by the younger generations.
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The following main sections in this chapter consolidate what has been learned about the skill challenge
confronted by employers in each of the ten priority export sectors through a field survey of employers in
each sector. The skills need survey was conducted during June and July 2013 using a detailed structured
questionnaire instrument with the five to ten largest employers in each sector. The focus of the survey was
on identifying skill gaps and bottlenecks and how to overcome challenges. Specifically, it identified skill
shortages and skill gaps at the low-, medium-, and high-skilled levels, current training resources including
on-the-job training (OJT), vocational and technical education (TVET), university education, as and how
individual sectors are addressing their needs. Additionally, published studies were reviewed to
complement the survey findings. In this chapter, skills are broadly classified using the internationally
accepted ISCO 88 major occupational groupings.363
Thereafter, the chapter highlights skill needs and possible responses to meet the challenges identified in
the ten sectors. Possible actions to respond to the challenges are identified in the Trade SWAp Roadmap.
A short Annex follows the main body text of the chapter. It looks briefly at issues of Industrial Labor
Relations, Working and Living Conditions, and Productivity and their linkages to the skill issues
addressed in the chapter. Some conclusions and possible actions are also drawn from the Annex and
reflected in the Trade SWAp Roadmap.

Garments and Footwear


Employment
The garment and footwear sector together employed approximately 440,000 production line workers,
supervisors, and professionals in the formal exporting sector and in subcontracting factories:
approximately 65,000 in footwear and 373,000 in garments. Ninety percent of the workers in the garment
sector are women, most of them coming from rural areas. The same applies to footwear sector, although
there are a growing number of young men working in footwear factories, given the nature of work and
machinery used. The garment and footwear sectors are covered by minimum wage and agreements
negotiated with the Garment Manufacturers Association of Cambodia (GMAC.) If 2012 and 2013 are
any indication, employment in the sector will continue to grow at a robust pace.364
363

ISCO88ma joroccupa ti ona l groups


1.Ma nagers

Ski l l l evel

Forthi s
s tudy

3+4

2.Profes s i onal s

3.Techni ci ans &a s s oci ateprofes s i ona l s

Hi gh

4.Cl eri ca l s upportworkers


5.Servi cea nds a l eworkers
6.Ski l l eda gri cul tura l ,fores try,andfi s heryworkers

Medi um

Low

7.Cra fta ndrel atedtra des workers


8.Pl a nta ndma chi neopera tors ,a nda s s embl ers
9.El ementaryoccupa ti ons
364

See chapters 7 and 8

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385

Sector Structure
GMAC is the umbrella organization for garment and footwear manufacturers/exporters. According to the
Association there are around 428 garments exporting factories and 47 footwear factories. Exporting
factories are highly unionized.
Subcontractors, which are generally not members of GMAC, are estimated to be around 37 although the
numbers might be higher. Generally these factoriesare not unionized; however they will follow trends in
the exporting factories. Subcontractors are not organized in an employer group at present; however they
are represented through different business associations.
Cambodia has approximately 2765 unions, 76 Federation of Trade Unions and 12 Union Chambers
registered. The majority of the unions are active in the garment sector. The sector has been plagued by
strikes and industrial unrest in 2013 after a relatively peaceful 2012. The union movement in general
remains young and unstructured, but is becoming more organized.
Sector Vulnerabilities
The sectors are vulnerable to external economic and general political stability. For example, following
the July 2013 elections, around 20 percent of the workforce did not return to work immediately after
elections leaving the garment sector in particular with lags in filling orders. To a lesser degree, such loss
of workers can also occur during harvesting season or other agriculture seasonal needs, during key
national holidays, or because of some other external factors. For example, during the financial crises, a
large portion of workers were laid off and returned home. Some found employment in the hospitality and
entertainment sectors and never returned to the garment sector.
Workers on the production floor in particular, are generally not very versatile in their skill and have
difficulty in adapting to other types of industrial environments.
Working Hours and Wages
General working hours are eight hours a day with two hours overtime, up to 48 hours per week over a sixday working week. Minimum wage in the sector is $81 and reaching just around $100 with mandatory
benefits. The $81 dollar minimum wage is an increase of 35 percent on the previous minimum wage of
$60 dollars in 2012. While wages are set and agreed at the Labor Advisory Committee (LAC) which is
tripartite in nature, a new committee has been established to investigate wage levels in Cambodia. It is
estimated that wages will increase again in 2014. Unions are targeting a $150 to $200 dollar minimum
wage, which would be nearly double the current minimum wage.

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Table 17.1 compares wages in the Cambodian sectors with those available in neighboring countries.
Table 17.1: Monthly Wages in Garment and Footwear Sectors,
Cambodia vs. Neighbors, 2012
Cambodia

Thailand
Indonesia

Vietnam

Laos

Myanmar

Minimum wage $80/month plus allowances and bonuses nearly $100/month for a production
worker excluding productivity pay. Supervisory and other production staff, from $150 to
$300. Other clerical personnel from $220 to $350. Management personnel $800 and up.
As of January 1, 2013, the minimum wage in Thailand is set at $10.34 per day. Based on a
26-day work-month, $268.84 per month.
Minimum wages across all provinces, increased by an average of 18 percent in 2013 and 20
percent in 2012. Minimum wages currently range from $226.50per month in Jakarta to
$85.45 per month in Central Java.
Minimum wage increased 26.8 percent on average in the years 2006-2010.
The minimum wage ranges from $79.12 per month in remote areas to $112.68 per month in
the key cities of Hanoi, Haiphong, and Ho Chi Minh City.
The national minimum monthly wage for private employees in Laos nearly doubled from
$43.50 to $78.15 in 2011, with the government also requiring employers to provide each
employee $1.10 as a meal allowance per day.
There is no general minimum wage in Myanmar, yet standards exist for certain sectors. For
example, public employees are paid a minimum of $56.80 per month and day laborers are
required to be compensated at least $2.30 per day. Discussions with employers note that
factory workers earn around $35.00 to $45.00 per month.

Source:http://www.aseanbriefing.com/news/2013/04/16/minimum-wage-levels-across-asean.htmlPosted
by ASEAN Briefing, April 16, 2013
Labor Standards
All exporting garment and footwear factories are monitored by the Better Factories Cambodia (BFC)
program. It is a mandatory requirement for exporting. The program monitors factories according to the
Cambodian Labor Law, which reflectsinternational labor standards.
Occupational Shortages and Skills Gaps
Table 17.2 provides a summary of current occupational shortages and soft skill gaps in garment and
footwear manufacturing.

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Table 17.2: Occupational Shortages and Foundation Soft/Core Skill Gaps in the Garment and Footwear Sector
Occupational
Shortages

Reasons for
Labor
Shortages

Foundation
Soft/Core Skill
Gaps

Low Skill
Sewing machine operators
Multiple machine operators
Shoe makers
Laborers

Medium Skill
High Skill
C&T workers
Accountants
Compliance staff
Compliance officers
Electricians and mechanical
Industrial engineers
technicians
Industrial relations
Mechanics
professionals
Health and safety compliance
Merchandisers
officers
Sourcing Buyers
Markers & pattern makers
Mechanical and electrical
Multi-skilled operators
engineers
Pattern makers
Middle managers
Quality control and assurance
Production managers
officers
Technical managers and
Shoe makers
controllers
Technical supervisors
Production line supervisors
Difficulty in accessing and attracting labor to sector is the overwhelming challenge
Lack of industry-specific training and education
Lack of industry attractiveness as perceived by workers
Unrealistic expectations of potential entrants with low skills and education levels
Lack of career growth prospects as perceived by workers
Low wages, as perceived by workers, and migration to higher wage jobs
Long working hours and difficult work place environment
Competition among employers
Access to housing and support facilities an issue
Lack of cross cultural
Lack of cross cultural
Lack of cross cultural
understanding
understanding
understanding for business
Maturity
Maturity
purpose
Common sense
C common sense
Maturity
Literacy/numeracy skills
Literacy/numeracy skills
Common sense
Lack of team working skills
Problem solving skills
Literacy/numeracy skills
Manual dexterity
Weak decision making capacity Problem solving skills
Lack of flexibility in attitudes
Lack of initiative
Weak decision making capacity
and approaches
Public speaking
Lack of initiative
Ability to communicate
Lack of team working skills
Public speaking
effectively
General language proficiency
General language proficiency
General language proficiency
(multiple languages)
(multiple languages)
Communication skills
Communication skills
Communication skills

Source: CTIS Skill-Need Survey of Employers, 2013 and, National Employment Agency and International Labor
Organization Survey.

Expected Occupational Demand


Table 17.3 shows expected skill demand over the coming five years based on the assumptions that the
sectors will continue to grow and both sector will seek to move up the value chain.
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Table 17.3: Expected Occupational Demand in Garment and Footwear Sectors, 2014-2018
Low Skill
--

Very low growth

Low growth
Medium growth
Medium growth
High growth
-Very high growth
-Source: Chapters 7 and 8

Medium Skill
--

High Skill
--

--

Low growth

--

-High growth
--

---

Light Manufacturing Assembly and SEZs


Employment
Light manufacturing sector was estimated to employ 10,000 in 2012 of which 7,000 worked in SEZs.
SEZ employment and light manufacturing jobs can be expected to grow significantly and quite rapidly in
the coming five years.365
Sector Structure
In the absence of an appropriate census, the number of factories in the sector, inside and outside SEZs, is
not available. There are 45 light manufacturing facilities in the eight SEZs in operations. A number of
factories are unionized. There is no employer association for this sector. Some investors are members of
the Cambodian Federation of Employers and Business Associations (CAMFEBA) and other business
associations. In addition, SEZs managers have their own association.
Sector Vulnerabilities
Most firms in the sector are tied to global or regional production chains. Work orders are influenced by
global and regional consumer demand for the final product. Image of the sector is not tainted by strikes
at present.
Working Hours and Wages
Working hours and wages in the sector are pegged on those prevailing in garments.
Occupational Shortages and Skills Gaps
Table 17.4 provides a summary of current occupational shortages and soft skill gaps in light
manufacturing assembly.
365

See Chapter 9

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Table 17.4: Occupational Shortages and Foundation Soft/CoreSkill Gaps in Light Manufacturing Assembly
Low Skill
Occupational
Shortages

Reasons for
Labor
Shortages

Foundation
Soft/Core Skill
Gaps

Employer
Comments

Medium Skill

High Skill

Machine operators based on the


nature of enterprise

Multi-skilled machine
Accountants
operators
Compliance officer
Compliance staff
Industrial engineers
Electrical and mechanical
Industrial and labor relations
technicians
Middle managers
Health and safety officers
Production and planning
Mechanics and maintenance
managers
operators
Logistics personnel and
Quality control and assurance managers
officers
Technical staff (based on
Technical supervisors
nature of enterprise drafting,
Production line supervisors
design, etc.)
Difficulty in accessing and attracting labor to sector is the overwhelming challenge
Poor basic education foundation
Lack of industry-specific training and education
Lack of industry attractiveness as perceived by workers
Unrealistic expectations of potential entrants with low skills and education levels
Lack of career growth prospects as perceived by workers
Low wages, as perceived by workers, and migration to higher wage jobs
Long working hours and difficult work place environment
Competition among employers
Availability of housing facilities nearby SEZs can be a problem
Poor work ethics
Lack of cross cultural
Lack of cross cultural
Poor education foundation
understanding
understanding
Lack of cross cultural
Weak communications skills
Maturity
understanding
(reading and writing) and
Common sense
Maturity
limited ability to follow
Literacy/numeracy skills
Common sense
instructions
Lack of problem solving skills
Literacy/numeracy skills
Foreign language ability
Lack of initiative
Weak manual dexterity
General language proficiency
Foreign language ability
Lack of technical and practical
Maturity
General language proficiency
skills
Common sense
Lack of team working skills
Literacy/numeracy skills
Weak manual dexterity
Problem solving skills
Weak technical skills
Lack of initiative
Employers perceive that the causes for occupational shortages and skill gaps are inappropriate link of the
education to the industry needs and no training facility to supply the skilled labor for the industry as well as
poor general quality of education from the primary education and unrealistic expectations of new entrants with
the realities of the workplace.
Employers see a commitment by Government to improving the quality of TVET education and curriculums as
critical to meeting the demand for skills required by the industry. Public Private Training Partnerships are seen

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as appropriate ways to resolve the skill development problem. Employers see the need for industry linkages
with universities and TVET programs to enhance the quality of current education.
Improving the quality of general education in Cambodia is essential. Basic general education among youth is
perceived as poor and work ethics as very weak.

Source: CTIS Skill-Need Survey of Employers, 2013

Expected Occupational Demand


Table 17.5 shows expected skill demand over the coming five years based on the assumptions that the
sector will continue to grow very rapidly.
Table 17.5: Expected Occupational Demand in Light Manufacturing Assembly, 2014-2018
Very low growth
Low growth
Medium growth
High growth
Very high growth
Source: Chapter 9

Low Skill
--High growth
--

Medium Skill
--

High Skill
--

--

Low growth
----

High growth
--

Agro-Processing and Fisheries Sectors


Employment
In 2010 there were more than 31,400 registered SMEs (capital less than $3,000 many household
operations) in Cambodias processed food, beverage, and tobacco sector, employing more than 93,700
people. In contrast, there were only 56 large investments registered with MIH (30 Processed Food
Factories; 15 Beverage factories; 11 Tobacco Factories employment number in those unavailable.)366
FiA statistics for 2009 suggest that over 420,000 people were generating some earnings from the fisheries
sector on a part-time or full-time basis. However, inland fish catching and processing is an activity often
combined with others by farmers that might also be growing rice, corn, cassava or other crops. The labor
force involved in the marine fishery sector, including fishing, gathering, processing, and marketing, is
estimated to be only 20,000 people (20 percent of the coastal inhabitants).367

366
367

Chapter 10
Chapter 11

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Sector Structure
The two sectors are not well structured on the private sector side. Larger actors will be members of the
Phnom Penh Chamber of Commerce. The sectors are largely outside the reach of labor unions.
Community fisheries are one element of structuring among small inland fisheries.
Sector Vulnerabilities
The constraints and weaknesses of the industry include the lack of supporting industries, food processing
technology and skills, sanitation and hygiene knowledge, market analysis and marketing information, as
well as the lack of high quality infrastructure especially for storing and packaging, an unreliable supply of
raw materials, and low level of competitiveness due to high operating costs.368
Working hours and Wages
Because the sectors are dominated by individuals and small scale processors, earnings and working hours
vary greatly.
Occupational Shortages and Skills Gaps
Table 17.6 provides a summary of current occupational shortages and soft skill gaps in the agroprocessing and fisheries sector.
Table 17.6: Occupational Shortages and Foundation Soft/Core Skill Gaps in Agro-Processing and Fisheries
Occupational
Shortages

368

Low Skill
Low skilled operators of
basic machinery
Low skilled workers with
basic understanding of
hygiene and cleanliness

See Chapters 10 and 11

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Medium Skill
Health, hygiene, and safety
technicians
Electrical and mechanical
technicians
Operators of food related
machine
Mechanics
Operators of steam machinery
and boilers
Quality control officers
Qualified personnel in storage
methods for freshness and loss
minimization
Qualified personnel in packaging

High Skill
Chemical and food safety
technicians
Chemical engineers
Personnel specialized in
products and production health
and safety
Business managers
Factory managers
Electrical and mechanical
engineers
Process control technicians
Technical supervisors
Production line supervisor
Quality control supervisors
Advertising and marketing
professionals
Research and Development
professionals

Reasons for
Labor
Shortages

Competition among employers


Lack of sector-specific training and education
Difficulties in finding individuals with basic training in food preparation and hygiene
Institute of Technology of Cambodia (ITC) has a food technology course with few graduates
Lack of industry attractiveness as perceived by workers
Lack of career growth prospects as perceived by workers
Poor basic educational foundations
Low wages, as perceived by workers, and migration to higher wage jobs
Difficult work place environment and long working hours
Need for supporting infrastructure including housing, health care, transportation etc. to attract workers
to work in agro-processing or fisheries plants.

Foundation
Soft/Core Skill
Gaps

Lack of understanding of basic


food hygiene, cleanliness,
storage, and packaging
Lack of understanding of loss
minimization
Weak basic literacy and
numeracy
Work ethics
Lack of cross cultural
understanding
Maturity
Common sense
Weak manual dexterity
Weak technical and practical
skills
Lack of team working skills

Lack of understanding of basic


food hygiene, cleanliness
Lack of understanding of
packaging, storage and loss
minimization
Basic education poor
Lack of cross cultural
understanding
Weak communication skills
including reading and writing
and ability to follow
instructions
General language proficiency
Foreign language ability
Maturity
Common sense
Literacy/numeracy skills
Weak manual dexterity
Weak problem solving skills
Weak technical and practical
skills
Lack of initiative

Weak cross cultural


understanding for business
purpose
Weak communication skills
Foreign language ability
General language proficiency
Maturity
Common sense
Literacy/numeracy skills
Weak manual dexterity
Weak problem solving skills
Weak technical and practical
skills
Lack of initiative

Source: CTIS Skill-Need Survey of Employers, 2013 and, National Employment Agency and International Labor
Organization Survey.

Expected Occupational Demand


Table 17.7 shows expected skill demand over the coming five years based on the assumptions that the
sector will grow at a medium rate.

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Table 17.7: Expected Occupational Demand in Agro-processing and Fisheries, 2014-2018


Very low growth
Low growth
Medium growth
High growth
Very high growth

Low Skill
--Medium growth
---

Medium Skill
--Medium growth
--

High Skill
--Medium growth
---

Source: Chapters 10 and 11

Milled Rice
Employment
Estimates of numbers of workers employed in rice mills are not available. That is also true of modern
rice mills targeting export markets. It is estimated that a rice mill employs around nine to15 full-time
people. Rice millers, as well as supporting transportation, freight forwarding, and service sectors, also
employ large numbers of part time workers during harvest seasons. Large employment is at the farm
level, accounting for millions of jobs during peak harvest seasons.
Sector Structure
Rice millers have a large number of associations. The largest millers are also organized under the
Federation of Cambodian Rice Exporters (FCRE.) The sector is not unionized.
Sector Vulnerabilities
Sector is vulnerable to weather conditions and international food prices.
Working Hours and Wages
Salaries in mills are adequate for full time professionals however but at the minimum wage level for parttimers and laborers. Working hours vary based on the season and are not monitored.
Occupational Shortages and Skills Gaps
Table 17.8 provides a summary of current occupational shortages and soft skill gaps in the milled rice
sector.

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Table 17.8: Occupational Shortages and Foundation Soft/CoreSkill Gaps in Rice Mills
Occupational
Shortages

Reasons for
Labor
Shortages

Low Skill
Laborers are hard to recruit

Medium Skill
High Skill
Milling machine operators
Engineers
Electrical and mechanical
Experienced general managers
technicians
Marketing and sales
Machine mechanics
professional with international
Quality control and quality
business understanding
assurances technicians to
Operations managers
control variety of rice
Professionals with training in
SPS assurance officers
quality control, SPS, standards
Semi-skilled logistics personnel
Although all skill levels are difficult to recruit, access to medium skill talents is a special challenge
for the sector. Very difficult to find trained and experienced workers in this area.
The causes for high, medium, and low skill occupational shortages are often attributed to poor
educational or vocational training of candidates, difficulties in attracting people to the sector due to
wages level that are often not competitive with other sectors, irregular working hours and schedules
in the industry.
Surveyed rice millers are unaware of the existence of educational/training programs and providers
that could supply the sector with the appropriate supply of entry level talents or retrain current staff.
Their perception is that there is an overall shortage of skilled labor force to staff the sector.

Foundation
Soft/Core Skill
Gaps

Employers and workers lack access to information on labor market and employment opportunities.
Basic and simple skills and
Poor educational foundations
Lack of cross cultural
competencies for industry
Weak communication skills
experience and international
Weak basic communication
Weak literacy and numeracy
business experience
Weak common sense
skills
Unrealistic expectations
Very poor educational
Limited computer literacy
General language proficiency
foundations: weak literacy and Weak common sense
Foreign language ability
numeracy skills
Weak problems solving skills
Weak problem solving skills
Simple problems solving skills Team working skills
and exposure
Weak team working skills.
General language proficiency
Lack of initiative
Lack of maturity
Foreign language ability
Weak maturity
Maturity
Lack of initiative

Source: CTIS Skill-Need Survey of Employers, 2013

Expected Occupational Demand


Rice milling continues to attract investors and its impact on GDP will continue to grow in the future.
However, the milled rice sector is not a large employer, even if larger, modern mills may have larger
number of employees. The main area of employment in the rice sector is rice farming.

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The primary areas for job growth in rice milling are likely to be among mechanics that can repair modern
machinery, electricians and mechanical technicians, staff associated with sales and logistics, and staff
dealing with quality and hygiene/SPS.
Table 17.9: Expected Occupational Demand in Exporting Rice Mills, 2014-2018
Very low growth
Low growth
Medium growth
High growth
Very high growth

Low Skill
--

Medium Skill
--Medium growth
---

Medium growth
---

High Skill
--Medium growth
---

Source: Chapter 12

Cassava
Employment
While the bulk of employment in cassava is among growers, there is a large amount of semi-processing
done at the farm level or small scale level.
Sector Structuring
The sector is largely unstructured and there is no organization large enough to structure the sector around
points of common interest.
Sector Vulnerability
The sector is nearly 100 percent export-focused and highly vulnerable to international prices and demand.
It is also vulnerable to possible environmental degradation of soil and water unless systems are put in
place to mitigate those risks. Sustainability is in focusing on formal export markets (China, Korea,
others) but those markets have strong SPS requirements.
Working Hours and Wages
Working hours are highly influenced by harvest requirements. Wages are a function of international
market prices for cassava.
Occupational Shortages and Skills Gaps
Table 17.9 provides a summary of current occupational shortages and soft skill gaps in the cassava sector.
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Table 17.10: Occupational Shortages and Foundation Soft/CoreSkill Gaps in Cassava


Occupational
Shortages

Reasons for
Labor
Shortages
Foundation
Soft/Core Skill
Gaps

Low Skill
Laborers

Medium Skill
High Skill
Trained farmers
Mechanical and electrical
Machine operators for
engineers
processing plants
Managers
Electrical and mechanical
Marketing and sales
technicians
professionals
Machine mechanics
Professionals with international
QC/QA technicians with focus
business understanding
on SPS
Operations managers
Logistics semi-skilled
Professionals with training in
personnel
quality control, SPS, standards
Lack of sector attractiveness as perceived by workers
Low wages, as perceived by workers, and migration to higher wage jobs
Difficult work place environment and long working hours
High dependency on Thai and Vietnamese expertise to fill gap
Weak common sense
Poor educational foundations
Lack of international business
Very poor educational
Weak communication skills
experience in the cassava
foundations: weak literacy and Weak literacy and numeracy
sector
numeracy skills
skills
Weak communications skills
Lack of simple problems
Weak common sense
Unrealistic expectations
solving skills
Weak problems solving skills
General language proficiency
Lack of understanding of very
Lack of initiative
Foreign language ability
basic principles of
Lack of knowledge of basic
Weak problem solving skills
hygiene/SPS
principles of food hygiene/SPS and exposure
Lack of knowledge of very
Lack of knowledge of
Lack of initiative
simple environmental
environmental mitigation
Maturity
mitigation measures
measures
Lack of knowledge of
principles of food hygiene/SPS

Source: CTIS Skill-Need Survey of Employers, 2013

Expected Occupational Demand


Occupational demand in the sector is hard to predict because prospects for expansion might be determine
largely by fluctuating global demand. In addition, sustainability of the sector will be determined in large
measure by Governments efforts to establish and implement a policy to support the sectors transition
from informal exports (dominant at present) into formal exports.

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Table 17.11: Expected Occupational Demand in Cassava, 2014-2018


Very low growth
Low growth
Medium growth
High growth
Very high growth

Low Skill
--Medium growth
---

Medium Skill
--Medium growth
---

High Skill
--Medium growth
---

Source: Chapter 13

Rubber
Employment
The sector employed approximately 40,000 in 2007, including 18,500 smallholder families. Given the
very rapid growth in output since then, employment might have nearly doubled since then and is expected
to grow very fast in the medium term as large quantities of new trees already planted are expected to start
producing. In the coming years, the majority of the sectors output will be generated by large plantations
operating in land concessions.
Sector Structuring
There is no employer organization. The sector is not unionized.
Sector Vulnerability
The sector is highly internationalized as natural rubber is sold to clients in countries with processing
capacity. It is vulnerable to global demandand international prices.
Working Hours and Wages
Working hours tend to be long. Information on wages is not available.
Occupational Shortages and Skills Gaps
Table 17.12 provides a summary of current occupational shortages and soft skill gaps in the natural
rubber sector.

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Table 17.12: Occupational Shortages and Foundation Soft/CoreSkill Gaps in Natural Rubber
Occupational
Shortages

Reasons for
Labor
Shortages
Foundation
Soft/Core Skill
Gaps

Low Skill
Laborers

Medium Skill
Workers with tapping skills
Workers with experience in
planting and tree maintenance
Machine operators
Electrical and mechanical
technicians
Machine mechanics
QC/QA technicians with focus
on grading

High Skill
Mechanical and electrical
engineers
Managers
Marketing and sales
professionals
Professionals with international
business understanding of the
natural rubber sector
Operations managers
Professionals with training in
quality control, grading, semiprocessing, packaging

Lack of sector attractiveness as perceived by workers


Low wages, as perceived by workers, and migration to higher wage jobs
Long working hours
High dependency Vietnamese expertise to fill gap
Weak common sense
Poor educational foundations
Lack of international business
Very poor educational
Weak communication skills
experience in the rubber sector
foundations: weak literacy and Weak literacy and numeracy
Weak communications skills
numeracy skills
skills
Unrealistic expectations
Lack of simple problems
Weak common sense
General language proficiency
solving skills
Weak problems solving skills
Foreign language ability
Maturity
Lack of initiative
Weak problem solving skills
and exposure
Lack of initiative
Weak maturity

Source: CTIS Skill-Need Survey of Employers, 2013 and, National Employment Agency and International Labor
Organization Survey

Expected Occupational Demand


Occupational demand in the sector will be driven in good part by the Governments success in
formulating and implementing a sector policy within the framework of the Rubber CLV Development
Triangle. If it does, this could lead do robust growth over the next five years

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Table 17.13: Expected Occupational Demand in Natural Rubber, 2014-2018


Very low growth
Low growth
Medium growth
High growth
Very high growth

Low Skill
---High growth
--

Medium Skill
---High growth
--

High Skill
--Medium growth
---

Source: Chapter 14

Tourism
Employment
The tourism sector was estimated to employ directly around 620,000 people in 2011 (around 8.1% of the
total workforce.) According to the Ministry of Tourism, there 476 hotels (26,484 rooms) and 1,142
guesthouses (16,752 rooms), 1,024 restaurants, 589 travel agencies and tour operators in 2011, and 3,230
licensed tour guides (including 422 women) in 2010.
In addition, there are approximately 14,000 Tuk-Tuk drivers; 6,000 in Siem Reap (50 percent are
migrants from nearby provinces such as Kampong Thom, Oddar Meanchey, Kampong Cham) and 8,000
drivers in Phnom Penh (almost all migrants from provinces such as Prey Veng, Takeo and Kampong
Cham.) There are 32 tourist transport companies registered with Cambodia MoT and many more,
unregistered. There are eight waterway transport companies. Twenty one scheduled airlines serve
Cambodia, including one domestic airline. There is one chartered airline.369
Through linkages and indirect multiplier effect, the sector may impact the earnings of about 1.5 million
people.
Sector Structure
Employers are organized in a Cambodia Hotel Association, Cambodia Restaurant Association, and a
Cambodia Travel and Tour Agency Association. There is also a newly formed Cambodian Chef
Associations. Part of the sector is unionized and there are instances of strikes, but limited at present.
Sector Vulnerability
The relative importance of international visitors from Northern countries has declined. Visitors from
neighboring countries (Vietnam, Lao PDR, and Thailand) and other Asia (China, South Korea, Japan)
now dominate the market. Tourism is highly dependent on broader trends in consumer demand in the
369

Ministry of Tourism, Annual Report, Phnom Penh: MoT, 2011 and www.Khmerbird.com , September 19, 2011

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global economy. The recent slowdown in Asian markets may have some impact on the rate of growth of
the Cambodian sector.370
Working Hours and Wages
There are no minimum wages in the sector. Monthly salaries can start as low as $45 to $60 for trainees
or entry level workers with limited skills. Most establishments need to service 24 hours, particular
hotels. In larger and formal establishments, shift work prevails; in informal or SME sectors, workers may
be asked to work extended hours.
Occupational Shortages and Skills Gaps
Table 17.14 provides a summary of current occupational shortages and soft skill gaps in the tourism
sector.
Table 17.14: Occupational Shortages and Foundation Soft/CoreSkill Gaps in Tourism
Occupational
Shortages

Foundation
Soft/Core Skill
Gaps

Reasons for
Labor
Shortages

370

Low Skill
Housekeeping workers
Helpers
Bell boys
Concierge
Security guards

Very poor educational


foundations
Basic and simple skills
Maturity
Weak common sense
Weak problem solving

Medium Skill
Cooks and culinary staff
Food and Beverage staff
Front office staff
Booking, sales and marketing
positions
Supervisory positions in all
functions (front desk,
housekeeping, restaurant)
Mechanics and maintenance staff
Waiters and waitresses
Weak common sense
Weak communication skills
Limited knowledge of General
language proficiency
Foreign language ability
Lack of experience Maturity
Weak problem solving
Lack of initiative
Customer services

High Skill
Chefs
Engineers
Electricians
Mechanical technicians
General Managers
Sales and customer services

Weak educational foundations


and outsized expectations
Weak cross cultural experience
General language proficiency
Foreign language ability
Weak life experience
Limited problem solving skills
Weak ability to take initiative
Maturity
General language proficiency
Particularly difficult to access medium skills talent in the sector. Labor shortage and insufficient
skills are the biggest constraint to growth of the sector.
Lack of number of graduates graduating from good training institutions, from TVET particularly.
Employers would prefer hiring better trained candidates from TVET with a realistic understanding
of industry than from universities.
Potential workers have outsized expectations from the sector and are reluctant to work long
schedules and hours.

See chapter 15

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Current workers migration to other sectors expecting to find higher wages


Lack of access to good labor market information
The NEA ILO survey notes that 20 to 23 percent of employees in the hospitality sector were
considered to have a skills gap (meaning the skills they brought to the position were insufficient to
meet employers requirements.) Skill gaps were reported the most in occupations such as cleaners
and helpers (18 percent of total occupations with skill gaps), waiters (17 percent), cleaning
supervisors (14 percent), and hotel receptionists (9 percent.) Collectively they accounted for 58
percent of all occupations with skill gaps. Reasons for the skill gaps included (1) primarily the
lack of employee motivation and/or lack of experience; and. (2) general language proficiency,
including foreign languages which is a crucial in the hospitality sector. The survey also noted the
largest occupational shortages were among Chefs, tour guides, customer service professionals, tour
operators, and marketing and sales personnel.
Source: CTIS Skill-Need Survey of Employers, 2013; and, National Employment Agency and International Labor
Organization Survey

Expected Occupational Demand


If the industry is to meet the six million international visitors target by 2018 it could nearly double in size
from its 2012 level. However, this is likely to be dependent on the ability of training institutions to
deliver the quality and quantity of required skilled workforce. Most likely, the most critical needs area
will be staffing of hotels and restaurants. The knock on effect of growth in the hotel and restaurant subsectors may be significant on other home based industries that caters to tourists, especially if the length of
stay of visitors start rising again.
Table 17.15: Expected Occupational Demand in Tourism, 2014-2018
Very low growth
Low growth
Medium growth
High growth
Very high growth

Low Skill
---High growth
--

Medium Skill
--High growth
--

High Skill
---High growth
--

Source: Chapter 15

High Value Silk Products


Employment
The sector employs approximately 1,000 silk work breeders and over 20,000 weavers. The great majority
of weavers are women.

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Structuring of the Sector


The sector is organized in communities of breeders of weaves. There are 39 communities of silk weavers.
There are some associations such as Khmer Silk Village (KSV.) A number of the communities have
organized purchasing units to help them with securing yarn at a reasonable price and of good quality.
Middle-persons and agents, working for buyers, contract for work and often provide design.
Sector Vulnerability
The sector relies on international visitors and exports of silk products. So it is influenced by trends in the
tourism sector and in global consumer demand. Capacity for design and innovation remains limited.
Exporters and retailers need to develop their marketing skills. There is a need protect Cambodian designs.
Working Hours and Wages
Working hours for weavers can be long when they are busy with orders. But it is a function of orders.
Wages of weavers vary but monthly income can be a little higher than the prevailing minimum wage in
the garment sector. The tendency is to follow the trend in the garment sector. Typically, weavers will be
provided with lunch.
Occupational Shortages and Skills Gaps
Table 17.16 provides a summary of current occupational shortages and soft skill gaps in the high-value
silk sector.
Table 17.16: Occupational Shortages and Foundation Soft/CoreSkill Gaps in High-Value Silk Product Sector
Occupational
Shortages

Foundation
Soft/Core Skill
Gaps

Reasons for
Labor
Shortages

Low Skill
--

Medium Skill
Weavers
Purchasing personnel to staff
purchasing units
Sales staff in retail establishments

--

High Skill
Designers
Marketing and promotion
professionals
Sales professionals
Sales managers in retail
establishments
Communication and networking
General language proficiency
Foreign language ability

Passing down traditional skills to


new weavers is becoming an issue
General language proficiency
Ability to take initiatives
Creativity
Migrating for better wages in the region, in particular the weavers at family level.
At high skill level, the sector needs entrepreneurs, the sector needs promotion

Source: CTIS Skill-Need Survey of Employers, 2013

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Expected Occupational Demand


Although the silk sector can bring significant, hard-to-quantify value in terms promoting Cambodias
cultural heritage and while the sector should be able to increase its output and value through design and
innovation excellence, it is unlikely to see high growth in the near future.
Table 17.15: Expected Occupational Demand in High Value Silk Product Sector, 2014-2018
Very low growth
Low growth
Medium growth
High growth
Very high growth

Low Skill
------

Medium Skill
-Low growth
---

High Skill
-Low growth
----

Source: Chapter 16

The State of the Training Infrastructure in the Ten Export Sectors


Table 17.16 below provides an overview of the training infrastructure in the ten export sectors. The main
lessons are quite obvious. Cambodias sector-specific training infrastructure is extremely weak in all ten
sectors. Most sectors continue to depend on limited OTJ training for low and medium skill and make
do with higher education graduates for higher positions even though their skills are often quite limited.
While the absence of a strongly supportive training environment may have placed few limitations on
Cambodias ability to grow most of its export sectors until now, this is unlikely to be the case going
forward. As competition intensifies, Cambodia needs to move up the value chain in nearly all sectors so
as to improve productivity and capture greater value and, in so doing, be able to match gain in value and
productivity with earnings growth of workers. Baring that, competitiveness will decline.

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Garments and
Footwear

Number of Higher
Education
Institutions
No technical higher
education programs,
but general business
degrees with no
sector- specific
focus.
GMAC has
obtained a loan to
set up a National
Training Center
for Garments

A few individual
training and
private providers.

No formal TVET
provision to
garment sector

Number of TVET

GMAC has taken a


$5 million loan to
develop a national
training institute

No higher
education
curriculum
specifically focused
on the sector.
University
education is
improving, but
TVET graduates
are considered to be
better prepared for
the work place with
more practical
skills and better
understanding or
expectation of the
workplace.

O-T-J training is
strong in the sector
compared to others

Factories are
training their own
workforces. Some
factories have a
training division.

Strengths

has good basic


programs but is not
an institution.

www.shrmp.com.kh )

The Society for


Human Resource
Management and
Productivity
(SHRM&P -

Quality of
Curriculums

Training Institutions

University
education is
improving, but
TVET graduates are
considered to be
better prepared with
more practical skills
and better

No higher
education programs
for the sector, but
accounting and
management with
no sector- specific
focus.

Secondary school
completion rates
remain a challenge.
Large segments of
the workforce
illiterate or semiliterate.

Lack of formal
vocational training
results in workers
losing opportunity
for greater earnings
as they must train
on the job.

Weaknesses

Opportunity to train
garment workers
through ASEAN
accreditation

The industry seems


willing to support
training PPPs

Industry-led TVET
would address acute
labor shortages and
build a flexible
workforce

Opportunities

SWOT of Training Institutions

Table 17.16 : Analysis of Training Capacity in the Ten Sectors

Industry unable to
move up the value
chain and while
losing
competitiveness to
countries that have
lower labor and
production costs
(e.g. Myanmar)

Workers leaving
for higher wages
in the region.

Threats

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AgroProcessing and
Fisheries

Light
Manufacturing
Assembly and
SEZs

Only Institute of
Technology of
Cambodia (ITC)
focuses on chemistry
and food
engineering, and
Royal University of
Agriculture (RUA)
has some

Few engineers
graduate every year.

FiA extension
services have very
limited resources

Lack of formal
TVET training
focusing on food
processing and
engineering

The sector is new


to Cambodia. Lack
of formal training
institutions.

Number of TVET

In general, lack of
educational and
training programs
focusing on food
hygiene and SPS
management (see
chapter 4.)

University
education is
improving, but
TVET graduates
are considered to be
better prepared with
more practical
skills and better
understanding or
expectation of the
workplace.

No higher
education
curriculum
specifically focused
on the industry.

Quality of
Curriculums

Training Institutions

No higher education
programs that are
industry focused.
Higher education has
only general
business and
management degrees
lacking sectorspecific focus

Number of Higher
Education
Institutions

Limited

OTJ training is
strong or foreign
investors use their
regional training
centers to train
Cambodians

Some SEZ
factories have
training centers
training around
100 200 workers/
month, e.g. Bavet.

Availability of land
in SEZs to attract
training providers.

Strengths

Lack of universities
(except ITC and
RUA) or TVET
with courses
relating to food
processing,
engineering,
hygiene, sanitary
controls and related

No higher
education
curriculum focused
on the sector

No higher
education programs
for the sector

No formal training
centers in the SEZs
to support investors

understanding or
expectation of the
workplace.
Lack of formal
TVET training for
light manufacturing
assembly

Weaknesses

Invest in R&D and


training center for
food innovation

SEZ training centers


could service the
region and overseas
workers

Industry seems
willing to support
training PPPs

Create PPPs to
support training
services and TVET
inside or outside
SEZs

Opportunities

SWOT of Training Institutions

Table 17.16 : Analysis of Training Capacity in the Ten Sectors

Continued
shortages of
skilled labor has
deleterious impact
on further
integration in
regional
production
networks
Lack of
investment in
training and
processing
factories in sector
means increasing
imports of
processed food
into Cambodia as

Lack of
motivation and
leadership in SEZs
to set up
supporting
services for
industry leaving
the full burden on
investors.

Threats

Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

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Cassava

Milled Rice

No formal higher
education regarding

Small number of
universities,
including RUA,
provide courses
relating to rice
growing, plant pest
and disease control
program, capacity to
undertake risk
assessment, rice
milling etc.

Number of Higher
Education
Institutions
relevanteducation
programs relating to
food processing but
weak in hygiene and
SPS (see chapter 4.)

MAFF extension
services lack
resources and
capacity to provide
training
No formal
vocational training

NGOs working in
the sector provide
training but no
institutionalization
(and risk of no
sustainability)

No TVET
providing training
for milling
machine operation,
post-harvest
management, safe
storage etc.

and capacity to
provide training in
fisheries
processing

Number of TVET

In general, lack of
educational and
training programs
focusing on food
hygiene and SPS
management (see
chapter 4)

Quality of
Curriculums

Training Institutions

Very Limited

Limited

Strengths

Shortage of training
institutions/courses

No higher
education
curriculum
specifically focused
on the sector. RUA
is undertaking a
curriculum review
and upgrade in
plant health, animal
health and food
safety with TA
support from ADB

Few training
institutions and
inadequate training
coverage needed by
sector.

lab work. RUA is


undertaking a
curriculum review
and upgrade in
plant health, animal
health and food
safety with TA
support from ADB

Weaknesses

TVET and higher


education training

Create a R&D lab


for developing seed
and crop varieties
and building
expertise in this
domain

Opportunities

SWOT of Training Institutions

Table 17.16 : Analysis of Training Capacity in the Ten Sectors

Lack of policy,
including training

Lack of leadership
and strong focus
on training and
importance of
SPS/hygiene
training to foster
excellence in the
sector. Rice
Millers unable to
meet SPS
requirements of
importing markets.

standard of living
increases.

Threats

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Rubber

No formal higher
education focusing
on rubber planting,
harvesting, and
processing

Number of Higher
Education
Institutions
cassava growing and
processing

No TVET focusing
on rubber planting,
harvesting, and
processing

MAFF extension
services lack
resources and
capacity to provide
training

regarding cassava
growing and semiprocessing

Number of TVET

Quality of
Curriculums

Training Institutions

Very limited

Strengths

OTJ training,
provided by
processing plants is

Lack of technical
training focusing on
modern cultivation
techniques, pest
management, and
post-harvest
handling, or
processing

No formal higher
education and
TVET programs
focusing on cassava

for proper training


to workers for pest
and disease control,
post-harvest
storage, semiprocessing and
management (see
chapters 4 and 13)

Weaknesses

Cambodia has great


opportunity to
become major
producer and
processor of rubber
including through
the rubber
development
triangle. To succeed
will require
strengthened sector
training to improve

Sustainability of
the sector will
require moving
into formal export
channels (e.g. to
China, Korea,
others.) But those
markets have
strong SPS
requirements that
can only be met
through training of
farmers and
processors.
With no
significant
investment in
training Cambodia
may not be able to
meet Government
targets for
development of
sector

policy for the


sector, put cassava
farmers at large
risks in the short
to medium term.

could help reduce


the very large
percentage of postharvest losses
TVET and higher
education training
could help the
sector address
threats associated
with environmental
degradation. Failing
that, yield will
decline.

Threats

Opportunities

SWOT of Training Institutions

Table 17.16 : Analysis of Training Capacity in the Ten Sectors

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Tourism

Higher education
institutions have
very theoretical
hospitality degrees
that lack relevance
and practical
application.

Number of Higher
Education
Institutions

A few NGOs train


disadvantaged and
poor people for
hotel and
restaurants but

MoT has a
program to certify
tour guides in
Siem Reap ( public
sector provided
and accredited)

Lack of training
institutions for tour
operators, guides.

Several TVET
institutions that
offer the needed
skill training for
hospitality sector
(hotels and
restaurant)
however with
varying degree of
strengths among
institutions

Number of TVET

MoH will roll out


training program to
support
introduction of
Good Hygiene
Practice (GHP)
rating system for
restaurants
University
education is
improving, but

NGO training lacks


consistent, good
quality training.
Most NGO
graduates unable to
work in quality
establishments

Higher education
training is not
practical enough
and graduates have
unrealistic
expectations of
hospitality and
tourism sector.

Quality of
Curriculums

Training Institutions

OTJ dominates
especially for low
and medium skills

Strengths

University
education does not
prepare youth for
the realities of the
workplace.

Existing programs
run by NGOs have
limited scope,
limited enrollment,
do not implement
well- established
curriculums

quality at every step


from planting to
processing.

limited because
employers face high
turnover and are
reluctant to invest.
Various NGO
TVET provides
skill training that
can be strengthened
and more publically
accessible

Develop and
implement
Customer Service
Strategy for
tourism.

Cambodian people
have a strong ability
to learn foreign.
Develop General
language
proficiency for
tourism.

Two TVET PPPs


under development
(for Culinary
Institute and
Tourism
Management) but
not materialized yet

Industry council to
inform and
coordinate training

Opportunities

Weaknesses

SWOT of Training Institutions

Table 17.16 : Analysis of Training Capacity in the Ten Sectors

Shortage of skill
labor slows down
the rate of new
investment and
Cambodia does
not meet
Government
targets for growth
in tourism.

Serious shortage
of medium and
high skill labor for
the sector may
lead to further
hiring of expat
staff from other
Asian countries to
help grow the
sector.

Threats

410 Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

RUFA (Royal
University of Fine
Arts) but not focused
on silk weaving

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Some books
document the
history of weaving,
arts and design

TVET graduates
are considered to be
better prepared with
more practical
skills and better
understanding or
expectation of the
workplace.
Limited knowledge
transfer from one
generation to the
next.

very small number


trained

No formal TVET
training
institutions for
weaving and silk.
Weavers lack
formal education.
Weaving training
is handed down
from generation to
generation.

Quality of
Curriculums

Number of TVET

Training Institutions

Source: CTIS Skill-Need Survey of Employers, 2013

Silk

Number of Higher
Education
Institutions

Very limited

Strengths

Women
Development
Centers have very
basic sewing
training, but no
training for silk
weaving

Available training
is donor-funded
with no long term
sustainability

No higher
education
curriculum
specifically focused
on the industry.

No formal TVET

Weaknesses

Create an institution
of weaving
excellence and
design innovation

Introduce
sericulture program
in RUA

Opportunities

SWOT of Training Institutions

Table 17.16 : Analysis of Training Capacity in the Ten Sectors

Weaving
occupation
declines due to
insufficient
incomes and
women migrating
to other better
paying jobs.
Knowledge
transfer disappears

Threats

Conclusion
The skills challenge is a universal one and pertinent to all ASEAN countries, not isolated to Cambodia.
There is no question that the employability and competitiveness of the workforce is linked not only to
education levels, but, in particular, to the demonstrated occupational skill ability (hard skills) of the
individual as well as to his or her interpersonal and soft skills, that in turn enables her or him to compete
in the work environment.
The field work and research carried out in conjunction with the preparation of this chapter suggest that,
for Cambodias export sectors to continue diversifying and moving up their respective value chains, there
is a clear need to address labor shortages and skills gap through deliberate interventions in a number of
strategic areas:

First, there is a needto ensure future competitiveness through continued improvement in


foundation education. Primary and secondary educations are essential in building the
soft/core foundation skillsthat the new generation will need to compete in an already diversified
economy. Further attention is needed to provide young people as early as primary and secondary
education with solid foundation skills ranging from robust literacy and numeracy to
communications (including foreign languages), problem solving, or team working skills. Young
people leaving secondary education need to be equipped with foundation skills to be able take on
employment in the formal sector, be able to re-enter the formal education sector at a later date,
and/or benefit from other opportunities of life-long learning which will influence greatly their
ability to get ever better jobs as they gain in experience and maturity.

Second,there is a need for immediate, deliberate efforts by Government and employers to


develop a robust, sector-specific TVET infrastructureto provide young people with more
diversified education opportunities that enable them to gain access to good jobs. From
discussion with and interviews of employers, such infrastructure will be best received if it
develops through public-private partnerships in many of the sectors. Partnership with private
sector is arguably essential to leap-frog TVET provision in Cambodia. TVET training needs to
be supported through appropriate levels of financing and with private sector inputs. Quality is
very important to ensure sustainability and relevance to industry. International and ASEAN
standards should be used as benchmarks when developing relevant curriculums.
The kind of partnership required to build a successful TVET system in Cambodia requires a
change in mindsets on both the Government and the Private Sector sides. For the private sector,
it means a commitment to getting involved in the process of starting and maintaining TVET
programs including through shaping curriculums, providing training internship opportunities for
young people, possibly financing some aspects of the programs. For Government, it means
accepting to share governance of programs with the private sector, possibly on an equal footing,
through Skill Councils, Boards of individual TVET institutions, etc. which is a significant
departure from the way Government institutions are used to operatetypically. The recent
experience with efforts to establish TVET programs on the basis of Public-Private Partnerships in
the two leading export sectors Garments and Tourism demonstrates the difficulty in getting
the two stakeholders to develop education and training, governance, and financing models that
are acceptable to the two key stakeholders.

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There are many models of successful TVET infrastructures. Surely, Cambodia will need to find
its own model. Box 17.1 presents the experience of Korea in building up its TVET
infrastructure. One important point from Koreas own experience is that TVET needs not start
after completion of secondary education. Indeed, both the Korean model and some of the best
European experiences suggest that successful TVET can begin in the very fabric of secondary
education, and then go beyond it.
TVET, as it is known today in Cambodia, is not valued by young people. There is a need
coordination and leadership from the Government, including relevant stakeholders such as NEA,
MoEYS, and MoLVT to raise the image and value of TVET education. Again, quality of
education provided through TVET schemes is critical in that respect. But better information and
explaining among young people is also critical. Students should be provided with career
counseling throughout secondary and upper education so they can make appropriate decisions on
selecting university courses or to enrolling in the TVET programs that will enable them to secure
good jobs and find jobs where labor market demand is.
Box 17.1: TVET in the Republic of Korea371
The Republic of Korea provides a shining example of how TVET can fuel stellar economic growth.
While no model should ever be fully emulated, the South Korean experience offers some key lessons.
First, the government took a sequenced approach to education.Money didnot start flowing into TVET
until the country nearly achieved universal primary education. By design or accident, major investing
began in the early 1980s, just as labor shortages started to pinch the economy. To make the big push
into export-oriented manufacturing, construction, and service-oriented sectors, the country needed a
new stream of skilled workers.
At the same time, Korean policy-makers were beginning to be alarmed by a growing appetite
for higher education and the risk that young peoples education would become out-of-step with an
economy thirsting for new sources of skilled labor for its manufacturing and emerging service-sectors.
By expanding TVET, the government planned to satisfy its forecasted labor needs while reducing
pressure on universities to enroll more students.
Today, about 40 percent of secondary students are enrolled in TVET. Yet it is still perceived as a
second-class education. So the government is also opening pathways to higher education. First, TVET
students are now getting a healthy dose of academic subjects so that they can continue on to
university. In some schools, academic and vocational students share as much as 75 percent of a
common curriculum. The government is also channeling public and private investment into new postsecondary training institutions to counter the myth that TVET is an academic dead-end.
The ultimate challenge lies in keeping abreast with technological change. To keep curricula relevant,
the plan is to tighten links to the private sector. For example, the Republic of Korea is now
experimenting with their own version of Germanys famous "dual system", which traces its roots back
to post-war reconstruction. It is opting for a 2+1 program, combining two years of classroom studies
at higher secondary education level with a year of apprenticeship.

371

http://www.unevoc.unesco.org/tvetipedia.0.html?&tx_drwiki_pi1%5Bkeyword%5D=Republic%20of%20Korea

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412 Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

Third, Cambodias National Employment Agency (NEA) has been established recently to
facilitate labor market matching as well as provide much needed information to young people and
employers about labor market trends and developments. The agency has a job website that
advertises a host of different job opportunities as well as provides advisory services to help young
people get prepared for the workplace and access relevant training providers. The NEA should
play an increasingly important role in supporting diversification and development of the
Cambodian economy as it generates labor market information and data that facilitate greatly
matching jobs with candidates and bring industry and education systems closer together.The
expectations of young people need to be managed by ensuring that they have access to
appropriate information regarding employment opportunities, career growth, and training to
enhance their skills and abilities. Todays younger workforce or future workforce has significant
access to social media and general news. More innovative mechanisms for information sharing
and education should be pursued.The information developed by NEA can play a critical role in
helping career counselors and professionals of TVET programs in better guiding young people
and explaining to them the future world of work and opportunities within it. Of course, better
labor market information is also essential to investors. The NEA has an important role in
providing potential investors with such.

Fourth,along with strengthened primary, secondary and TVET education, there is a need to
ensure the quality and relevance of higher education. While higher education is the type of
education most desired by youth with the goal of obtaining a good job post graduation, it is
essential to ensure the relevance and quality of higher education. Industry skills councils could
be developed to address closing the skill gap in curriculums and to provide youth with better
opportunities when they enter the work place. Quality of higher education should be genuine so
that its full value is recognized by employers. There is a great opportunity for higher education
to incorporate shorter certificate-based education to enable young people to get quicker access
the job market while studying.

Fifth, there is a need to ensure that all education systems, in general, support lifelong learning
and access to lifelong learning whether such learning is through TVET providers, higher
education and university providers, or private sector trainers. With Cambodia boasting a young
workforce, re-skilling, up-skilling and flexibility in the total employment skill-set are important
in ensuring that young people can adapt quickly to a changing economic environment. To
support a lifelong learning approach, it is necessary to develop a vision of the future Cambodian
workforce and actively promote such a vision to foster improvement.

In addition to re-focusing the educational and training systems to ensure they are more responsive to the
needs of individuals and employers, there is a need for Cambodia to address some issues in the workplace
and living environment that are linked to the skill shortages and gaps issues and that have a direct impact
on the country competitiveness. Those are explored in the Annex to this chapter. From the Annex, two
additional conclusions can be drawn:

First, the growing number of industrial actions is having a negative impact on the economys
competitiveness. Cambodias balanced management and enforcement of labor policies will be
arguably a very critical element in moving forward to continue attracting FDI as it needs to
diversify its economy. While Cambodia has benefited from low wages, pressure on wages and
an immature and disruptive union movement are likely to impact investors perceptions on the
investment climate.

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Second,as a result of an excessive number of disruptive industrial actions coupled with the very
large number of public holidays and need for overtime to meet production schedules, Cambodia
could find itself in a trap of low productivity, long work hours, and inability of providing
additional time off to employees for training which is the basis for productivity enhancement.
The role of tripartite partners in Cambodias pursuit of industrial and economic diversification
cannot be underestimated as to their impact and contribution towards productivity development,
skills enhancement and coordination with government. Cambodias industrial relations can be
classified as young, often resulting in losses for both employers and workers and the economy as
a whole. Better proactive management of industrial relations is needed, including leadership and
vision from Government. The role of the Labor Arbitration Council in resolving conflicts
should be deepened. Tools such as Collective Bargaining Agreements could be introduced.
And the negative impact of excessively high numbers of public holidays on productivity and
factory operations needs to be addressed.

Box 17.2: ASEAN, Cambodia, and Skills


Cambodias labor pool includes, primarily, low skilled or unskilled workers. There is a growing pool
of medium-skilled individuals that have rather limited, practical hard skill qualifications and little work
experience. To compete truly in an ASEAN environment, Cambodia needs to take both a medium term
and long term view of skills building and ensuring versatility of the workforce including addressing
health and nutrition challenges. Educational foundations are essential to ensure a more competitive
future generation of workers and to ensure Cambodia continues to benefit from its growing youth
population.
Labor productivity is the key to sustaining growth and growing jobs and income.Labor productivity
varies greatly among ASEAN nations. Cambodia has one of the lowest productivity levels (output per
worker) within ASEAN. Access to relevant training and diversified education pathways to up-skill or
learn new skills are critical to sustaining continued labor productivity gains.
A workforce vision and development strategy is essential for the industrial diversification of Cambodia
and needs to be tailored by sector and consider regional developments. On the one hand, ASEAN
integration poses threats for Cambodia in losing workers who may be able to earn higher wages in other
countries. On the other hand, it will also provide opportunities for higher skilled work and earnings
which in turn, through remittances, can have a significant positive impact on rural and household
incomes as well as on the development and exposure of the Cambodian workforce. ASEAN integration
can also help leap frog innovative education and training developments by drawing on regional
frameworks and focusing Cambodia specific education and training developments on regional
integration and regional workforce needs. A workforce strategy and vision must therefore include
external migration policies and how to manage better internal migration, in other words to manage the
supply of workforce and skills needs within Cambodia with the leveraging of the oversupply of skills
within the region that can contribute to Cambodias diversification.

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414 Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

ASEAN Labor Ministers have a clear vision to foster employment creation and promote development
of productive, competent, and capable workforce by investing in training education and skill upgrading.
This vision includes sharing knowledge and policies, sharing regional experiences in training,
establishing close coordination of programs related to human resource development planning among
ASEAN members, and fostering overall regional cooperation and collaboration in HRD and skills
upgrading. Among those efforts, ASEAN is promoting the development of mutual recognition
agreements (MRAs) on skill frameworks and standards as well as bodies to coordinate sector specific
human resource development matters. Some of these include creation of ASEAN accredited standards
for training of workers in garments under AFTEX (ASEAN Federation of Textiles Industries) as well
as the development of a recognized standards and competencies for tourism including the ATPRS
(ASEAN Tourism Professionals Registration System.)
Cambodia could greatly benefit by setting a trend in harnessing innovative education models and
methods that not only benefit Cambodian workforce, but position Cambodia as leading provider of
training and education services for selected sectors. These could be fostered through Public-Private
Partnerships (PPPs) that would be of a high quality and meet ASEAN standards and recognition as well
as PPPs that bring in regional players or flagship institutes that could spearhead the development of a
training sector in Cambodia. With the development of national training institutes in the garments and
in the culinary or hospitality sectors, Cambodia could be an emerging destination of training
excellence. Political leadership in promoting innovation and excellence will play a key role in
harnessing the benefits of ASEAN integration and creating a niche where Cambodia plays an important
role in skill development in the region.
Positioning the Cambodian workforce for ASEAN integration is essential. Not as a labor excess
country, but as a skilled and competent workforce that is consistent and intelligent, that evolves with
industrial developments in the region, and that becomes the preferred hiring choice of domestic and
regional employers. The importance of the National Employment Agency and dissemination of
information is critical to the success of positioning and informing the Cambodian workforce for
opportunities, development, and economic changes in the region.

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Appendix to Chapter 17
SOME OBSERVATIONS ABOUT INDUSTRIAL LABOR RELATIONS
AND THE WORKING ENVIRONMENT IN CAMBODIA

This short appendix complements information presented elsewhere in the report focusing on skills, human
development impact of trade development, and trade sector competitiveness by focusing on the working
environment in Cambodia, including industrial labor relations, and its impact on productivity.

The Need for Managed and Harmonious Industrial Labor Relations


Whenever discussing industrial labor relations and actions in Cambodia, it is important to note that
Cambodia, together with the Philippines and Indonesia, are the only three countries in ASEAN that have
ratified all eight fundamental international labor conventions as shown below:
Freedom of Association Conventions
1. Freedom of Association and Protection of the Right to Organize Convention, 1948 (No. 87)
2. Right to Organize and Collective Bargaining Convention, 1949 (No. 98)
Force Labor Conventions
3. Forced Labor Convention, 1930 (No. 29)
4. Abolition of Forced Labor Convention, 1957 (No. 105)
Child Labor Conventions
5. Minimum Age Convention, 1973 (No. 138)
6. Worst Forms of Child Labor Convention, 1999 (No. 182)
Discrimination Conventions
7. Equal Remuneration Convention, 1951 (No. 100)
8. Discrimination (Employment and Occupation) Convention, 1958 (No. 111)
Myanmar has ratified C87 and C98 listed above while Malaysia and Singapore have ratified C98.
Coupled with being the first country to introduce a Better Work program, known as Better Factories
Cambodia (BFC), the country has subscribed to the highest standards in labor management and
protection. Investors from the region do stress the good protections that employees enjoy in Cambodia.
They were 2,765 unions in Cambodia as of 2012, up from 1,725 in 2010; 76 federations of trade unions,
up from 41; seven confederations; and, twelve union chambers, up from one.

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416 Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

Industrial Actions
The growing number of actions initiated by unions in the garment sector in particular are becoming a
concern. The number of strikes increased by 255 percent in 2012 from 2011 and lost work days by 289
percent.372 The vast majority of unions are active in the garment sector alone. Still, while the union
movement can be characterized as young and immature, its often disruptive and violent practices appear
to be growing. A recent, well publicized strike in 2013 shows unions requesting a garment factory to
double minimum wage as well as terminate a shareholder. Such demands which, by any international
standards, would be considered unusual show that factory managers are dealing with a complex and
challenging workforce.
A new wage committee has been established to investigate the minimum wage level in Cambodia. This
has created confusion among private sector stakeholders. Minimum wages are traditionally negotiated
through the Labor Advisory Committee (LAC) which is tripartite in nature. Concerns have been raised
by investors as to the need for a new committee, when LAC is responsible for such decisions. It is
important that the operations and legitimacy of established mechanisms that play an important role in
decision-making be not over-ruled or disregarded simply because of reacting to a strike action.
In parallel to this concern, it must also be noted that, over the years, there have been several cases of
intimidation against unions. The killing of union leader Chea Vichea remains unsolved and has led to a
challenge at international levels regarding Cambodias ability to prevent serious violations of human
rights. Continued reports of threats against unions as well as physical harm, remain pertinent challenges
in the sphere of labor relations.373
To preserve legitimacy and good governance, the authority and credibility of a given system cannot be
undermined to satisfy any one party. It is essential that there is leadership and careful management of
industrial relations in Cambodia to ensure that investors who can contribute to economic diversification
are not deterred because of industrial actions and repeatedly disrupted work schedules.
Harmonious Industrial Labor Relations
The management of industrial labor relations must be careful and proactive in its pursuit for industrial
harmony as the economy diversifies. Tri-partite constituents need also to play an active role in
communicating decisions and requests from Government. Proper enforcement of decisions and rulings
by competent authorities and proper enforcement of the law must remain a top priority of industrial labor
relations. This will play an increasingly important role as Cambodia pursues diversification and bringing
in new types of investment into the country.
In addition, there is a need to ensure that established mechanisms such as the LAC are respected or
improved upon, and not overruled so as to ensure increased confidence in the systems and mechanisms in
place, within Cambodia and abroad. If specific mechanisms are no longer relevant, they should be
removed through consensus, not replaced arbitrarily by a single party. Expanding the role and
372
373

CAMFEBA remarks at ILO Committee of Applications of Standards, June 2013.


See Phnom Penh Post, Unionists Remain in Hospital, August 30, 2013, p3

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representation of the Labor Arbitration Council can assist in managing disputes better because the
mechanism already commands respect as an independent, established, and credible organization. Overall,
there is a need to ensure that unions acts responsibly and reasonably and that employers representatives
play their part in peaceful industrial relations.
Introduction of industrial relations tools such as a collective bargaining agreement (CBA) arguably need
promotion and capacity building so that they can function and be useful in the Cambodian context. In
that regard, government leadership and vision are essential.

Working Time, Training Time, and Productivity


Average Working Time
Working time is a sensitive matter but deserves attention in the light of the need to address the skill gap in
export sectors. In the context of closing the skills gap, working time available is critical. The concept of
working time is not as simple as calculating the number of days available to work. It should consider
more broadly productivity, skill levels, wage levels, social security coverage, and other matters related to
the quality of overall employment.
Cambodias productivity is low. There are many reasons and arguments for low productivity: (1) low
wages are a disincentives towards higher productivity; (2) management/supervisions mostly by the
foreigners causes misunderstandings on the production floor and possible resentment; (3) equipment and
technology are typically old and out of date; (4) the workplace environment is poor; etc. Also, for the
most part, Cambodias industrial workforce is rural, with little education, and starting from a very low
skill base.
Cambodias social security system is very new and includes contributions to the fund by employers to
cover liability associated with work place injury. Medical contributions will be introduced in 2014 and,
later, contribution to a pension fund.
Figures 17.1 and 17.2 show work time available in Cambodia. They take into account public holidays,
annual leave allowances, and weekly day off.All ASEAN countries require a day off per week as does
Cambodia.
1. Based on a 6-day work week, average working days per month are 22.42.
2. Based on a 5.5-day work week, average working days per month are 20.25.
Typically, factories operating on a 6-day workweek organize their production schedules around 26 workdays per month; those operating on a 5.5-day work week, around 24 work-days per month. Because of
the reality of shorter worker schedules, they must use overtime to make up for the shortfall.

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A vast majority of the current industrial labor force is made up of young women. Cambodian Labor Law
states that women shall be entitled to 90 days of maternity leave plus one hour per day for breastfeeding
from the date of the child delivery.374 Generally it is difficult for a woman to take two thirty minute
breaks or a one hour break from work to breast feed, particularly if working in a factory. Hence, the one
hour break is not included in the calculation in Figures 17.3 and 17.4
1. Based on a 6-day work week, a woman that gives birth works an average of 16.54 working days
per month.
2. Based on a 5.5-day work week, average working days per month are 14.92
These average available working days raise pertinent questions for policy makers and business managers
as to how to manage training time in order to reduce the skills gap, promote the workforce, and increase
productivity. These calculations highlight the complexity of managing production in labor intensive
industries that must operates on short turn-around and go a long way in explaining why most factories use
overtime to get longer work weeks. These calculations also suggest that, while employers at present
provide on-the-job training, any additional time spent training and not working is likely not feasible or
may have a negative impact on firms performance.

374

See Article 182 and Article 184 of the Cambodian Labor Law. For one year from date of child delivery, mothers who breast
feed are entitled to one hour per day during working hours to breast feed their children. This hour may be divided into two
periods of thirty minutes each. Article 185 further states that breaks shall not be deducted from normal breaks provided in the
labour law, in internal regulations or collective agreements or local custom

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Figure17.1:
Time
Figure17.1
1: Average Available
Available Working
W
Working
Tim
me in
in Cambodia,
Cambodia, based
based on
on 6-day
6-day work
wo
ork week
36
65

0
52

32
29

0
26

29
92

0
18

DaysPeryear

25
56

21
19
18
83

365

14
46

269

11
10
7
73

Averaggeworkingtimep
per
month,22.42

3
37
0
DaysperYear

WeekkendDays

P
PublicHolidays

AnnualLeave&
SpecialLeavee

MaternityyLeave

Totaalperyear

TotalAvailableWorkingDaysperyear

MinusLeavee

Daysperyear

Averageworrkingtimepermo
onth

Figure 17.2
17.2:
Working
Time
week
2: Average Available
A
Available
W
Working
Tim
me in
in Cambodia,
Camboodia, based
based on
oon 5.5-day
5.5-day work
w
36
65

32
29

0
78

29
92

0
26

DaysPeryear

25
56

0
18

21
19
18
83

365

14
46
243

11
10
7
73

Averaggeworkingtimep
per
month,20.25

3
37
0
DaysperYear

WeekkendDays

P
PublicHolidays

AnnualLeave&
SpecialLeavee

MaternityyLeave

Totaalperyear

TotalAvailableWorkingDaysperyear

MinusLeavee

Daysperyear

Averageworrkingtimepermo
onth

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420 Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

Figure 17.3:
17.3: Work
Working
Time Available
for
Figure
king Time
A
Available
forr Woman
Woman Taking
Taaking Maternity
Materrnity Leave,
Leave,
based
d on 6-day work
w
week
365

0
52

329

0
26

292

0
18
1

Days Per year


DaysPeryear

256

70.5

219
183

365

146
110

198.5

73

Averageworkingtimeper
A
month,16..54

37
0
DayysperYear

WeekendDays

PublicHolid
days

AnnualLeaveand
SpecialLeave

MatternityLeave

Totalperyear
(22.42workdays
(
s)

TotalAvailableWorkiingDaysperyearr

MinusLeave

Dayssperyear

Averaggeworkingtimep
permonth

king Time
A
r Woman
aking Mater
rnity Leave,
Figure 17.4:
Figure
17.4: Work
Working
Time Available
Available for
for
Woman Ta
Taking
Maternity
Leave,
on 5.5-day
5.5-day work
workweek
week
based on
w
365

329

0
78

292

0
26

Days Per year


DaysPeryear

256

0
18
1

219
183

0
64

365

146
110
179

73

Averageworkingtimeper
A
month,14..92

37
0
DayysperYear

WeekendDays

PublicHolid
days

AnnualLeaveand
SpecialLeave

MatternityLeave

Totalperyear
(22.42workdays
(
s)

TotalAvailableWorkiingDaysperyearr

MinusLeave

Dayssperyear

Averaggeworkingtimep
permonth

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Holidays and Leave Days in Cambodia vs. Selected ASEAN Countries


Table 17.17 compares public holidays and annual leave days between Cambodia and selected
ASEAN countries.
Table 17.17: Comparison of Public Holidays and Annual Leave Days,
Cambodia and Selected ASEAN Countries
Country
Thailand

Public Holidays
13 15 days per year

Annual Leave Days


Not less than 6 working
days.
Progressive based on
seniority starting at 7
days per year up to 14
from 8th year of service
onwards
Progressive based on
seniority starting at 8
days per year, 12 days for
(2 to <5 years continuous
employment, and then 16
for 5 years or more
continuous services
12 days per year
No legal obligation,
general 5 days with an
incentive for working
after continuous services
10 16 if highly
hazardous work

Singapore

10 days per year

Malaysia

17 days per year

Indonesia
Philippines

13 days per year


12 - 16 days per year

Vietnam

14 days per year

Myanmar

19 - 24 per year

No data source found

Laos

13 17 days per year

15 days per year375

Cambodia

25 26 days per year


If working only a 5 day
week, public holidays on a
weekend are given an
additional day off.

18 days per year and


increase 1 day each 3
years term of service

Source: Multiple country sources available through internet

375

http://jclao.com/the-basic-rules-of-employment-in-laos/

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Total Days
19 21 days in total
17 24 days per year
if with the company
for 8 years or more.

25 33 days per year


if with a company for
5 years or more

25 days per year


17 21 days per year

24 30 days per year


depending on type of
work
At least 19 days per
year
28 32 days per year
43 days minimum per
year

The number of non-worked days in Cambodia stands out when compared to other ASEAN
members. Businesses, particularly in the garment and manufacturing sectors, note that it is
becoming increasingly difficult to manage production schedules with the exorbitant number of
holidays. To make up the time needed for production, it is necessary to work extended 2 hours
overtime per day, stretching the working hours of a worker and leaving little free time for the
employer as well as the employee, to pursue training and education.
Low averages in regular work time impact competitiveness in at least three ways. First, it raises
costs as employers must make up a significant amount of production time using over time.
Second, overtime tends to raise the level of fatigue in individual workers, hence lower their
productivity. Third, the disincentive towards using some of the limited production time for
training also hinders productivity gains.
As a footnote to this discussion, observe that Malaysia and Singapore have progressive annual
leave days that coincide with seniority in a company rather than blanket coverage. China follows
the same approach with five annual leave days granted for one to nine years seniority, ten annual
leave days for ten to 19 years seniority, 15 annual leave days for 20 years seniority and
onwards376. In South Korea, employees, except for agricultural and forestry workers, are
provided one-day-per-month of leave with pay. Maternity leave is mandated, and employees are
excused from overtime work, and, if requested, must be provided lighter workloads. Maternity
leave pay is required for up to 60 days after childbirth with a minimum of 30 days.377
In sum, the social cost of holidays in Cambodia is significant. It creates an additional, significant
challenge in closing the skills gap as time that would be needed for training conflicts head-on
with time needed by employers to ensure that they meet their production schedule.

Supporting Social Infrastructure and Urban Planning


A great deal of manufacturing activity remains centered on Phnom Penh and, to a lesser extent,
Sihanoukville. Access to decent housing, safe transportation, affordable and quality medical
care, clean food, clean water, and similar amenities is critical to ensuring the well-being of the
workforce. It is well documented that living conditions of garment workers are poor, with many
workers sharing a small room to cut costs and save money. It is also well known that when
wages rise, the cost of accommodations also rises, not necessarily with additional services and
improvements in accommodation.
Workers productivity is, in part, a function of urban planning and the supporting social
infrastructure that are critical to their well-being and safety.

376
377

http://berl.co.nz/economic-insights/global/asia-and-pacific/china-planning-to-enforce-paid-annual-leave/
http://www.ehow.com/list_6636119_south-korean-labor-laws.html

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Chapter 18
TRADE MAINSTREAMING, AID-FOR-TRADE,
AND THE ROLE OF THE PRIVATE SECTOR IN TRADE SWAp
Introduction
As shown in Chapter 1, Cambodias trade sector has developed rapidly since the validation of
Cambodia Trade Integration Strategy 2007 (DTIS 2007) five years ago and the subsequent
launch of its Trade Sector-Wide Approach (Trade SWAp) as a mechanism to enhance the role of
trade in national development policy, strengthen coordination of Aid-for-Trade, and deepen its
impact and effectiveness. Whereas credit for robust economic growth, significant trade
diversification, and sustained Aid-for-Trade flows cannot be attributed solely to the Trade SWAp,
it certainly has contributed greatly, if unevenly, to better inclusion of trade and trade-related
issues in national development policy, improved coordination between the Royal Government of
Cambodia and development partners, and to a lesser extent stronger dialogue between
Government and the private sector.
Still, and notwithstanding progress, it is useful for Cambodia to look back at what has been
achieved or where expectations have fallen short so as to draw lessons for enhanced trade
mainstreaming and implementation of Trade SWAp in the coming years. In particular, through
Trade SWAp, Government and Development Partners have sought to put in place tools and
mechanisms intended to ensure that trade development objectives and trade-related technical
assistance become key drivers of national development objectives and national capacity
development. Strengths and shortcomings of some of those tools and processes call for closer
examination and should lead to recommendations for improvements wherever necessary.
The first main section of this chapter review steps taken since 2007 to put in place the
Governance, Planning, and Implementation mechanisms of Cambodias Trade SWAp to support
deeper and more effective mainstreaming of trade. The section also review the extent to which
selected AfT support has been helpful in building the capacity of some of those mechanisms and
the limitations of the capacity built thus far.
The second main section draws from the first one to recommend areas of improvement and
possible changes to strengthen Trade SWAp mechanisms. This is done bearing in mind
decreasing Aid-for-Trade resources globally as well as changing patterns of Aid-for-Trade
disbursement channels and monitoring tools.

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Trade Mainstreaming Progress Since 2007


Trade Mainstreaming
There is no broadly-agreed definition of trade mainstreaming.378 For the purpose of this chapter,
we define it as the integration of trade in national development strategy including poverty
reduction goals and sector policies, the implementation of trade-development actions supportive
of the countrys strategic and policy objectives, enhanced dialogue with development partners
around the use of AfT, and enhanced dialogue with trade-oriented private sector and civil society
actors.
Accordingly, trade mainstreaming can be seen as happening at a minimum of four levels:

Integration of trade in national and sector policies


Institutional framework and processes intended to support trade mainstreaming in the
implementation of national and sector policy objectives
Strengthened dialogue with Private Sector stakeholders and Civil Society as key partners in
trade development
International cooperation with development partners to enhance Aid-for-Trade effectiveness

At the policy level,trade mainstreaming involves enhancing the understanding and awareness of
how trade can contribute to the broader good and ensuring that trade is taken into account in
setting national and sector priorities. Since trade is a crosscutting issue, integrating it into the
policy process requires interaction with nearly every government entity at national and subnational levelsa complex task. However, trade on its own cannot deliver development
objectives; complementary policies are required and must be properly sequenced.
At the institutional level, leadership of the main Government body responsible for trade is vital
in mainstreaming trade. Closely related to this is also the dynamic engagement of the main
stakeholders by the lead trade Ministryas required: other line ministries, pertinent Government
agencies, and local Government, private sector, civil society stakeholders such as academia, trade
unions, vulnerable groups, youth and women organizations, etc. Management and analytical
capacity is also needed in the lead trade Ministry as well as key line ministries to conduct the
necessary analyses, facilitate coordination, implementation, monitoring and review. Capacity in
the overall institutional set-up is particularly important for ensuring that the vision and priorities
defined at the policy level are effectively resourced, implemented, and monitored.
At the dialogue level with the private sector and civil society, Government needs to recognize
it is ultimately responsible to ensure good cooperation from the private sector that, ultimately,
provides much of the investment required for trade expansion and that is responsible for ensuring
that trade development is used to reach broader socio-economic development objectives.

378

See UNDP, Practical Guide to Trade Mainstreaming,Geneva and New York: UNDP, 2011 and EIF, Compendium of
EIF Documents: A Users Guide to EIF, Geneva: WTO,page 12

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At the internationalcooperation level, the development partner community has an important role
to play in mainstreaming trade. It must systematically integrate trade into its country and sector
analyses and strategies, assistance programs, and activities.
In short, trade mainstreaming involves articulating trade-related priorities to stimulate economic
development, reduce poverty, and attain the MDGs, translating policy statements into operational
objectives and action plans, linking strategies to resources and following through with
implementation, monitoring and evaluation of results.
There is no blueprint or template for successfully mainstreaming trade into national development
strategies and policies. Still, mainstreaming trade is not new to Cambodia. Cambodias decision
to go forward with accession to the World Trade Organization (completed in 2004) was also a
deliberate decision to place trade liberalization and trade development as key drivers of the
countrys economic development strategy. Throughout preparation for accession and
immediately thereafter, Cambodia received a significant amount of AfT. However, following the
2007 first update of the DTIS, the convergence of views between the RGC, the development
partners -- in particular the EU, UNDP, and the Integrated Framework -- led to the development
of a more integrated approach to trade development and trade mainstreaming, leading to the
successful launch of a Trade SWAp in 2008.
It is through the lenses of the Trade SWAp that trade mainstreaming progress, successes and
shortcomings should be viewed, as Trade SWAP constitutes the overarching umbrella and
institutional mechanism for trade sector development in Cambodia
Trade Mainstreaming and Cambodias Trade SWAp
Cambodias Trade SWAp constitutes a new, deeper dimension of trade mainstreaming. Its
formulation encompasses aspects of policy formulation, institutional arrangements, and dialogue
mechanisms more far-reaching than those which existed prior to its introduction.
Cambodias Trade SWAp is a set of mechanisms put in place by the Government under the
leadership of the Ministry of Commerce for improving the Governments capacity to formulate
and implement a vision for trade sector development, using Government and increased AfT
resources from Development Partners, and to strengthen Aid Effectiveness, in line with the
principles of the 2005 Paris Declaration of ownership, alignment, harmonization, management for
results and mutual accountability.
A SWAp is first and foremost a planning and management instrument for Government, which, in
turn, can be supported by donors. Where it is donor supported, a SWAp offers Government an
effective tool for donor coordination. Traditionally, a Sector Program is the implementation
vehicle for the Sector-Wide Approach with a minimum of three core elements:
1. The sector policy and strategy;
2. The sector budget and Medium Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF); and,
3. The sector coordination framework for implementation.
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.
Cambodia Trade Integration Strategy 2007 identifieda number of priority areas for reform and
development that became the basis for the three Pillars of the Trade SWAP. The Pillars
replaces the traditional action matrix typical of a DTIS by making it a planning tools rather than
a list of desirable projects to be funded by development partners. The Pillars, therefore, constitute
the basis for the implementation of DTIS recommendations through the mechanisms of Trade
SWAp.379
Pillar 1focuses on Cross Cutting Legal and Institutional Reforms for Trade Development, with
priority areas including, among others, (1) completion of the legal reforms and commitments
associated with WTO accession, (2) lowering of the costs of trade facilitation, (3) improvements
in the investment environment, (4) enhanced use of intellectual property protections, (5)
development of the legal and institutional environments for SPS and technical standards;
Pillar 2 focuses on Developing a Competitive Export Supply with an emphasis on diversifying
Cambodias export basket through new products and services and new markets, with priority
areas including (1) development of information on export value chains and trade opportunities,
(2) strengthening of trade support institutions at the product association level and in the
provinces, and (3) strengthening of export supply capacity in the 19 priority potential sectors
identified in CTIS 2007;
Pillar 3 focuses on Building RGCs Capacity to Lead Trade Sector Development and Manage
Aid for Trade including, among others, (1) capacity building in a newly created MoC
Department of International Cooperation to serve as the Secretariat for the Trade SWAp, the
TDSP, and the EIF Tier 1 and tasked to lead the day-to-day coordination of AfT programs, (2)
capacity building in line Ministries engaged in the implementingTrade SWAp actions, (3)
development of trade policy research capacity; (4) strengthening of trade negotiation capacity.
The priority objectives, benchmarks, and targets of the three pillars were subsequently
consolidated in three roadmaps that are providing guidance to the Trade SWAp
stakeholders,including the donors supporting the SWAp -- the Multi-Donor Trust Funds Trade
Development Support Program (TDSP), the EIF Tier 1, EIF Tier 2 CEDEP I and II and other
ongoing AfT programsfunded by multilateral or bilateral development partners such as ADB,
IFC, AusAid, USAID, AFD, JICA, and others. In EIF parlance, the Trade SWAp Pillar
Roadmaps serve as basis for Cambodias Medium Term Program and AfT Medium-Term Plan.
The Pillar structure was adopted in 2007 as the main vehicle for Trade SWAp implementation,
with the creation of individual task teams for each focus areas, includingGovernment officials and
Development Partners interested in the area. A Prakas (Ministerial Circular) was signed,
assigning specific objectives to each Pillar and appointing officials across Ministries and
Agencies to contribute to individual pillars. To kick-start the proposal formulation process under
379

For more information, see Ministry of Commerce, Trade Sector Development & Aid for Trade in Cambodia,
Phnom Penh:MoC, 2011

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each pillar, three development partners were appointed to act as Pillar Shepherds until the
government had acquired the capacities to lead the pillar works.
The main sub-sections that follow analyze in details where trade mainstreaming has progressed
over the years, where Trade SWAp may have helped in deepening trade mainstreaming, and
where limitations remain.
Box 18-1: Trade SWAP Independent Review, 2013
Cambodia Trade SWAp has been through a long learning curve and struggle for
acceptance. But it has emerged intact and strong in concept. It needs greater linkage with
upstream national policy and sector policies and strategies and requires a stronger
analytical capacity to articulate the linkages between trade and poverty as well as sector
links. The concept of mainstreaming is well understood and accepted by Government
agencies but the private sector and CSOs have limited understanding or appreciation of
benefits for them. Stronger linkages between a policy and performance indicators and
monitoring for the SWAp are needed and linked to clear implementation plans and
responsibilities. Donors and stakeholders need to be more inclusive and awareness and
visibility improvements are required.
Source: Ministry of Commerce,An Independent Review of the Trade SWAp, Phnom Penh:
MoC, 2012
Trade Mainstreaming at Policy Level: NSDP, Rectangular Strategies, and Sector Policies
At the policy level, the National Strategic Development Plan (NSDP) provides the countrys
essential policy context for mainstreaming trade. NSDP-IV (2014-2018) under preparation will
be no exception. The four main components of the current NSDP-III were configured around
Cambodias Rectangular Strategy Framework-Phase II, which served as the Government
strategy until the July 2013 elections. Main focus included (i) enhancement of the agriculture
sector, (ii) rehabilitation and construction of physical infrastructure, (ii) private sector
development and employment, and (iv) capacity building and human resource development.
The responsibility for formulating, updating and evaluating progress of the five-year NSDP falls
with the General Directorate of Planning of the Ministry of Planning, while formulation of the
Government platform or Rectangular Strategy is under the responsibility of the Supreme
National Economic Council (SNEC) a government think-tank that reports to the Ministry of
Economy and Finance.
The NSDP formulation is based on contributions from individual ministries, including the
ministry of commerce. The contributions are usually in the forms of indicators tracking the level
of implementation of specific targets mentioned in previous NSDP or mid-term reviews as well as
the provision of new indicators for the next five years.
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Individual ministries generally use their own five-year strategic plan or master plan as a basis for
their inputs to NSDP. Several meetings and checkpoints between MoP and individual ministries
take place until a draft NSDP is prepared and circulated to the Council of Ministers for
endorsement.
NSDP-I (2001-2005) held just a few references to trade, namely in the chapters dedicated to the
Integration of Cambodia into the region and the world. Trade was expected to play a role in
overall economic growth as well as transportation and infrastructure development. NSDP-II
(2006-2009) followed the same approach by integrating trade related issues in the broader
narrative, against the background of the Rectangular Strategy Framework.
NSDP-III (2009-13) went further. Three out of the five priorities are directly linked to trade,
while the remaining two are indirectly linked, showing more explicit recognition of the role of
trade as a key driver of development. The section on Integration of Cambodia into the Region
and the World provides for cooperation with neighboring countries, regional entities and the
WTO. Integration within ASEAN and formulation of WTO-compliant legislation were
highlighted as focus areas. Ministry of Commerce (MoC) is featured in its role in strengthening
the private sector and attracting investment, complete with indicators and a corresponding set of
actions. Indicators include export volumes, improvements in market access, and other tradespecific performance measures. This said, NSDP III highlights the role of private sector
development to support growth, rather than trade specifically, and focuses on attracting
investments, SME promotion, employment creation, and social welfare of workers.
Despite the countrys robust GDP growth, strong export increases, and good poverty reduction
records as indicated by its remarkable progress in attaining MDGs, trade contribution is not yet
accurately reflected in national development plans,in strategy documents, and through the
budgeting process.
The trade priority formulation efforts led by the Ministry of Commerce in order to prepare for the
NSPD and RS updates show that critical issues need to be addressed including relying on
accurate, timely and easily accessible data, increasing the participation of private sector in the
formulation on sector objective and policies, increasing the contribution of the private sector to
the design of corresponding projects, and linking trade development to objectives of poverty
reduction.
Trade not being reflected accuratelyin national development strategies may lead to underinvestment by Government and development partners in areas of needs including infrastructures
and productive capacities. In addition, itmay mean missing out on the leverage trade can provide
to increase employment, improve revenue generation, empower disadvantaged groups including
women, youths and others, and,in-fine, reduce poverty.
This is compounded further by a current structural weakness in the public sector budgeting
process. Cambodias trade sectorand Trade SWAp prioritiesarepoorly integrated within a medium
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term expenditure framework (MTEF) that matches expected Government and donor resources to
expenditure plans like is the case for other sectors. This is due, in part, to the cross-cutting nature
of trade. Thelack of a system to integrate fully trade sector priorities into the overall RGC
budgetary cycle limitsthe sectors access to public funding. This is the case especially to the
extent thatindividual Ministries may have in place their own frameworks, themselves integrated
in the MTEF, but often under-estimating the importance of trade development. Furthermore,
absence of closer integration gives the impression that trade sector development and Trade SWAp
should be entirely donor funded and, consequently, donor-driven. Instead,Governments
contribution to the SWAp, besides MoCs support as a Secretariat, should be viewed as important
and increasing.
Another risk is that expenditures will be expanded with development partner support at a level
that is not sustainable in the medium to longer term when that development partner support is
phased out and must be replaced by Government support.
The RGC budget process should include direct contributions to Trade SWAp. The current
process lacks sufficient consultation between the donor community and Government to
reviewGovernment spending plans and indicate Government requirements for future donor
commitments.
The Trade SWAp programplanning and review process can add value to the overall government
budget planning process. Sector policies and priorities only become meaningful when they are
linked to some forecast of the level of resources available to fund them.
New elements have been introduced in the NSDP-IVformulation process to address some of those
limitations. Chief among those has been the request for individual ministries to share their inputs
to NSDP with the relevant Donor-Government Technical Working Group for comments. The
rationale behind this is to improve the alignment of future donor support with the Government
strategy, in a partnership mode, therefore avoiding that donors be consulted only once the policies
have been drafted and approved. It is expected that this new approach will increase the quality of
policy making and resource mobilization through a stronger dialogue with development partners
on Government needs.
Looking back at the NSPD-III and the ongoing NSDP-IV formulation processes, several lessons
can be drawn as to why trade, so far and in spite of its driver role in the economy, has not
featuredas prominently as it ought to in the NSDP:
1. Lack of sound and reliable data and research capacity: Despite recent improvements in
data gathering through ASYCUDA (GDCE) and Certificates of Origins (MoC) among others,
very little reliable and accurate statistics are produced by MoC, MEF or other line Ministries
to inform policy making. Whatever data is available is often not comparable from one source
to the next. Estimates of informal trade, which plays an important role in some sectors, are
very difficult to develop and not highly reliable. The Ministry of Commerce and other key
line ministries are seldom cooperating with academic or research institutions that might have
better technical capacity to address the gap in trade data and information. The lack of strong
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data and research capacity renders the process of identifying key policy priorities more
difficult.
2. The cross-cutting nature of trade: The responsibility for trade development cuts across
multiple Government bodies. Information on its contribution and impact on growth and
development is scattered across various ministries that do not cooperate easily making the
process of formulating policy priorities more complex. They include the Ministry of
Economy and Finance (MEF), the Ministry of Industry and Handicrafts (MIH), the Ministry
of Agriculture, Forestry and Fishery (MAFF), the Council for the Development of Cambodia
(CDC), the National Bank of Cambodia (NBC), the Ministry of Planning (MoP), among
others

MEF is responsible for macroeconomic policies as well as integration within regional


(including ASEAN) and global markets. It administratively oversees revenue
collection, including customs (GDCE.)

MIH coordinates and manages Government interventions in industrial and


technological development, development of natural resources, and the production and
supply of electricity and water. The Institute of Standards is also hosted by MIH.

MAFF plays a key role in promoting the development of agricultural commodities


and outputs that are becoming large sources of exports.

NBC is responsible for monetary and exchange-rate policies. It licenses, regulates,


and supervises banks and financial institutions.

CDC deals with donor coordination and serves as Secretariat of the GovernmentDonor Coordination Committee (GDCC). DCC also plays a key role in promoting
and licensing private investment projects, including foreign investment.

MoP undertakes two main functions. The first one is national socio-economic
planning, including overseeing the implementation of the NSDP as well as
preparation of tri-annual public investment programs. The Ministry also oversees the
National Institute of Statistics.

3. Limited consultation with the private sector: The fragmented nature of Cambodia private
sector, the limited understanding by private sector representatives of the benefits of
participating in policy formulation, the absence of a clear timetable with milestones that often
accompanies the preparation of NSDP add up to the fact that, all too often, the trade inputs
provided by the Ministry of Commerce to NSDP lack private sector buy-in. When it
happens, the dialogue is limited to a few issues of interest to particular economic groups that
do not always represent the main business actors.
4. Division of labor among Ministries and Government agencies on policy formulation, policy
updates and policy review: There is no clear-cut, step-by-step methodology and template for
NSDP formulation (with timetable, deadline, responsible bodies), making the process unclear
even at Ministry level. Many Ministries lacking research and analytical capacities for policymaking relies heavily on donor support to support individual sector analysis. As a
consequence, the production of robust analysis to inform policy making is left to the
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432 Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

availability of experts. There is also a lack of continuity between the formulation,


implementation, and review process, making NSDP formulation a one-time rather than a
continuous exercise.
5. Limited role for SWAp committees to provide inputs for key policy formulation. Key sector
policies, such as the rice policy, are formulated by SNEC on behalf of the Council of
Ministers and the Ministry of Economy and Finance with limited inputs from line ministries.
Line ministries become involved at the implementation rather than the formulation stage.
This limits possibilities the Sub-Steering Committee and the Pillar Working Groups to
provide direct inputs to policy formulation.
6. Lack of trade-related indicators in most sector policies: Line ministries often do not always
see trade as a key dimension of their own development strategy, even though a few sector
strategies are beginning to include trade-related indicators (e.g. Fisheries Master Plan, Rice
Policy). In addition, no tools are provided to line ministries to enable them to mainstream
trade in their own strategies.
7. Timing and modus operandi of DTIS update: The DTIS is the main strategic document
available for trade policy formulation. Traditionally, the DTIS is prepared under the
leadership of the Ministry of Commerce but with inputs from line Ministries and includes a
set of targets, indicators, and corresponding activities that can feed into the national
development plans and strategies. However, the timing of the DTIS updates has yet to be
better aligned with that of the NSDP so it can better feed into it. In addition, much more
must be done to develop domestic know-how and national capacity to participate in the
updating process order to reduce dependency on international experts who may not always
have a deep knowledge of Cambodias particulars.
8. Need for a stronger budgeting approach to Trade Mainstreaming and Trade SWAp: As
mentioned earlier, there needs to improvement in the mechanisms through which trade
mainstreaming priorities are financed through the Government budget so that it is not totally
dependent on donor support.
Mainstreaming of Trade at the Institutional Level: Trade SWAps Mechanisms
As mentioned earlier, following the 2007 DTIS update, the RGC, with support from Development
Partners put in place a SWAp to strengthen implementation of the Governments vision for trade
through enhanced coordination and effectiveness of technical assistance in the sector.
Institutional mechanisms are now in place in line with the core principles of the Paris Declaration
on aid effectiveness.
The governance, design and monitoring, and technical (implementation) arrangements for
Cambodias Trade SWAp framework is shown in Figure 18.1 within the broader context of
Government-Development Partners consultation and dialogue mechanisms. They include:

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Governance Level:

Sub-Steering Committee on Trade Development and Trade-Related Investment (100


Members)
The Private Sector Development Technical Working Group (Donor-Government)
The EIF Focal Point (Secretary of State, MoC)
The Donor Facilitator (ADB since 2012)

Supervision and Coordination Level:

The SWAp Implementation Committee (20 members from line Ministries participating in
SWAp, chaired by an MoC Secretary of State)
The SWAP Pillar Working Groups (120 members, from line Ministries and public
institutions, appointed through Prakas)
The Tier 1 and Tier 2 Appraisal Committees TAC 1 and TAC 2: TAC1 and TAC2
include the EIF Focal Point, the EIF Donor Facilitator, and representatives of the S-SC
TD&TRI and key line Ministries (upon invitation by the EIF Focal Point).

Technical Level:

The Trade SWAp Secretariat (DICO), a department in MoC staffed with 20 government
officials and supported by national and international consultants.380 Secretariat for Trade
SWAp, TDSP, and EIF
The TDSP implementing agencies (IA) (line Ministries implementing project funded by the
MDTF)

While the PSD-TWG and the S-SCTD&TRI were created before the Trade SWAp was launched,
their mandate has evolved since 2008 to take into consideration the SWAp mechanisms.
The EIF Focal Point and EIF Donor Facilitator are key elements of the National Implementation
Arrangementsfor the EIF program. UNDP was the EIF donor facilitator until October 2012 when
it was replaced by the ADB.

380

The Department of International Cooperation of the Ministry of Commerce was created as a result of MoCs
thorough internal reforms in 2007-2008. While its role was primarily to focus on international relations, its selection as
the Trade SWAp Secretariat profoundly changed its mandate.

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434 Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

381
Figure
Map381
Figure 18.1:
18.1: Institutional
Institutional Map

PublicFinancial
Management

Educa on

PSDSC

PrivateSector
Development

SSCPPI
Planningand
Poverty
Reduc on

Partnershipand
Harmonisa on

SCC.TDTRI

Na onalImplementa onUnit
(NIU)

Legal&
Judicial
Reform

Forestry

Agriculture&
Water

Health
Land

Infrastructure
andRegional
Integra on

HIV/AIDS

Law,TaxandGovernance
ExportProcessingandTradeFacilita on

FoodSecurity
andNutri on

ImplementingAgencies(IA)

SSCSME

TradeSectorWideApproach(TradeSWAp)
PILLAR1PILLAR2PILLAR3

Mine
Ac on

Fisheries

TradeSWAp

ee(IC)
Implementa onCommi

Decentraliza on&
Deconcentra on

Public
Administra on
Reform

Gender

PrivateSector
WorkingGroups/
GPSFSecretariat

BankingandFinancialServices
Tourism
ManufacturingandSMEs

AgricultureandAgroIndustry

Energy,TransportandInfastructure
IndustrialRela ons

MilledRice

TradeSwapInstitutionalArrangements
GovernmentDonorJointTechnicalWorkingGroups
381

Adapted from UNDP, National Trade Mainstreaming Agenda for Cambodia, Geneva: UNDP, 2012

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Table 18.1: Review of Trade SWAps Institutional Performance


Governance Level
Committee/
Position/Institution
S-SC TD&TRI

PSD TWG

EIF Focal Point

EIF Donor
Facilitator

Role in Trade SWAp

Performance 2008-2013

1. Overall guidance for Trade SWAp


implementation and AfT strategy,
including review of progress and
impact on trade sector development
2. Highest level decision making body
on new projects under EIF and TDSP
3. Consultative body with
participation of all stakeholders

1. Chair by the Minister of Commerce has


given weight and credibility to the S-SC
2. Effective in providing guidance to MoC
and Implementing Agencies on EIF and
TDSP projects
3. Weak private sector participation limits
dialogue
4. Thus far, too much focus on project level
(operation, finance) and too little on M&E,
outcomes and impact at program level,
compounded by the lack of capacity of
Technical Level to monitor Trade SWAp as
a program.
1. Weak Government participation has
limited quality and quantity of dialogue
2. Trade tends to be diluted in wider PSD
agenda
3. Limited bridging between G-PSF and
Trade SWAp, compounded by a recent
weakening of the G-PSF process
1. Stability over the years has provided
visibility to the position
2. Effective in bridging the gaps between the
global EIF program and its implementation
in Cambodia
3. On occasions, the EIF FP had to deal with
operational issues rather than strategic ones,
highlighting the need for effective
delegation of power within MoC on AFT
management issues
1. Effective promoter of Trade SWAp and
EIF-related activities
2. Moderate success in increasing other DPs
interest in coordinating their support
(especially bilateral) through Trade SWAp,
compounded by a lack of clear mechanism
to allow some degree of overall monitoring
of assistances other than TDSP and EIF
through Trade SWAp.

1. Forum to organize Development


Partners support to PSD
2. Forum for Government and DPs to
review policy issues and Technical
Assistance needs on PSD
3. Bridge between G-PSF and Trade
SWAp
1. Political level representation of EIF
programme in Cambodia
2. Final decision-maker on technical
and strategic issues for EIF Tier 1 and
Tier 2 projects
3. Leads TAC1, TAC2, Trade
Development Update meeting, and
Cambodian delegation on AfT issues

1. Leads donor discussion on trade


issues
2. Supports EIF program
implementation in Cambodia
3. Promotes participation of donors
and stakeholders in trade SWAp

Coordination and Supervision Level


Trade SWAp IC

1. Provides operational guidance to


Trade SWAp stakeholders and MoC
on design, monitoring, and
implementation of trade development
Technical Assistance
2. Ensures that projects proposed by
EIF and TDSP are supportive of
Government policies and objectives

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436 Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

1. Effective in ensuring regular inputs of line


Ministries in trade-related matters
2. Ensures increased participation of line
ministries in Trade SWAp through project
formulation and implementation financed
under TDSP and EIF
3. Lacks a mechanism to ensure greater
coordination between TDSP or EIF funded

as well as line Ministries strategies


3. Ensures that duplication and
overlap among AfT projects are
avoided or minimized
4. Endorses projects considered under
TDSP funding for S-SC TD&TRI
final approval
SWAp Pillar
Working Groups

1. Propose, formulate, and evaluate


projects submitted by Implementing
Agencies
2. Ensure that project proposals
contribute to Pillar Roadmap
3. Support the formulation, review,
and update of Pillar Roadmaps
4. Make recommendations to SWAp
IC and S-SC TD&TRI on possible
project proposals

TAC 1 and 2

1. Appraises project proposals and


project extension requests submitted
to EIF Tier 1 and Tier 2

projects and Technical Assistance funded


outside TDSP and EIF (mainly bilateral
basis) through MoC or other line Ministries
4. Focus of project review is at disbursement
and activities level. Lack of resultmonitoring information on impact of projects
limits the usefulness of participating in IC
meetings
1. The participation into Pillar work has
differed among Pillar (high in P1, low in P2,
and moderate in P3)
2. Most active pillar WG are those where
funds are accessible for projects
3. No or minimum DP participation in
meetings of Pillar WG, limiting
opportunities for coordination among project
ideas submitted to Pillar WG, projects
formulated by Implementing Agencies for
submission to TDSP, and projects
formulated directly by DPs with line
Ministries
4. The slow process of formulating Pillar
Roadmaps has limited the capacity of Pillar
WG to M&E project implementation and
contribution to roadmaps.
1. Effective and transparent mechanisms to
appraise locally developed project proposals,
including ensuring strong coordination with
other donor-funded projects to avoid
duplication and ensure synergies
2. Effective leadership by EIF FP and EIF
DF has increased visibility of the TAC
works

Technical Level
DICO

1. Serves as Trade SWAp Secretariat,


EIF National Implementation Unit,
and TDSP Executing Agency
2. Procures goods and services for
TDSP and EIF-Tier 1 projects
3. Monitors and evaluate projects
under TDSP and EIF
4. Provides outreach and
communication services for SWAp

1. Staffing of Trade SWAP Secretariat, EIF


NIU and TDSP Executing responsibilities
through DICO has increased ownership of
Trade SWAp implementation
2. Limited capacity development efforts by
DPs and MoC has restricted absorption
capacity
3. Absenteeism has increased following
termination of salary supplement scheme
4. Lacking capacity, DICOs M&E has
focused on project level disbursement and
implementation of activities rather than on
project results and impact, let alone on
Trade SWAp results and impact as a
program
5. The absence of M&E capacity in DICO
has limited its capacity to provide
information that the S-SC TD&TRI would
need to carry out its overall Monitoring and
Governance of the Trade SWAp and trade
sector development

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Implementing
Agencies (IA)

1. Formulates and implement project


funded under TDSP and EIF
2. Collaborate with Development
Partners to formulate and implement
trade development projects outside
TDSP and EIF

1. Though limited capacity delayed smooth


implementation of the TDSP, there has been
a significant increase in the capacity of
Implementing Agencies to formulate and
manage projects as a result of their
involvement in TDSP and EIF.
2. Within line Ministries, there is a lack of
communication between IA departments, IA
project teams and their representatives on
the IC limiting the capacity of the latter to
speak for the needs of their Ministries

A number of lessons can be drawn from the experience with implementing the Trade SWAp mechanism
since 2008:
1. Government buy-in: Notwithstanding the current limitations of the Trade SWAp mechanisms, they
have resulted in clear and resounding support for the Trade SWAp and its continuation. In particular,
opportunities for consultation and dialogue among line Ministries through several of the Trade SWAp
Governance or Monitoring mechanisms including the S-SC TD&TRI and the Implementation
Committee as well as opportunities opened up by TDSP and EIF for funding individual projects
proposed by various line Ministries and agencies have helped strengthen the notion of a shared vision
for trade sector development among line Ministries.
Despite the success of Trade SWAp in bringing about a sense of shared vision within Government,
Trade SWAp could have benefit from high profile visibility, outreach, and communication including
as a means to more fully bring other Cambodian actors including the private sector and civil society
as stakeholders in the results and success of the trade development strategy.
2. Sequencing of technical assistance and capacity of Implementing Agencies: In a perfect world
DTIS 2007 should have led to the Trade SWAp strategy and Pillar Roadmap first; then, projects
should have evolved from this process. However both the TDSP and the EIF programs were
supporting the establishment of the Trade SWAp, which, in turn was supposed to be coordinating
with the help of the programs. Hence a particularly complicated order of priorities surfaced.
In hindsight, a tiered-staged approach might have been developed focusing initially on assessing the
management and related capacity needs and gaps of IAs and DICO according to the DTIS and action
matrix, then identifying the resources to strengthen the weaker IAs, and then developing projects
based on the implementing strengths of individual IAs. Most IAs still find the process of developing
a basic project document demanding, somewhat alien to the process which they were used to in the
past when development partners carried most of the work of project preparation. In addition, at this
stage, many IAs are yet lacking sufficient project implementation capacity to meet the requirements
requested from DICO for procurement requests, reporting, etc.
A positive feature of the Trade SWAp is that it has abandoned the model of using (a) Project
Management Unit(s) (PMU) outside the main government structure in favor of building capacity in
core project management functions through a single National Implementation Unit in this case
DICO which is itself a government department.
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438 Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

3. Sequencing of technical assistance and alignment with the Roadmaps: Some of the Projects and
interventions that were developed out of TDSP before the Trade SWAp Roadmaps were finalized are
not always fully aligned with the Pillars objectives and building blocks.
4. Monitoring results and impacts: Trade SWAp, thus far, has been weak in the critical area of M&E.
Many of the initial project proposals under TDSP did not include a monitoring framework or
indicators of success. Much of the monitoring carried out by DICO remains at the level of tracking
disbursements and implementation of activities.
But even more importantly, the original Trade SWAp mechanism has lacked a clear set of tools and
processes focusing on measurement and monitoring of results of trade-related technical assistance
not only focusing on technical assistance disbursed through TDSP or EIF, but through other
multilateral or bilateral funding mechanisms. The absence of such clear mechanisms and tools,
compounded by the lack of M&E capacity within DICO which should be tracking and preparing such
information (as Trade SWAp Secretariat), have limited the ability of the S-SC TD&TRI to fulfill its
mandate as true overseer of the progress made against the Governments trade development strategy.
The absence of such mechanisms and tools have also made it difficult for technical assistance
provided outside the framework of the TDSP and EIF to fit in and/or convenient to remain somewhat
outside the purview of the S-SC TD&TRI as a Governor and Owner of Cambodias trade
development strategy.
The Pillars were initially expected to provide a place for dialogue among IAs, private sector and
development partners, including generating project ideas that could be financed either through TDSP
or EIF or through other donor funding as well as ensuring synergies and elimination of possible
overlaps among projects. To a certain extent, the Pillars have failed to provide such a forum and
mechanism. Absent a working process at the Pillars level, EIF TAC-1 and TAC-2 have probably
provided some of the strongest forum for exchange and coordination among IAs and development
partners. In the end, what the current mechanisms have failed to do is to provide clear processes
through which development partners can link more strongly their other trade-related assistance
programs to the Trade SWAp, including ensuring the objectives of those other assistance are
consistent with the priorities identified by the Government.
Overall, this key weakness in the original Trade SWAp mechanisms has led to a nearly exclusive focus on
monitoring the implementation of individual projects at all levels of the Trade SWAp structure at the
expense of monitoring the progress of an overall strategy and asking questions about technical assistance
needs in light of gaps identified through overall monitoring. This is a key limitation that needs to be
addressed in the coming years. Possible ways to remedy this weakness are suggested in the next major
section of the chapter.
The Participation of the Private Sector in Cambodias Trade Development Vision
The Government's Rectangular Strategy and NSDP are based on a vision of private-sector-led growth.
The reform agenda is led by a steering committee, chaired the MEF with other relevant Ministries and
agencies participating.

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Robust mechanisms have been put in place in the past ten years to ensure that private sector does
contribute to the implementation of the countrys development vision, at different levels, as described
below:
1. Strengthening G-PSF: Firstly, a Government Private Sector Forum (G-PSF) was put in place as a
public-private sector consultation mechanism. G-PSF is chaired by the Prime Minister. It provides a
framework for private sector advocacy and inputs on business and trade-related policies and measures
through business associations such as the Cambodia Federation of Employers and Business
Associations (CAMFEBA), the Garment Manufacturers Association in Cambodia (GMAC), the
Cambodia Hotel Association (CHA), and the Freight Forwarders Association (CAMFFA). With
support from IFC and under the auspices of the Cambodian Chamber of Commerce, eight thematic
working groups were established to facilitate engagement with policy issues. The groups were
instrumental in enabling the private sector consultation in the 2000s but weak capacity in many
business associations has constrained involvement in substantive policy discussions since the
responsibility for managing the G-PSF was transferred from IFC to the private sector in 2010.
2. More effective TWGs: Second, 19 Government-Development Partner Joint Technical Working
Groups (TWGs) operate under the CDC to provide a means for government-donor coordination on a
sectoral basis (e.g. Technical Working Group on Forestry and Environment). Although there is no
dedicated trade TWG, trade- related matters often come up in the sector TWGs and in the Private
Sector Development (PSD) Group. The Secretary General of CDC is Secretary General of the PSD
Committee, which is co-chaired by the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank. Discussions in
the PSD TWG may, at times, include review of issues raised in individual G-PSF working groups.
3. Other ad-hoc committees: Finally, a number of Government-led steering committees work with the
G-PSF and TWGs in an effort to strengthen coordination within government. This includes
committees on WTO and ASEAN, on Intellectual Property, or on Standards that benefit from private
sector inputs on a need basis.
In spite of these mechanisms, the capacity of the private sector to engage fully in the policymaking
process and participate in Aid for Trade project design, implementation, or monitoring has remained
weak. Participation of private sector representatives in Trade SWAp committee meetings has been erratic,
limited to a few BMOs, and seldom includes participation from foreign Chambers of Commerce or
provincial chambers of commerce.
In addition, there appears to be a continued disconnect between the three dialogue forums namely the
G-PSF, the PSD TWG, and the Trade SWAp. Opportunities for joint funding or joint project formulation
are either not known or ignored by the private sector. Information on Trade SWAp progress, in particular
when it comes to cross-cutting issues (e.g. Intellectual Property, Investment Environment, Trade
Facilitation) is not readily available and often insufficiently advertised. Several attempts have been made
to bridge the gap and establish more formal relationship between the Ministry of Commerce and private
sector representatives through meetings or joint workshops, but with little impact on the depth and quality
of the public-private dialogue when it comes to trade issues. In the end, private sector representatives are

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440 Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

reluctant to comment or provide feedback to draft policies and strategies as they reckon that their views
were not sought earlier and therefore do not expect much from dialogue.
Mainstreaming at International Cooperation Level
Cambodia has benefited from substantial inflows of Official Development assistance (ODA) over the past
two decades. Yet, despite the very broad and comprehensive set of recommendations emerging from the
first DTIS, the focus of technical assistance during the first half of the 2000s remained limited reflecting
partly priorities of the Government, absorption capacity of Cambodian institutions, and somewhat unclear
commitment of traditional development partners towards trade sector development.
Much of the focus of ODA in the area of trade during those years was on WTO Accession and related
legal reform and on strengthening the dialogue between Government and the Private Sector. The launch
of the Aid for Trade initiative in 2005, the momentum created by the 2005 Paris Declaration on Aid
Effectiveness, the launch of the Enhanced Integrated Framework (EIF) in 2007, as well as renewed
interest of development partners for trade development helped provide new opportunities for Cambodia to
mobilize AfT for trade mainstreaming.
Learning from previous shortcomings, theDTIS 2007 moved away from the typical DTIS action matrix to
develop the basis for a Trade SWAp. The Trade SWAp was launched in early 2008 by the RGC in
consultation with development partners to implement the objectives of DTIS 2007 and help strengthen
RGCs ownership and management of AfT.
The launch of the TDSP under a Multi Donor Trust Fundsupported by the EU, DANIDA, and UNIDO
and administered by the World Bank was organized to provide Government with resources to support the
Trade SWAp. Other donor-funded programs e.g. UNDP TRADE, ADB, IFC, EIF Tier 1, USAID,
others were largely or partly aligned with the Trade SWAp to ensure they would support the shared
objectives.

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41.39

0.02

4.81
0.73
17.02
9.80
0.11
1.77
0.15
0.05
6.90

2002

0.31
16.53
182.52

71.18
1.42
41.37
7.69
1.02
24.51
1.18
11.87
5.39

2003

2.22
0.05
182.37

43.93
1.68
55.35
1.185
6.02
63.88
1.58
0.55
5.88

2004

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30.53
28.87
62.05
7.72
2.99
87.36
1.71
1.37
2.24

2005

10.31
0.02
235.19

Source:OECD/DAC, CSR Database, 2011 (http://www.oecd.org/dac/aft)

Total

III.3.b. Tourism

III.3.a. Trade Policies & Regulations

III.2.b. Mineral Resources & Mining

III.2.a. Industry

III.1.c. Fishing

III.1.b. Forestry

III.1.a. Agriculture

II.5. Business & Other Services

II.4. Banking & Financial Services

II.3. Energy

II.2. Communications

II.1. Transport & Storage

Sector(s)
83.26
3.21
33.03
3.12
0.21
35.27
1.37
1.53
16.60
0.01
9.90
0.55
188.11

2006
51.42
1.92
51.82
5.34
5.05
25.23
1.61
1.98
6.71
0.02
5.23
0.65
157.03

2007
94.72
2.14
19.46
63.09
7.32
20.27
1.78
2.23
42.85
1.69
8.86
1.01
265.45

2008

Table 18.2: Aid for Trade Disbursements to Cambodia, $ millions, 2002 2011

156.69
1.70
4.60
9.81
4.43
41.18
1.41
12.06
7.12
1.81
1.94
1.01
243.81

2009
310.92
3.41
16.90
45.57
4.11
54.54
1.182
1.26
12.15
1.96
8.10
1.17
461.32

2010

77.41
1.83
1.68
38.20
1.83
123.79
2.78
2.04
2.54
1.416
1.21
1.66
256.46

2011

While the bulk of AfT as defined by OECD/WTO is recorded outside the Trade SWAp, withannual
commitments around $250 million since 2008 (exceptionally, $461 million in 2010) according to
OECD/DAC data (table 18.2), the role of CambodiasTrade SWAp in coordinating aid delivery focusing
on needed trade reforms and institutional strengthening should be noted, as it has helpedprovide better
alignment of donor assistance to national priorities.382
The distributionof AfTdisbursement by sector has remained relatively stable since 2002 as shown in table
18.3 above, with agriculture and transport towering over other AfT categories. In addition, asignificant
amount ofAfT has been allocated recently to the banking and financial sector.
The top four AfT donors operating under the OECD/DAC systemin 2011, in terms of commitments,were
Japan, the Asian Development Bank, South Korea, and the World Bank. Together they made up 74
percent of Cambodias total AfT.
In terms of resources more directly supporting areas of focus under Trade SWAp (primarily Item #III.3.a,
Trade Policy and Regulations, in table 18.2 and some, but more limited contributions under other Items
III as well as II.1) severaltechnical assistancemechanisms have contributed the bulk of resources:

The Multi-Donor Trust Fund (the umbrella program for the TDSP) has provided $16 million between
2009 and 2013 financed by EU, DANIDA and UNIDO, with an extra $5.8 million from EU
earmarked for 2013-2015. The MDTF is divided in two different segments, the TDSP or RecipientExecuted Trust Fund ($12.35 Millions) administered by the World Bank and executed by MoC/DICO
and the Bank-Executed Trust Fund ($3.65 Millions) solely executed by the World Bank. The TDSP
is used to support project formulated by Implementing Agencies in support of the Pillar Roadmaps
and or the Program Development Objectives, with a principal focus on Pillar 1 and Pillar 3 projects.

The Enhanced Integrated Framework Trust Fund provides funding through two windows: The EIF
Tier 1 (2010-2015) provides assistance up to $1.5 million for building capacity in DICO and
strengthening the SWAp institutional framework. This includes financial support for the current
DTIS update. Current Cambodian projects under the Tier 2 category focus on Pillar 2 and promotes
export diversification and expansion in five key sectors, for an approximate total of $6 Million over
the period 2013-2016. The sectors selected are in line with those targeted for export diversification
by the Government of Cambodia.

The UNDP TRADE Project, which was completed in 2010, provided approximately $5 million worth
of assistance to build the foundations of the SWAp. Funding came primarily from UNDP core
funding, complemented by Window 2 funding from the Integrated Framework, the 1997-2005
precursor to the EIF.

Various assistance from bilateral and other multilateral donors including support for building export
supply capacity (AFD, USAID, AUSAID, ADB, JICA, GIZ, NZAID, EU, DANIDA, IFC), for legal
reform (USAID, ADB, UNCTAD), for trade facilitation (WB, JICA, AUSAID, EU, IMF, WICO), for
Intellectual Property Rights (WIPO, EU, AFD), for SPS (ADB, NORAD) and others.

Issues affecting the mobilization and coordination of AfT resources around Trade SWAp include:

382

See http://www.oecd.org/dac/aidofrtrade/aid-for-tradestatisticalqueries.htm

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1. Lack of monitoring: The absence of a robust monitoring framework in the original Trade SWAp
mechanisms has limited the ability of the Governance structure to provide greater leadership at the
Trade SWAp program level and made more difficult to demonstrate results. Several factors have
played into this: the absence of a clear M&E framework itself; the late adoption of the Pillar
Roadmaps in 2012 has limited the possibility of measuring progress in achieving trade development
outcome and impact results against clear benchmarks and targets; and, the lack of capacity within
DICO to develop M&E information. This shortcoming is now fairly well recognized and early steps
have been taken to address it, including building M&E capacity in DICO or using the opportunity of
the current DTIS update to update the Trade SWAp Pillar Roadmaps, with clear outcomes,
benchmarks and targets, through extensive analytical work and thorough validation with Government
officials in key Ministries as well as private sector representatives.
2. Hesitant donor support: Only three donors contributed initially to the MDTF -- EU, DANIDA, and
UNIDO. No new donor has shown interest in contributing additional resources to the fund except for
some replenishment by the EU. In addition, only EIF has followed in the footsteps of the TDSP and
elected to use DICO as its project management unit. Alignment of other supports from trade-focused
development partners to the Pillar Roadmaps has been mixed, though several donors have made
progress towards aligning some of their focus and result framework with the trade SWAp framework.
This is the case, for instance, ADB in areas of legal reform and SPS capacity building, USAID in
legal reform, IFC and ADB in milled rice exports, and others as well. As mentioned previously, a
main limitation has been the absence and/or failure to establish a working mechanism indicating how
a donor financed project funded along more traditional Government-individual donor lines could be
designed to capture key Trade SWAp outcomes and actions, could be monitored for such under the
Trade SWAp Governance structure, while retaining some greater degree of autonomy. This issue
needs to be addressed going forward.
3. Absorption capacity: At least until now, Cambodia has not been constrained by the lack of AfT
resource. However, absorption capacity and speed at which institutional change can be achieved have
been factors limiting the implementation of AfT resources, hence the ability to mobilize additional
amounts of technical assistance.

4. Donor short-term expectations: Short-term expectations at donors headquarters are often at odds
with the long-term nature of change when capacity building is involved. Opportunities for additional
assistance, at times, may simply be the result of the inability (political or otherwise) of donors to align
their timelines with the realities of development.
5. Untapped resources: Thus far, Cambodia has been re-active rather than pro-active towards AfT
resource mobilization. By doing so, it is overlooking other untapped sources of funding in particular
from South-south cooperation providers (in ASEAN and ASEAN +3), from BRICS and possibly by
the private sector, including through various forms of public-private partnerships combining
resources from Government, development partners, and the Cambodian private sectors. More
development partners include a private sector dimension in their TRTA to Cambodia (ADB, AFD,
SIDA) allowing much needed public-private partnership to be supported.

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Box 18.2: A PPP for Tourism


The Ministry of Commerce and the Ministry of Tourism, in partnership with Sida, the EIF and SDC are
partnering in2013to develop an ambitious Public-Private Partnership (PPP) to establish Cambodias
Royal Academy of Culinary Arts (RACA) to train food preparation personnel ranging from chefs to
cooks or baristas for the Cambodian hospitality sector. Through the establishment of RACA, it is
expected that hotel and restaurant operators will be able to improve the quantity and quality of their
offering through improvements in the number and quality of trained Cambodian kitchen staff available in
the labor market and that a governance and financial model has been put in place to ensure long term
sustainability of RACA independent of Development Partners support.This partnership is expected to set
the scene for other promising partnerships in trade development.

Trade SWAp Forward:


From Aid Delivery to a Sector Development Perspective
This second major section of the chapter draws from the lessons identified in the previous section to
develop recommendations in three major areas:
Strengthening of trade mainstreaming and Trade SWAp mechanisms
Strengthening monitoring and mobilization of AfT
Enhancing private sector participation in AfT
Possible Actions to implement the recommendations developed hereafter are presented in the Trade
SWAp Pillar Roadmaps 2014-2018 under Outcomes #18, #19, and #20
Deepen Trade Mainstreaming and Strengthen Trade SWAp Mechanisms
The Continued Relevance of Trade SWAp in Cambodia: For full effectiveness of AfT and Government
resources in promoting trade sector development in Cambodia, there is need to move beyond the
traditional project-oriented aid-delivery focus and embrace an approach to effective trade sector
development. Such approach needs to looks at the many institutional and policy interactions that
characterize trade sector development and prioritize actions and use of available resources within a
comprehensive strategic vision and with support of an institutional framework that brings in all relevant
stakeholders. Trade SWAp is an attempt to provide such comprehensive vision and inclusive
implementation framework. It remains more pertinent than ever, even if it needs to be improved in light
of the experience of the early years.
Trade SWAp should not be about implementing technical assistance under a particular disbursement
modality, but implementing a vision under an inclusive approach that can embrace many different
modalities -- be they budget support, pooled funding, or funding based on traditional single-donor
procedures. Which donor disbursement modalities are used are decisions that should be made on the basis
of joint assessmentsby donors and Government, provided there is alignment with sector development

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priorities identified by the Government. So far, Trade SWAp has focused on implementing a Trust Fund
modalityand has not gone much beyond the project delivery focus.
The current effort to update the DTIS in conjunction with the preparation of NSDP-IV will be a positive
development if the result is that the priorities identified for Trade SWAp for the coming years are more
clearly embedded into the priorities of the NSDP. This would send a pretty unambiguous message to line
Ministries and Government agencies as well as development partners that the Trade SWAp objectives and
priorities are also the countrys development priorities.
Similarly, the Cambodia Trade SWAp was not designed as part of the governments budgetary and
expenditure framework. Ideally a SWAp should also be part of an integrated budget framework matching
expected donor and government resources to expenditure plans. This ensures that the government is
aware and able to meet its sector commitments. Without such a process of budgeting and expenditure
prioritization of total resources available, there is a risk that resources are expanded at a level that is not
sustainable once donor funding is phased out.
In the long run (2018 and beyond) the principle of sector budget support should be considered and should
help sustain and consolidate Trade SWAp. With appropriate mechanisms in place, funds would be
channeled via government budget systems, with a strong emphasis on approval of work plans of the MoC,
other line Ministries, and other trade related institutions before allocation of funds.The mechanisms for
the approval of work plans would need to be worked out between contributing development partners and
the Ministry of Commerce, under the purview of the Ministry of Economy and Finance.
For the current Trade SWAp to move in the broader direction described above, several changes will need
to take place:

The dialogue with development partners on Trade SWAp implementation will need to move away
from the current, nearly exclusive focus on disbursement, procurement, and fund availability to a
more balanced and mature exchange that also focuses on program outcomes, impacts, and the
respective contributions needed from different stakeholders -- Government, private sector, civil
society to achieve such results
Donors and Government will need to see measurableresults for their investments, requiring well
developed monitoring arrangements.
The scope of donor support and Government funding monitored under Trade SWAp will need to be
expanded to include a much broader range of projects and assistance delivered under multiple
modalities than those currently monitored under Trade SWAp

Improving Policy Formulation, Governance and Monitoring Framework, under Trade SWAp:
Mainstreaming trade in national development policy promotes policy coherence. Leadership and
engagement of stakeholders are key success factors. Integrating trade into national policy cycles requires
structured and continuous efforts by governments and stakeholders. Trade must be actively mainstreamed
into every stage of the policy cycle, beginning with sound analysis, consultation, and communication.
While the preparation of the 2013 DTIS update, with a much closer linkage to the preparation of NSDPIV, is a significant improvement from earlier NSDP formulation cycles, there is ample room for further
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improvements. More efforts will be required to ensure that priorities identified inthe DTIS through the
Trade SWAp Roadmaps are better reflected in other Government policy formulation efforts, including the
formulation of sector policies. In addition, there is a need for stronger alignment of Aid-for-Trade
mobilization and management to the Government five-year planning and budgeting cycle.
Institutional development appears strongly on the agenda of Trade SWAp, with support provided at
present by TDSP and EIF Tier 1. Moving from project-focused Aid to programmatic Aid will require a
shift in the focus in the Trade SWAp mechanisms and strengthen national systems and capacity.
Needs for change might be summarized as follows:
a) Improvingcoordination between the formulation of trade development objectives and those of the
national development strategy:

The AfT and public resources needed to implement the priorities identified in the DTIS and Trade
SWAp Roadmaps and reflected in the Trade SWAp should be integrated into the national planning
and budgeting system, including the Government budget, PIP, and Aid cycles. MoC in partnership
with MEF, CDC, and development partners should explore ways to link Trade SWAp resources
planning with the Government budgeting and MTEF processes. Introduction of annual and five-year
Action plan by MoC would also support this effort.

Studies should be commissioned in the lead up to NSDP-IV mid-term review and NSDP-V
formulation focusing, for instance, on key export sectors and trade-related cross-cutting issues to
understand better how the linkage between trade development and national goals (LDC graduation for
instance) can be improved.

MoCs capacity to compile and use statistics and trade data to inform policy-making and formulate
appropriate measure for trade sector development needs to be strengthened. Linkages between MoC
and national research institutions with capacity to develop trade-related studies should be
strengthened. In addition, MoC could develop and maintain a user-friendly and electronically
accessible database of available trade-and PSD-related studies, reports, and presentations.

Continued high-level political commitment to Trade SWAp is required for ensuring sustainability.
Current informal arrangements for inter-ministerial consultations on trade and investment-related
issues among MoC, MAFF, MIH, CDC, and SNEC could be strengthened by establishing a highlevel working group.

MoC could work with MoP and SNEC to prepare a set of indicators to be used by each ministry to
mainstream trade in their own plans and strategies.

There is a need to develop clear indicators measuring the impact of trade development on povertyreduction and sustainable human development. In addition to designing such indicators, there would
be a need to put in place a tracking system so that impacts can be monitored. This could be a task
taken on by MoC Trade Training and Research Institute though formulating and tracking such
indicators would likely need some degree of cooperation across several line Ministries. Civil society
organizations such as the NGO Forum should also be involved in this exercise.

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b) Improving the Trade SWAp Governance and Implementation framework

The Trade SWAp Governance and Implementation framework needs to shift from the current,
dominant focus on individual project implementation and reporting to a greater balance between that
and a focus on Governance and results Monitoring and Evaluation of an overall trade development
program (as reflected in the DTIS and Trade SWAp Roadmaps)

To help with the above, the Trade SWAp Pillar Roadmaps must be less instruments to guide and
monitor implementation of individual donor projects (with an emphasis on activities and outputs) and
more tools to help the Governance structure to monitor progress in the implementation of an overall
trade development and AfT program (with an emphasis on impacts and outcomes.) To do so, clear,
measurable benchmarks and targets are needed at the outcome and impact levels, not simply at the
action/output levels.

Explicit mechanisms need to be identified so that AfT projects implemented outside the framework of
the current TDSP and EIF funding can be monitored under the umbrella of the Trade SWAp
Governance mechanism against the benchmarks and targets identified in the Roadmaps. By doing so,
their contribution to the implementation of the overall trade development strategy will be better
understood and overall Trade SWAp progress better measured. To help with this, at a minimum two
changes could be implemented:
o

The current Pillar Working Group structure has proven too static and too bulky to bring about
the focused dialogue between IAs and development partners around technical assistance
needs, project formulation, and funding mobilization that was expected. To evolve towards a
more dynamic and more focused mechanism, it would be better to bring together smaller and
more targeted groups of stakeholders and development partners to discuss actions and
resources needed at the individual outcome level -- 20 outcomes under the updated Trade
SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018 -- using existing project steering committees or working groups
that already function under most of those outcomes. Project steering committees are a perfect
place to involve key officials from line Ministries associated with the sector and/or issue,
representatives from sector associations, as well as the few donors with projects focusing on
the particular outcome and to hold more in-depth discussions of progress, needs, synergies
and complementarities across technical assistance.

An annual meeting of MoC and development partners supporting Trade SWAp with projects
others than TDSP could take place so that the development partners could present their
program status, proposed/current log frame, and monitor their results (with some working
procedure with DICO.) The meeting could take place back-to-back with the Q4 meeting of
the S-SC TD&TRI.

c) Strengthening the capacity of the Ministry of Commerce to serve as lead trade agency for Cambodias
Trade SWAp, including meeting its Secretariats functions

The creation of a dedicated training and research institute in MoC should be sped up. The institute
will need to team up with domestic, regional, and international institutions in the early stages.
Additional capacity development modules can be added as the facility develops.

Additional resources to strengthen further DICO with specialist staff dedicated to the programmatic
and monitoring side are needed. Additional resources are also needed to strengthen project

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management capacity in IAs. Over the longer term, the goal should be to reduce and then phase out
the role of international consultants and advisers in DICO. Retention of the best staff will be an
important factor for this capacity switch to happen.

A comprehensive training program for MoC officials to be implemented by the Government and
various external partners such as the Royal School of Administration and focusing on needs identified
in the MoC-wide capacity needs assessment carried out in 2008 is still very much needed.

MoCs internal aid management processes need to be better organized, more rigorous, and
independent of donors. Emphasis must be placed on information as a management tool and efforts
made to improve monitoring at all levels. The current information flow, requiring up to six layers of
decision, is too cumbersome.

There must be a credible, sustained government commitment to long-term salary improvement linked
to public service reform to motivate staff and reduce absenteeism or early departures. Non-salary
incentives can also be effective, especially increased delegation of responsibilities and authority with
the opportunity for individuals to achieve and be recognized for real improvements to services. The
long-term solution to the problem of low incentives depends on economic growth and increased
revenue to make higher salaries affordable. Donor-funded salary supplements have created
distortions and rigidities in personnel management and face sustainability problems.

There is a need to move expeditiously with the implementation of MoCs ICT master plan, in order to
modernize and automate the processes of MoC and related provincial offices, including linking up
with database and trade information portals in other government institutions.

Monitor and Mobilize Aid for Trade


Strengthen M&E:Governments and development partners that work jointly in the context of a wellformulated programwith specific goals to overcome supply-side constraints are likely to get the greatest
pay-off. This underscores the importance of government ownership, mutual accountability, and overall
alignment and harmonization in Aid for Trade. Countries have varying capabilities to articulate needs,
plan, budget, monitor, and evaluate Aid for Trade. Assistance to help governments build this type of
results-based management capacity can have a high return for trade.
Weak monitoring capacity in the early years of Trade SWAp has dented the opportunity for the Ministry
of Commerce and the Royal Government of Cambodia to better explain its successes in mainstreaming
trade. The creation of the Pillar Roadmaps and the National Implementation Unit (DICO) for Aid-forTrade projects in the Ministry of Commerce has helped bridge some of the gaps between donors
expectations and the RGC capacity.
Efforts deployed in 2013 to enhance the capacities of both the NIU and of implementing agencies on
reporting will help improve the dialogue among line Ministries, MoC and development partners on
progress achieved under some of the TDSP and EIF projects. But, as mentioned earlier, much additional
M&E capacity remains to be built.
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Over the next five years, a much stronger monitoring and evaluation system that serves the need for
information at project and program levels and enhances results-based management must be put in place to
strengthen Trade SWAp and resource mobilization as well as provide RGC with timely monitoring
information and statistics that can inform decision-making at the Government and Ministrylevels.
For this to happen, actions will be needed at three different levels:
a) Capacity development on M&E
These actions have been noted previously.
b) Harmonization

Review experience of other developing countries in developing trade sector development monitoring
frameworks. This could include regular experience sharing or joint training sessions with other
countries in the region, in particular EIF and recently graduated countries or middle-income
economies.

Develop pro-active strategy to harmonizeGovernment and donor result framework formulation and
reporting requirements for all trade-related projects and for Trade SWAp

Partner with MoP and SNEC on measuring the progress towards NSDP goals

The procedural system currently used to manage projects arising through Trade SWAp needs to be
unified into a common system open to all existing and potential donors. It must be acceptable to all in
terms of financial management, procurement, monitoring and evaluation. At present development
partners are not clear as to how their potential contribution would fit within Trade SWAp and whether
to align with Trade SWAp Roadmap or not, especially if their projects are implemented bilaterally.
Hence DICO needs to explain and disseminate the Trade SWAp vision and purpose more effectively

c) Plans and benchmarks

Organize a 2016 mid-term review of the Trade SWAp Roadmaps2014-2018 jointly with line
Ministries and update benchmarks and targets as needed to account for changes since 2013

Review progress against the Trade SWAp Roadmaps outcomes annually

Develop and implement an M&E plan including roles and responsibilities, data gathering and
management, data analysis, use of information and building of capacities required. The training for
M&E unit staff could be provided by the MoC Trade Training and Research Institute, in partnership
with local institutions.

Increase the use of IT-based monitoring systems for Trade SWAp related projects. In the long run,
develop a web-based monitoring and evaluation platform emulating the traffic light approach used
in MDTF reports.

Finally, the oversight role played by civil society and the media in general can be an effective driver
of change and bring better government accountability on actions and results. Those two actors should
be included also in ensuring monitoring and evaluation of results.

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Box 18.3: How Aid for Trade is Monitored Globally


A recent Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) review of accountability in
AfT initiatives concluded that the status of M&E in AfT is relatively weak. With increased investment in
trade-related initiatives, there is a need to demonstrate that initiatives have been well implemented and
that they have reached their development objectives. The last few years have seen an enhanced focus on
M&E in AfT initiatives. In the self-assessment conducted on AfT programming in 2009 it was observed
that two-thirds of partner countries regularly monitored and evaluated their trade-related programs
To assess progress towards the objectives of the Aid-for-Trade Initiative, the OECD and the World Trade
Organization (WTO) have developed a joint monitoring framework. This framework links accountability
at the country (or regional) level with accountability at the global level. As outlined in the Paris
Declaration on Aid Effectiveness, mutual accountability is designed to build genuine partnerships and
focus these partnerships on delivering results.
Three elements are central in establishing mutual accountability: a shared agenda with clear objectives
and reciprocal commitments; monitoring and evaluating these commitments and actions; and, closely
inter-related, dialogue and review. The Aid-for-Trade Initiative is one of the clearest international
examples of how these three elements create powerful incentives to carry out commitments and,
ultimately, to change behavior.
The logical framework for assessing the Aid-for-Trade Initiative is based on four main elements identified
by the OECD-WTO Task Force:
A) Demand (i.e. mainstreaming and prioritizing trade in development strategies);
B) Response (i.e. aid-for-trade projects and programs);
C) Outcomes (i.e. enhanced capacity to trade); and,
D) Impacts (i.e. improved trade performance and reduced poverty.)
Source: OECD/WTO, Third Global Aid for Trade Review and Fourth Global Aid for Trade Review
Communicate Results: As more countries compete for decreasing AfT resources world-wide, it is
critical for acountry to communicate wisely its progress, using different mediaand focusing on different
target audiences.
In the recent past, Cambodia has increased its visibility at the international level, through its WTO
accession bid, its participation to international AfT meetings, its successful WTO trade policy review and
other events. Several media supports, such as the Trade Development and Aid for Trade in Cambodia
Stories and the EIF-produced Cambodia Trading Stories movie, have contributed to building a different
image of Cambodia.
Yet, it sometimes looks as if Cambodias trade development and AfT successes are better known
internationally than nationally. At the national level, dissemination of results and progress has occurred
mostly through meetings and outreach workshop, but it has failed to reach private sector or sub-national
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Government authorities. There seems to be limited understanding within Cambodia about the linkages
amongtrade mainstreaming, poverty-reduction, Government priorities , including among donors, the
private sector, and other trade stakeholders.
Trade SWAp needs a more effective, high-visibility publicity, outreach and communication plan. A
Trade SWAp communication strategyand action plan were developed in 2010 and updated in 2012 in the
framework of the EIF Tier 1 project. The recent addition of a communication cell in the EIF Executive
Secretariat in Geneva has accelerated the adoption by Cambodia of dedicated tools.
In line with most of the recommendations included in the Trade SWAp communication strategy, the
following actions need to be implemented in the coming years to ensure increased visibility within
Cambodia in particular:

Creation of a SWAp communications unit within DICO, with dedicated staff, with the mandate to
implement the Trade SWAp communication strategy and provide MoC with tools, media and access
to media to promote trade mainstreaming successes, in both Khmer and English.

Development of a large-scale public relations activity plan, with support from both TDSP and EIF
programs, to be kick-started immediately after the launch of the DTIS 2013 update

Upgrading and maintenance of the Trade SWAp website to provide meaningful information to all
stakeholders, and be linked with project partners own websites. Dedicated corners for Trade SWAp
M&E should be developed for transparency purposes.

Production of a TV documentary highlighting the importance of trade sector development and the
Governments strategy, including the use of Trade SWAp, available in Khmer and shared with
mainstream media in Cambodia

Partnership with Cambodia Chamber of Commerce to reach out to their members, followed by
increased communication with relevant G-PSF working groups and sector associations

Mobilize AfT: Despite the downturn in OECD countries aid expenditure, substantial funding remains
available, including via South-South cooperation, triangular cooperation, and the private sector. On
average, one dollar invested in aid for trade results in an increase of nearly $8 in exports from all
developing
Because the trade development landscape is changing, Aid funding, national expenditure, public policies,
as well as private investment increasingly need to be examined in an integrated way. While aid for trade
has been defined in terms of ODA, other sources of finance can help build trade capacities in LDCs like
Cambodia.
Two priorities have become obvious if Cambodia wants to take advantage of new or untapped sources of
funding:

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a) The Ministry of Commerce, with support from MoP, line Ministries, and the relevant development
partner groups, must deepen the partnership with existing and new development partners

A mapping of current development partners interventions in support of Cambodias trade


development within or outside Trade SWAp must be updated and kept up-to-date by MoC.

Non-participating development partners must be kept informed of Aid-for-Trade and Trade SWAp
achievements through focus group meetings (e.g. the Trade Development Update informal luncheon
meetings organized every quarter by MoC with development partners) dedicated communication, and
bilateral visits. DICO should organize a campaign of intensive dialogue with donors explaining the
Trade SWAP, its objectives, and benefits for development partners. Success stories should be
championed. New donors, in particular, should be invited to participate in the Trade SWAp.

The role of the Donor Facilitator (DF) should be reviewed regularly, strengthened, and improved as
needed. This will provide strong linkage and coordination between funding agencies not yet aligning
their monitoring framework with the Trade SWAp Roadmap and those that do (EIF and TDSP) and
also ensure the SWAp is understood and offered as an umbrella for all trade-related supports.
Additional funding can be sourced while the DF can utilize the M&E system to feedback to interested
parties.

Regular high-level meeting between Government officials and development partner should take stock
of on-going assistance, funding gaps, and strategize on how to bridge the gaps based on the updated
Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018 and an up-to-date TRTA matrix.

Donors need to articulate their concerns and needs in order to support the SWAp and use it to
coordinate all trade related activities. Donor funding in the trade related areas needs to be increased
and aligned with the SWAp. Currently many donors are working independent of the SWAp and the
pillars roadmaps which is undermining the Trade SWAp. The proposed mechanisms to review
annually the logical frameworks of development partners and how their actions contributes to the
Trade SWAps result framework, under the purview of the S-SC TD&TRI would provide steps in the
right direction.

Donors need to adjust their expectations of the time needed for policymaking and program
development in order to allow governments to build the consensus essential for successful
implementation. Pressure for immediate results must be balanced with the realities of capacity
development to avoid disappointment and damage to program.

The NIU should become more proactive in ensuring a smoother dialogue between MoC the lead
agency on trade and development partners. So far the NIU has been too reactive, focusing on
coordinating existing projects, and not advocating for more support. Regular meetings with nontraditional donors should be organized, under the leadership of the EIF Focal Point, to share progress,
constraints, needs and achievements made under Trade SWAp and promote alignment of donor
actions to the Trade SWAp Roadmaps.

b) Tap unused Aid-for-Trade resources


The trade agenda of developing countries is increasingly being pursued through regional economic
integration and cooperation efforts, a fact noted during the Third Global Review of Aid for Trade in 2011.
In this context, regional aid for trade can help boost trade and facilitate movement along value chains.
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Support from new regional donors reached its highest ever level in 2012 world-wide. So far, Cambodia
has been unable to tap into these resources. The findings of the OECD/WTO monitoring survey suggest
that most providers of South-South trade-related cooperation plan to increase their resources in the future.
Regional aid for trade has a critical role to play in boosting the participation of least developed countries
(LDCs) in regional production networks, and enabling them to move up the value chain. One of the main
motivations of the trend towards regional integration is the need to reduce barriers in regional production
networks. Barriers to trade, bureaucratic bottlenecks, and infrastructural deficiencies reduce the
competitiveness of countries.
China and India for instance, on top of their non-concessional support, doubled their ODA-like assistance
in 2011 to $ 2.4 billion and $ 730 million respectively. South-South trade-related support is becoming
increasingly an important complement to aid for trade. Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, if on a smaller
scale are also trying to increase their ODA support.
A targeted approach towards those non-traditional development partners should include:

A review of current practices, strategies, and resources of non-traditional AfT donors active on trade
issues in the region. This can be done by meeting relevant partners representations in Cambodia
(China, Kuwait, United Arab Emirates, ASEAN partners) as well as those venturing in trilateral
cooperation (Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand)

Design a dedicated communication and outreach strategies targeting non-traditional donors, starting
with their participation in the launch of the DTIS Update, participation to S-SC TD&TRI meetings,
and PSD TWG meetings. Link the outreach strategies to recommendations of the DTIS Update for
regional integration and expansion.

Assess the possibilities to target ASEAN funded assistance through the ASEAN Secretariat and
increased partnership with ASEAN technical bodies (included ERIA).

Enhance Private Sector Participation in Trade Policy and Aid for Trade
While the focus of the Government-Private Sector dialogue in Cambodia, so far, has been mainly on
business environment policy and regulatory issues, such as those addressed in the Government-Private
Sector Forum, steps are being taken to expand the scope of the dialogue to win-win cooperation as
exemplified by the recent flurry of Public-Private Partnerships, some of them including development
partners participation.
Clearly, the private sector needs to be involved at different levels of Cambodias trade development
policy formulation and implementation. Trade-related dialogue between Government and the private
sector needs to be part of those processes and MoC should take the lead through ensuring a pro-active
private sector is involved in all stages of Trade SWAP.

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In the medium term, it should be possible for the private sector to be more involved in Aid-for-Trade
project design, formulation, and implementationand to contribute financially wherever appropriate.383To
that effect, the G-PSF and the PSD TWG could be used as avenues for the formulation and development
of more and better public-private partnership schemes to ensure a more balance contribution to trade
sector development.
The capacity of BMOs to further engage the government into a productive dialogue must be strengthened.
This should start with implementing a few recommendations, such as:

Raising the profile of the Cambodia Chamber of Commerce (CCC) and selected business
organizations vis--vis other private sector institutions and development partners. The CCC should
become an efficient instrument for reaching out to private sector stakeholders.

Building the capacity of business membership organizations (BMOs) in identification and analysis of
business environment issues and support Public-Private Dialogue at national and provincial levels.
Initial efforts have been launched in this direction with TDSP funding of a one-year capacity building
project.

Prepare a strategy and implementation plan and activity and resource schedule with indicators of
achievements and deadlines for the CCC. Assess needs for initial funding and technical assistance,
consultant studies, equipment, travel and budget plans and longer term self-sustainability and selffinancing.

Recent developments among Cambodias BMOs show the multiplication of parallel business focus
groups, such as those initiated by EUROCHAM, in part in response to the feeling by some BMOs that the
G-PSF does not speak for the great majority of businesses but tend to be dominated by a few large
companies. While the approach is understandable, the fragmentation of the private sector voice could
lead to an unhealthy fragmentation of the dialogue with the RGC that will become counter-productive.
Engaging the private sector more closely in Trade SWAp could be achieved at different stages of the Aidfor-Trade project life cycle:
a) At the stage of policy formulation and implementation strategy design

By establishing a calendar for trade policy formulation including review meetings with the private
sector, inclusive of Cambodian and foreign business associations.
By including private sector representatives in DTIS update Task Force
By adapting the mandate and modus operandi of the PSD TWG and align it to the DTIS Update as far
as trade issues are concerned. Trade-related issues tackled during PSD TWG meetings could be
aligned with key reform areas in the Trade SWAp and could make greater use of the Trade SWAp
Roadmaps. Meeting could focus alternatively on (1) trade, (2) private sector development, and (3)
investment, not diluting trade into broader issues.
By formally informing G-PSF and PSD TWG of the contents, scope, and timetables of DTIS Updates

383

Under CEDEP I and CEDEP II projects, the private sector is expected to contribute a share of the costs of technical assistance
of direct benefit to investors, such as bearing most of the costs of HACCP or GMP certification in rice milling, fisheries, or
cassava processing, or by contributing to the financing of the TVET RACA school for the training of Chefs and other food
handling personnel.

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Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

455

Possibly, by including the DTIS update, trade policy update and progress review into G-PSF and PSD
TWG meeting agendas, instead of addressing only those at the end of the mandate for NSDP
formulation. Regular check points could be set to ensure that progress towards NSDP indicators is
monitored.

b) At the stage of identification of the projects

By increasing the participation of private sector representatives in project steering committees


Be reviewing recent experiences (constraints, challenges, and need for support) of the private sector
associations in provinces.
By increasing the awareness of BMOs on Aid for Trade and Trade SWAp opportunities through
regular focus group meetings with MoC and RGC

c) At the stage of formulation of projects

By inviting private sector representatives to participate in AfT project formulation team


By inviting private sector representatives to participate in initial formulation workshop with MoC
By inviting private sector representatives to make suggestions or submit project proposals to MoC, in
support of the Trade SWAp Roadmaps

d) At the implementation stage of the projects


By increasing participation of private sector representatives in specific project steering committees
By encouraging private sector representatives to participate more regularly in S-SC TD&TRI
meetings
e) At the stage of evaluation of the projects

By increasing participation of private sector representatives in project evaluation, including providing


stronger feedback on how private sector benefitted from project activities

Box 12.4: Implications of Regional Integration


The changes required preparing for and adapting to ASEAN Economic Community (AEC 2015) and
further regional integration efforts have two direct implications for Trade mainstreaming and Aid for
Trade.
First, national development plans and trade development strategies can no longer be thought of in
terms of domestic and international trade, but needs to include the regional dimension, be it for
complying with commitments made under AEC 2015, ASEAN+3, ASEAN+6 or the GMS, as
discussed in other chapters of this study. Regional integration triggers challenges for trade policy
formulation that go well beyond negotiating traditional trade agreements, to include a wide range of
new issues including liberalization of capital flows (e.g. the ASEAN Comprehensive Investment Area
- ACIA - to encourage and facilitate financial flows), freer movement of labor, increased
liberalization of services, the removal of temporary exclusion lists for goods from such sectors as
manufacturing, agriculture, fisheries, forestry, and mining, as well as reform of non-tariff barriers and
further harmonization of intellectual property and other economic practices.
Second, regional integration means also increased South-south cooperation and, in particular,
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456 Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

between more mature and newer members of ASEAN as well as with ASEAN dialogue partners.
This includes cooperation and dialogue through the Regional Technical Group on Aid-for-Trade
spearheaded by ADB and Japan and for which Cambodia is the co-chair. Non-traditional donors such
as Singapore, Malaysia, and Thailand have strengthened their regional cooperation with Cambodia
through multilateral, bilateral, or even trilateral channels (Germany has for instance set-up two
regional trilateral programs, with Singapore and Malaysia respectively, in support of Cambodias
economic development. This is in line with recommendations of the Busan Partnership Declaration
on Aid Effectiveness (2011).

Box 12.5: Human and Institutional Resources Development Needs


Program management resources were quite limited when Trade SWAp was launched in early 2008
following completion of CTIS 2007. The combined support of the IF, UNDP, and EU early on
focused on setting up the basic implementation arrangements and developing core capacity in the
newly created Department of International Cooperation (DICO) so that it could take on the functions
of a Trade SWAp Secretariat and a National Implementation Unit. Subsequent support provided by
the TDSP and EIF since 2010 has allowed further capacity development. A functional structure in
DICO is in place, staffed primarily by government officials with some ad-hoc support from
international advisors. Project formulation, implementation, and reporting capacity has been built in
several departments in line Ministries and in MoC as well so they can operate as Implementing
Agencies (IAs.)
Yet, institutional and human capacity to support Trade SWAp and Trade Mainstreaming remain a
challenge. They need to be addressed to allow Cambodia to benefit fully from a more robust trade
mainstreaming, from new opportunities offered by south-south cooperation, or resources accessible
from non-traditional partners.
First, the capacity of the Trade SWAp mechanism to shift from a focus on individual projects
oversight to trade development program guidance and monitoring as well as the implementation of
Cambodias Medium Term Aid-for-Trade strategy have been affected by the lack of M&E capacity,
within DICO especially but within individual IAs as well. Without such capacity, DICO, in
particular, has been hard-pressed (1) to provide the S-SC TD&TRI with the information it would need
to assess the contribution of different TRTA projects to the overall trade agenda or to analyze tradeoffs and options for subsequent technical assistance as well as (2) keep development partners and
national stakeholders informed of achievements and challenges in implementing the AfT agenda.
MoC and most line Ministries as well remain ill-equipped with the kind of research capacity that is
necessary to provide senior level policy makers the information they need to analyze policy and
strategy options, be they at the level of the NSDP, the DTIS or sector policies. In that regard,
Government institutions remain overly dependent on expertise provided by development partners
through ad-hoc experts.
The efforts supported by the TDSP and CEDEP projects under EIF Tier 2 modalities to strengthen the
M&E capacity in DICO and IAs is beginning to yield some early results, including the production of
regular substantive progress reports and a shift away from reporting exclusively on procurement and
disbursements. The creation of MoC Trade and Training Institute will provide a unique platform for
training of staff in MoC and line Ministries (central and provincial levels) as well as provide much
needed trade research capacity to support policymakers and planners.
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457

Second, the capacity of private sector organizations to be more engaged in a dialogue with
Government on trade development, to participate in policy formulation, or to access potential Aid-forTrade resources is weak. Likewise, the existing consultation mechanisms among public sector,
private sector, and development partners started from a low capacity base and have not expanded
rapidly enough in past years to cope with the rapid changes brought by regional integration as shown
by the insufficient use of the G-PSF mechanisms by the private sector and the absence of a real
dialogue on trade in the framework of the PSD TWG. Several efforts are underway under the EIF
Tier2-funded CEDEP projects to strengthen capacity in sector business associations, but the MoC
Trade and Training Institute could also provide a platform for training and stronger outreach to
BMOs.

Box 12.6: Progress Since 2007 and Possible Future Targets


Two years after the launch of the Aid for Trade initiative in Hong Kong and five years after validation
of Cambodias first DTIS (2002), the RGC decided to update its DTIS, launch a Trade SWAp (never
tried elsewhere), and strengthen its capacity to mainstream trade into national development.
Considerable progress has been made in the five years to date, as demonstrated in stronger efforts to
embed fully trade development priorities in the NSDP, success in increasing Aid for Trade resources,
success in engaging many stakeholders in support of the Government July 2010 Rice Policy,
significant improvements in trade facilitation, just to list a few examples. Visits by a number of LDC
trade delegation to learn from Cambodias recent experience is also an indirect testimony to the
significant progress made in recent years. The November 2011 WTO Trade Policy Review and the
Third Global Review of Aid for Trade both highlighted these developments.
Nevertheless Cambodia still has a long way to go as it finds itself at the crossroads of several changes,
including full integration in the ASEAN Economic Community and a possible LDC graduation in the
near future. To fully benefit from those, further capacity development efforts will be needed over the
next five years. Still, as Cambodias economy developed, so will its relations with its trading partners
and with development partners.
Challenges abound: successfully integrating private sector in policy formulation, in project design and
project implementation; ensuring equitable growth so that vulnerable groups do also benefit from
trade development; increasing the competitiveness of its key sectors and continuing to broaden its
economy including diversification of its export base; bridging the skill gap to ensure new entrants into
the job market find opportunities commensurate with their expectations and avoid that a new
generation be left behind, underemployed or unemployed.
At the institutional level, better coordination within the Royal Government of Cambodia and stronger
dialogue between RGC and private sector representatives will be needed. In the context of changing
ODA and with a renewed focus for LDC to integrate into regional and global value chains, more and
different Aid resources and mechanisms will need to be tapped into, not only from traditional and
non-traditional donors, but also from the private sector itself. Finally, progress towards the SWAp
goals will need to be better monitored, evaluated, and communicated based on robust result
framework at the Trade SWAp and NSDP levels.

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458 Cambodia CTIS 2014-2018 Full Report

Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018


Development Impacts, Strategic Outcomes, and
Short and Medium Term Indicative Actions
With Key Performance Indicators

Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018

459

Acronyms
AfT
AFSIS
AFTEX
AIDSP
ARASFF
ASEAN
ATIGA
BFC
CAMFEBA
CARDI
CBA
CCIC
CDC
CEDEP
CIS
CLV
CO
CoM
CSF
CTIS
DAC
DAHP
DFQF
DICO
DP
DTIS
EBA
EDC
FDI
FiA
FMD
FOCC
2|Page

460 Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018

Aid for Trade


ASEAN Food Security Information System
ASEAN Federation of Textile Industries
Agro-Industry Development Strategic Plan
ASEAN Rapid Alert System for Food and Feed
Association of South East Asian Nations
ASEAN Trade in Goods Agreement
Better Factories Cambodia
Cambodian Federation of Employers and Business Associations
Cambodia Agriculture Research & Development Institute
Collective Bargaining Agreement
China Certificate and Inspection Group, Cambodia
Council for the Development of Cambodia
Cambodia Export Development and Expansion Program
Confederation of Independent States
Cambodia Laos Vietnam
Certificate of Origin
Council of Ministers
Classical swine fever
Cambodia Trade Integration Strategy
Development Assistance Committee
Department of Animal Health and Protection
Duty-Free Quota-Free
Department of International Cooperation
Development Partner
Diagnostic Trade Integration Study
Everything-but-Arms
Electricit du Cambodge
Foreign Direct Investment
Fisheries Administration
Foot and mouth disease
Footwear & Garment Order Center of Cambodia

FSCC
GCC
GDA
GDCE
GDP
GHP
GMAC
GMP
G-PSF
GSP
INFOSAN
HACCP
IP
IPPC
IPM
IPR
ISC
ISO
LDC
MAFF
MEF
MICE
MoC
MoCFA
MoEYS
MoFA
MoH
MoI
MIH
MoPWT
MRD
MoT
MoU
MoWA
NCIPR

Food Safety System Certification


Gulf Countries Council
General Directorate of Agriculture
General Department of Customs and Excise
Gross Domestic Product
Good Health Practice
Garment Manufacturers Association of Cambodia
Good Manufacturing Practice
Government-Private Sector Forum
General System of Preference
International Food Safety Authorities Network
Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points
Intellectual Property
International Plant Protection Convention
Integrated Pest Management
Intellectual Property Right
Institute of Standards Cambodia
International Standards Organization
Least Developed Country
Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries
Ministry of Economy and Finance
Meetings, Incentives, Conventions & Exhibitions
Ministry of Commerce
Ministry of Culture & Fine Arts
Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports
Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Ministry of Health
Ministry of the Interior
Ministry of Industry and Handicrafts
Ministry of Public Works and Transport
Ministry of Rural Development
Ministry of Tourism
Memorandum of Understanding
Ministry of Women Affairs
National Committee on Intellectual Property Rights

3|Page

Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018

461

NEA
NGO
NIS
NSW
NTM
OECD
OIE
PPP
PRC
PRRS
PSD
RACA
RCEP
RDB
RGC
RO
RoI
RSA
RRIC
RUA
SEZ
SNEC
SPS
S-SC
TA
TBT
Trade SWAp
TEU
TRTA
TTRI
TVET
TWG
VAT
WG
WTO
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462 Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018

National Employment Agency


Non-Governmental Organization
National Institute of Statistics
National Single Window
Non-Tariff Measure
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
Office International de lEpizootie
Public-Private Partnership
Peoples Republic of China
Porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome
Private Sector Development
Royal Academy of Culinary Arts
Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership
Rural Development Bank
Royal Government of Cambodia
Rules of Origin
Return on Investment
Royal School of Administration
Rubber Research Institute of Cambodia
Royal University of Agriculture
Special Economic Zone
Supreme National Economic Council
Sanitary and Phytosanitary
Sub-Steering Committee
Technical Assistance
Technical Barrier to Trade
Trade Sector-Wide Approach
Twenty-Foot Equivalent Unit
Trade Related Technical Assistance
Trade Training and Research Institute
Technical Vocational Education and Training
Technical Working Group
Value Added Tax
Working Group
World Trade Organization

Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018

463

Investment projects approved by


CDC doubles to $70 billion (or
more) between 2014-2018
At least 16 of the 20 Outcomes
receive TA support and have at least
one TA monitored through Trade
SWAp. Of the 16 outcomes, at least
10 have 2 or more TAs monitored
through Trade SWAp

CDC approved $35.5 billion worth of


investment projects between 20072011
14 of the 20 Outcomes in Trade
SWAp 2014-2018 receive TA
support as of 2013. Of the 14
outcomes with TA, only 10 have one
TA or more monitored through Trade
SWAp of which 3 have 2 or more
TAs monitored (TRTA matrix)

Trade SWAp Goal 4:


Responsiveness of RGC to Private
Sector needs increases as a result of
better dialogue

Trade SWAp Goal 5:


Improved planning, implementation,
and monitoring capacity of RGC
through implementing Trade SWAp

5|Page

n.a. = not applicable

Trade SWAp Goal 3:


Strengthened capacity of RGC to
formulate and implement trade
policies and strategies

n.a.

n.a.

n.a.

n.a.

n.a.

11% yearly average growth of goods


and services exports during 20142018
Garments and tourism represent 60%
or less of total recorded goods and
service exports in 2018
4 additional sector policies focusing
on export by 2018

Trade SWAp Goal 2:


Significant increase in the
contribution of the trade sector to
GDP and deepening diversification of
Cambodias export base

n.a.

Responsible Parties

Cambodia narrows its distance to the


best performing country for all
indicators combined by an additional
10% by 2018

Trade SWAp Development Impacts/Goals

Key Performance Indicators


Baseline
2016 or 2018 Target

During 2005-13 Cambodia narrowed


its distance to the best performing
country for all indicators combined
in Doing Business by 11.1%.
Cambodia 2013 ranking was 133 out
of 185 countries
13% yearly average growth of
exports of goods and services during
2007-11
Garments and tourism represent 80%
of total recorded goods and service
exports in 2011
1 sector policy focusing on exports in
2013 (for Rice)

Trade SWAp Goal 1:


Improved competitiveness contributes
to reduce poverty through better and
new jobs

Development Impacts/Goals
Outcomes, Indicative Actions

464 Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018


75% of the 84 Actions listed in
RGCs Work Program have been
fully completed by 2016
The RCEP rules of origin allow for
cumulation across all its members by
2018

84 Actions identified in the RGCs


Work Program on WTO Obligations
and Related Issues 2012-2015
RCEP Rules of Origins need to be
negotiated

Law approved by Parliament and


signed into Law by 2016
Law approved by Parliament and
signed into Law by 2016

Draft text exists in 2013

Draft text exists in 2013

6|Page

Law approved by Parliament and


signed into Law by 2016

No draft in 2013

Indicative Action 2:
Draft and promulgate Legal Text on
Rules of Origins
Indicative Action 3:
Finalize and promulgate Law on
Trade Remedies
Indicative Action 4:
Finalize and promulgate Law on SEZs
Indicative Action 5:
Finalize and promulgate revised
Investment Law
Draft amended law exist in 2013

Cambodia negotiates with EU and


Canada to ensure that graduation of
individual countries from GSP
programs does not affect
Cambodias cumulation for ROs
purpose
Law approved by Parliament and
signed into Law by 2016

ROs in EBA and Canadas DFQF


are favorable but countries
graduating from GSP programs can
no longer be used for cumulation

Indicative Action 1:
Favorable Rules of Origin remain in
place under EUs EBA and Canadas
DFQF

Short-Term Actions: 2014-2016

Outcome 1: Trade Policy Reform


and Trade Negotiations
Cambodia meets its trade legal reform
obligations under WTO and ASEAN;
strengthens its access to markets
through trade negotiations; enhances
the transparency of its trade rules and
laws

Outcome 1: Trade Policy Reform and Market Access Negotiations

CDC, CoM

CDC, CoM,

MoC, CoM,

MoC, MEF, CoM

MEF, MoC (immediate


Action to be taken)

MoC, Line Ministries


responsible for individual
legal or institutional
actions
MEF, MoC, Line
Ministries

Pillar 1: Increasing the Competitiveness of Cambodian Exporters in World Markets


Through a Strengthened Export Business Environment

Trade SWAp Strategic Outcomes and Indicative Actions by Pillar

Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018

465

7|Page

Indicative Action 9:
Legal measures to ensure compliance
with ATIGA (Art. 56 on Authorized
Operators, Art. 62 on Advance
Rulings, Art. 61 on Post Clearance
Audit, Art. 57 on Customs Valuation)
have been adopted
Indicative Action 10:
National Work Program on NTMs in
line with ASEAN requirements is in
place
Indicative Action 11:
CLV Development Triangles focus
on rubber sector proceeds as planned
with formulation of Action Plan by
the three countries (same as Outcome
14, ST Action 7)

Indicative Action 6:
Finalize and promulgate Law on
Competition
Indicative Action 7:
Amend legislation on Standards to
make it WTO-compliant (same as
Outcome 4, ST Action 9)
Indicative Action 8:
Trade rules and regulations (including
tariffs) are freely available online
National information portal at
www.ocm.gov.kh fully operational
in Khmer and English in 2016. MoC
Trade Information (includes ASEAN
National Trade Repository) website
fully operational
Full compliance with ATIGA is
achieved by the end of 2015

No website with consolidated


presentation of Trade Laws and
Regulations (including for SPS and
TBT) as of 2013

Anukret to create Inter-Ministerial


Committee on NTMs being drafted
under MEF leadership as of mid
2013
The 7th CLV Development Triangle
Summit of Heads of State held in
Vientiane March 12, 2013 requested
preparation of action plan for
development of the rubber sector in
the Triangle

Action plan fully formulated for the


8th CLV Development Triangle
Summit as requested during 7th
Summit

Anukret signed by Prime Minister.


Committee is up and running.

Laws on standards has been


amended and is WTO-compliant by
2016

Law on Standards not WTOcompliant.

Prakas on Advance Ruling issued by


GDCE in January 2013. No or
limited action taken elsewhere

Law approved by Parliament and


signed into Law by 2016

Early draft exists as of 2013

MEF, MoC, MAFF,


SNEC

Line Ministries included in


NTM Inter-Ministerial
Committee

GDCE, MoC and other


line agencies

CoM, MEF, MoC

MIH, CoM

MoC, CoM

466 Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018

8|Page

Indicative Action 3:
Improved accessibility, compilation
and use of statistics and trade data to
assist in assessing and formulating
appropriate trade support
interventions (same as Outcome 18,
ST Action 3)

Indicative
Action 2:
The Process of notification to the
WTO is strengthened
Indicative Action 3:
Non Tariff Measures are classified,
reviewed, streamlined and notified to
the ASEAN Secretariat, as mandated
under the ASEAN NTM Work
Program.

Snippet_308F659A0.idms

Indicative Action 1:
Legal framework for food safety
upgraded, including adoption and
promulgation of modern food law
(same as Outcome 4, MT Action 2)

By 2016, a complete database of


NTMs has been set up and
notifications are made regularly to
the ASEAN Secretariat.
By 2018, the current NTM stock has
been reviewed and streamlined.
By 2018, the impact of all new
NTMs is assessed by the Interministerial Committee on NTMs and
several NTMs have been lessened or
eliminated
Beginning in 2016, MoC Trade
Training and Research Institute
(TTRI) produces an annual trade
data publication that consolidates
and reconciles data extracted from
different Government sources and
ensure enhanced coherence with
Comtrade mirror statistics

No action has been taken as of 2013

All MoC data are available up to


date through MoCs revamped

All WTO-relevant actions on laws


and regulations contained in the
RGC's 2012-2015 WTO Work
Program or in this Roadmap are
notified to WTO

Nine notifications as of 2013

Official Cambodian trade data are


extracted from database maintained
by GDCE (Customs data), MoC (on
COs, import/export, licenses), MEF
(trade repository), and MAFF (SPS
certificates.) There is no structure to
compare and ensure coherence
across sources, limited quality
control systems, no tool to
compare/benchmark Cambodian
statistics against mirror statistics
Some MoC data are difficult to
obtain

Legal framework has been adopted


compliant with WTO/SPS and
ASEAN principles and good
international practice by 2018

No proper legal framework in place

Medium-Term Actions: 2016-2018

MoC

GDCE, MoC, MEF.


MAFF, National Institute
of Statistics

MoC, MEF, line agencies

MoC, MIH, ICS, MAFF,


MoH

MoC/Camcontrol, MoH,
MAFF, MIH, MoT, MEF,
CoM

Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018

467

2011 Cambodia time for cargo


release is 24 days compared to 16
days for ASEAN-6 average

2011 Cambodia import/export cost is


136% ASEAN-6 average (from
WB/IFC Doing Business)

Issuance of Certificates of Origin is


manual in 2013. CO reform plan
introduced by MoC in November
2013
GDCE and MoC/Camcontrol have
adopted WTO compliant service fees

Indicative Action 2:
Cambodia progresses towards full
computerization of trade related
documents
Indicative Action 3:
Establish WTO compliant service fees
by all border agencies
Indicative Action 4:
Cambodia is taking steps to
implement the WTO Agreement on
Trade Facilitation

9|Page

Indicative Action 1:
Updated Trade Facilitation Action
Plan has been adopted and
implemented

Draft updated Trade Facilitation


Action Plan as of late 2013

Medium-Term Actions: 2016-2018

An Agreement on Trade Facilitation


was approved as part of the Bali
Package endorsed during the
December 2013 WTO Ministerial
Conference. The agreement contains
special provisions for LDCs

No website with consolidated


presentation of Trade Laws and
Regulations (including for SPS and
TBT) as of 2013

Indicative Action 1:
Trade rules and regulations (including
Customs tariffs) are freely available
online (same as Outcome 1, ST
Action 7)

Short-Term Actions: 2014-2016

Outcome 2: Trade Facilitation


Cambodia increases its
competitiveness through reduced
import/export cost

Updated Action Plan has been


adopted and is fully implemented

WTO compliant service fee structure


for all remaining border agencies in
place by 2016
By June 2015, Cambodia has
notified the WTO as to which of its
trade facilitation reform actions will
fall in Categories A, B, and C of the
Agreement respectively

National information portal at


www.ocm.gov.kh fully operational
in Khmer and English in 2016. MoC
Trade Information (includes ASEAN
National Trade Repository) website
fully operational
Certificates of Origin can be applied
for and processed online by 2015

2018 Cambodia import/export cost


reduced to 120% ASEAN-6 average
($552/container in Doing Business
2012)
2018 time for cargo release reduced
to ASEAN-6 average

Outcome 2: Trade Facilitation Reform

Website

GDCE, MoC, MAFF and


all other border agencies

MoC, GDCE, border


agencies

Relevant border agencies

MoC

CoM, MEF, MoC (2014)

All border agencies

All border agencies

468 Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018


GDCE

AEO regime in keeping with


Cambodian compliance management
needs is fully implemented by 2018
By June 2017, Cambodia has
notified the WTO of the
arrangements entered into with DPs
regarding TA needed to support
implementation of Category C
Actions

2018 Speed for trade logistics rises


to 25 Kmh, transport cost decreases
to $0.7/MT/Km, logistics cost
decreases to $0.15/MT/Km (at
constant prices)
Comprehensive plan has been
developed. Plan is linked to existing
ASEAN frameworks such as the
"Roadmap for the Integration of
Logistics Services"

On the two major land trade


corridors, average speed for trade
logistics is 22.15 Kmh, transport cost
is $0.11/MT/Km and logistics cost is
$0.2/MT/Km in 2012

10 | P a g e

Indicative Action 1:
A National Transportation Logistics
Plan is developed and implemented

No comprehensive plan formulated.

Outcome 3: Enhanced Trade Logistics

By June 2015, Cambodia has


notified the WTO as to which of its
trade facilitation reform actions fall
in Categories A, B, and C of the
Agreement respectively

GDCE, MoC, MAFF and


all other border agencies

Risk Management Systems is fully


implemented by all border agencies
and profiles are managed centrally
by 2018

Risk Management fully implemented


by Customs as of 2013. Some
progress by non-Customs agencies
but risk management
underdeveloped
AEO regime is not yet implemented

MoPWT, MEF, concerned


Line Ministries and
agencies

MoPWT, MEF, MoC,


MAFF

MoC, GDCE, border


agencies

MAFF

SPS certificates can be applied for


and processed on line

Sanitary and phytosanitary


certificates required for exports are
processed manually

GDCE, MoC, MAFF and


all other border agencies

National Single Window (NSW)


compliant with ASEAN
requirements has been implemented
by 2018

No National Single Window as of


2013. Issuance of key documents
partly automated.

Short-Term Actions: 2014-2016

Outcome 3: Trade Logistics


Cambodia increases its
competitiveness through improved
trade logistics

Indicative Action 5:
Establish an Authorized Economic
Operators (AEO) System
Indicative Action 6:
Cambodia is taking steps to
implement the WTO/Bali Agreement
on Trade Facilitation

Indicative Action 2:
Cambodia implements its updated
Trade Facilitation Action Plan
including establishment of a National
Single Window
Indicative Action 3:
Cambodia progresses towards full
computerization of trade related
documents
Indicative Action 4:
Extend Risk Management System to
non-Customs agencies

Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018

469

A system to collect pilferage


statistics is put in place by 2014 and
pilferage is substantially reduced by
2016

Cambodian ports offer competitive


fees compared to neighboring
countries. Sihanoukville costs are
lowered
Private Sector are involved in some
or all aspects of ports operations and
management
Full, regular scheduled rail freight
service between the two cities
operates by 2014

Pilferage is reported as a problem by


Private Sector operators

Port fees are set by the RGC

Some scheduled freight service by


rail between Sisophon and Phnom
Penh has commenced by 2016
Plan to expand rail link from Phnom
Penh to VIETNAM border finalized
and financing secured
A National Transportation Logistics
Plan is implemented with
performance indicators. Annual
reviews of indicators are carried out

Rebuilding or renovation of rail link


yet to be completed

No rail link

Comprehensive Plan has been


developed

Rail link has been rebuilt/renovated


and limited scheduled service
available

Ports are managed by Government

Cross-border agreements (bilateral


and regional) are fully enacted and
implemented, in cooperation with
neighboring countries.

Existing agreements have only


partial coverage and are not fully
implemented.

11 | P a g e

Indicative Action 1:
A National Transportation Logistics
Plan is implemented

Medium-Term Action: 2016-2018

Indicative Action 5:
Private Sector participate in ports
operation and management
Indicative Action 6:
Rail link between Phnom Penh and
Sihanoukville offers scheduled freight
service
Indicative Action 7:
Reopen rail connection between
Phnom Penh and Poipet to compete
with road transport
Indicative Action 8:
Develop rail link between Phnom
Penh and Vietnam border

Indicative Action 2:
Improved cross-border transport
agreements (road and waterways) are
negotiated with neighbors and
regional organization for an integrated
transport market
Indicative Action 3:
Carry out security review of
Sihanoukville and Phnom Penh Ports
and implement plan to reduce
pilferage in line with international
security standards
Indicative Action 4:
Liberalize port fees to increase
competitiveness

MoPWT, MEF, concerned


Line Ministries and
agencies

MoPWT, MEF

MoPWT

MoPWT

MEF, Port Authorities,


MoPWT

MEF, MoPWT, MoC, Port


Authorities

Port Authorities, in
coordination with other
border agencies

MEF, MoC, MoPWT,


MoFA, concerned Line
Ministries and agencies

470 Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018

12 | P a g e

Indicative Action 7:
Improve road between Phnom Penh
and Sihanoukville
Indicative Action 8:
Upgrade highways conditions
between Thai and Vietnamese borders

Indicative Action 6:
Investigate possibility of increasing
draft of Phnom Penh Port

Indicative Action 2:
Improve transport regulations on:
liabilities, axle loads limits, drivers'
qualifications and conditions, safety
standards
Indicative Action 3:
Work with ASEAN to establish a
regional third party liability insurance
scheme
Indicative Action 4:
Introduce road fleet modernizing
scheme
Indicative Action 5:
Increase draft capacity of
Sihanoukville Port
A policy for road fleet modernization
has been developed by RGC with
some clear targets identified
Dredging has been completed and
Sihanoukville Port provides access
to ships larger than 1000 TEU

No policy currently in place to


promote road fleet modernization.

Average road transport of 20


container between the two borders is
15 hours in 2013

Large sections of the highway


remain two lanes

Average road transport of 20


container between the two borders
lowered to 13 hours in 2018 as a
result of road improvements

Study possibility of dredging


Mekong river between Phnom Penh
and Saigon ports to enable barges
larger than 120 TEU
Four lane highway between Phnom
Penh and Sihanoukville completed

Third party liability insurance


scheme in place

No third party liability insurance


scheme in place

Current draft limited to ships less


than 1000 TEU. Additional dredging
in progress and new facilities under
construction
Phnom Penh Port can accept barges
less than 120 TEU

Regulations in line with international


standards are adopted and
implemented

Most regulations are lacking or need


to be reviewed

MoPWT, MEF

MoPWT, MEF

MoPWT, Phnom Penh


Port

MoPWT, Port of
Sihanoukville, MEF

MEF, MoPWT, MoC,


Trucking Industry

MEF, MoPWT

MoPWT, GDCE, MoC,


MoC/Camcontrol, MAFF

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13 | P a g e

Indicative Action 1:
Capacity of rice millers to meet basic
Hazard Analysis & Critical Control
Point (HACCP) or Good
Manufacturing Practice (GMP)
standards is developed through rice
mills certification program
Indicative Action 2:
Implementation of SPS standards
(HACCP or GMP) among marine
fishery product processors increases
resulting in improved export
competitiveness
Indicative Action 3:
Capacity of dried cassava processors
to meet basic GMP-based standards
developed through certification
program
Indicative Action 4:
Cambodia natural rubber value chain
produces high-quality products for
export markets

Certification system in place for


processors that produce for
demanding export markets in 2016

System to register quantities of


natural rubber by grade and price in
place and implemented by 2016

No system in place to monitor


quality of exported natural rubber

12 marine fishery product


processors HACCP/GMP certified in
2016

1 marine fishery product processor


HACCP/GMP certified in 2013

No certification system in place

10 Cambodia rice mills are HACCP


or GMP certified in 2016

The three ratios grows by a factor of


ten or more by 2018 indicating
significant shift from informal to
formal exports

No modern rice mills certified as of


2013 (one plant certified by ISC, but
ISC is not internationally accredited
as of yet so this certification has no
export value)

Short-Term Actions: 2014-2016

Ratios of formal exports of milled


rice, cassava, and corn to total
production of each in MT reflect,
indirectly, the ability of Cambodian
producers/exporters to meet some, if
limited, standards
2011Rice ratio: 0.0165
2011Cassava ratio: 0.0085
2011Corn ratio: 0.0497
(MoC for formal MT exports; AFSIS
for total MT production)

Private Sector, MAFF,


MoC, RRIC

Private Sector, MIH,


MAFF

Private Sector, MAFF/FiA

Private Sector, MIH,


MAFF

Private Sector, MAFF,


MoC, MIH

Outcome 4: Strengthened Capacity of Exporters to Meet Technical Standards and SPS Requirements

Outcome 4: Technical Standards


and SPS Requirements
The capacity of Cambodian exporters
to meet technical and SPS
requirements standards set by
importers and importing countries
increases

472 Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018


No formal system in place in 2013

The legal framework for SPS and


TBT has many gaps, inconsistencies,
unclear mandates, and quality issues.
It is neither WTO- nor ASEANcompliant
Law on Standards not WTOcompliant

Indicative Action 7:
Surveillance and testing of food
products

Indicative Action 8:
Legal review and recommendations
for improved SPS and TBT legislation

14 | P a g e

No national plan, no coordination

No formal system in place in 2013,


except for Avian Flu

Indicative Action 6:
Surveillance of trans-boundary animal
diseases

Indicative Action 9:
Amend legislation on Standards to
make it WTO-compliant
Indicative Action 10:
Strategy to support development of
regulatory SPS laboratories

No formal surveillance system in


2013

Indicative Action 5:
Surveillance of pests and diseases for
export crops, pesticides, and fertilizers
used in production areas for export

Laws on standards has been


amended and is WTO-compliant by
2016
Action Plan for development of
regulatory food testing laboratories
ready by 2016

Formal surveillance system in place


for plant pests and diseases and
pesticides as required by main
importers and compliant with
international standards, and regular
reporting to IPPC, ASEAN and
trading partners by 2016
Formal surveillance system in place
in targeted regions for FMD (foot
and mouth disease), CSF (classical
swine fever), and PRRS (porcine
reproductive and respiratory
syndrome). Evidence of regular
monitoring and reporting to OIE by
2016
Formal surveillance system in place
for markets, restaurants, and street
food with annual report on food
safety in Cambodia. Active
participation in The International
Food Safety Authorities Network
(INFOSAN) and ASEAN Rapid
Alert System for Food and Feed
(ARASFF) by 2016
An assessment with
recommendations for upgrading the
legislative framework for SPS and
TBT has been completed by 2015

MEF, MoC, MAFF, MIH,


MoH

MIH, CoM,

MoC, MAFF, MoH, MIH,


MoT, MEF, CoM,

MoC/Camcontrol, MoH

MAFF/DAHP

MAFF/GDA

Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018

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15 | P a g e

Indicative Action 4:
Surveillance of residues of veterinary
drugs and growth enhancers in meat
products and feed
Indicative Action 5:
FiA is upgraded, qualifies as
competent authority for EU, and
can support exports of fisheries
products to EU

Indicative Action 1:
Legal framework for conformity
assessment, accreditation for technical
standards and SPS
Indicative Action2:
Legal framework for food safety
upgraded, including adoption and
promulgation of modern food law
Indicative Action 3:
Surveillance and testing of primary
food products at primary production
and processing level

FiA has been recognized as EU


competent authority and can
support Cambodian exporters
targeting EU markets by 2018

Export of fisheries products to EU


not yet possible. Public management
of SPS for fisheries weak

No formal system in place in 2013

No formal system in place in 2013

No proper legal framework in place

Legal framework has been adopted


compliant with WTO/TBT and
ASEAN principles and good
international practice by 2018
Legal framework has been adopted
compliant with WTO/SPS and
ASEAN principles and good
international practice by 2018
Formal MAFF surveillance system
in place and evidence of regular
monitoring with contributions to
MoC and MoH for integration in the
on-going annual report on the food
safety situation in Cambodia and
reporting to INFOSAN and
ARASFF by 2018
Formal annual surveillance system in
place and evidence of regular
monitoring by 2018

No proper legal framework in place

Medium-Term Action: 2016-2018

MAFF/FiA

MAFF/DAHP

MAFF, MoC/Camcontrol,
MoH

MoC/Camcontrol, MoH,
MAFF, MIH, MoT, MEF,
CoM

MIH, MAFF, MoH, MoC,


CoM

474 Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018

16 | P a g e

Indicative Action 9:
Capacity of Corn drying, shelling,
and storage facilities to meet
GMP/HACCP certification
Indicative Action 10:
Quality and traceability of silk yarn
imports ensured

Lack of COs on most imported yarn

No facilities with GMP/HACCP


certification

Index from baseline survey of SPS


standards in hotel and restaurant
kitchen to be conducted by the Royal
Academy of Culinary Arts under
CEDEP-II. Also to use info from
voluntary Good Health Practice
(GHP) rating to be introduced by
MoH
Restaurant rating system being
prepared. No restaurants have
passed GHP/GMP audit. Low
hygiene standards in sector
No market access agreement in place
with SPS-demanding countries

Indicative Action 7:
SPS standards in kitchen in hotel and
restaurant improve through enhanced
training of existing and new kitchen
staff

Indicative Action 8:
Corn exports can meet SPS standards

Capacity of SPS Enquiry Point,


Notification Authority, Codex, IPPC
and OIE contact points very limited.

Indicative Action 6:
Effective SPS coordination in place

30% of imported yarn has a clear CO


in 2018.

MAFF, MoC

A Cambodia-China MoU on
phytosanitary requirements for
export of corn in place and
implemented by 2017
5 facilities with GMP/HACCP
certification by 2018

Private Sector, MoC,


MoWA,

Private Sector, MIH,


MAFF

Private Sector, MoH, MoT

Private Sector, MoH,


RACA, MoT

MoC, MAFF, MIH, MoH,


Private Sector

A rating system is in place. 200


restaurants have passed GHP/GMP
audits by 2018

SPS Enquiry Point and Notification


Authority in place with (i) up-to-date
website on SPS legislation and
import and export requirements
(could be part of National
Information Portal), and (ii)
notifications of new SPS measures
done as required by WTO.
National Codex Committee meets
regularly for food safety
coordination. CODEX, IPPC, and
OIE contact points functioning well
by 2018
Repeat baseline survey (CEDEP II)
by 2016-17

Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018

475

17 | P a g e

Indicative Action 13:


Cambodia progresses towards full
computerization of trade related
documents (same as Outcome 2, MT
Action 3)
Indicative Action 14:
Public funding of SPS and Technical
Standards related tasks enhanced

Indicative Action 11:


Safety among food processing
exporting facilities enhanced by
increased adoption of GMP and
HACCP certification
Indicative Action 12:
Risk management for SPS and TBT

An enhanced public funding outputbased system, including transparent,


advertised, WTO-compatible feesfor-services in place to secure
adequate resources for key SPS and
Technical Standard functions by
2018

MEF, MAFF, MoC, MIH,


MoH

MAFF

SPS certificates can be applied for


and processed on line

Funding for public goods,


including necessary SPS and
Technical Standards tasks is
inadequate

MEF, MAFF, MoC, MIH,


MoH

Risk profiles for products developed


and risk-based inspections
implemented by 2018

No risk-based inspections in place


for food safety, plant and animal
health, technical regulations, and
legal metrology
Sanitary and phytosanitary
certificates required for exports are
processed manually

Private Sector, MIH, MoH

Another 20 large food processing


facilities are certified against
international standards by 2018

7 large food processing facilities


have been certified recently under
HACCP, GMP, ISO 22000 or FSSC
22000 standards

476 Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018


2012 net FDI inflows were $1.5
billion

No comprehensive Industrial Policy


as of 2013, but early draft under
preparation. Current policy
environment lacks focus on
developing linkages between
exporters and domestic suppliers as
well as between investment
promotion and rules of origin

Indicative Action 2:
Measures developed to strengthen
linkages between foreign investors
and SMEs/domestic suppliers

18 | P a g e

Limited strategy and capacity in


place to address increased global
competition and fragmentation of
value chains

Indicative Action 1:
Development and initiation of a
National Investment Promotion
Strategy

Short-Term Actions: 2014-2016

Outcome 5: Investment
Environment for Exports
The environment for investment in the
ten DTIS 2013 focus export sectors
strengthened

Private Sector, CDC,


MIH, MAFF, other
concerned Line Ministries

Formulation and initial


CDC, MoC, MIH, MAFF,
implementation of a comprehensive
SNEC
National Investment Promotion
Strategy. Strategy includes proactive
and targeted promotion measures,
including focus on: CTIS 2014-2018
ten priority sectors; measures
intended to promote investment in
clusters of domestic suppliers to
support key export sectors; and,
capacity development among policy
makers. National Investment
Promotion Strategy fully aligned
with Law on SEZs and Industrial
Policy
Industrial Policy fully developed and SNEC, MEF, CDC, MoC
adopted by 2016. Policy includes
clear tools to support development of
clusters of domestic suppliers in the
ten CTIS 2014-2018 priority sectors.
Investment promotion coordinated
with Rules of Origin so as to attract
producers of inputs used in
garments, footwear, bicycles and
other emerging manufacturing export
sectors

Net FDI inflows grow 25% annual


average between 2014-2018 to triple
to $4.5 billion

Outcome 5: Improved Investment Environment for Exports

Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018

477

Law approved by Parliament and


signed into Law by 2016

Inputs used in the production of


exports, whether imported or
produced domestically, are exempt
from duties and VAT for all exports
irrespective of sectors

Draft amended law exist in 2013

Early draft exists as of 2013

The Anukret implementing the


Investment Law provides for dutyfree import of materials needed by
supporting industries in the
production of output sold to
exporters. There is no provision for
VAT exemption but it can be
negotiated on a case-by-case basis

19 | P a g e

Indicative Action 1:
Implementation of a National
Investment Promotion Strategy

Strategy has been developed and the


basic elements are in place

MEF

MoC, CoM

CDC, CoM

CDC, CoM

CDC, MoI, MAFF, MIH,


MoC, SNEC

Full implementation of the National


CDC, MoC, MIH, MAFF,
Investment Promotion Strategy by
SNEC
2018. Significant increases in FDI in
several of the ten priority export
sectors in CTIS 2014-2018

Law approved by Parliament and


signed into Law by 2016

Draft text exists in 2013

Indicative Action 4:
Finalize and promulgate Law on SEZs
(same as Outcome 1, ST Action 4)
Indicative Action 5:
Finalize and promulgate revised
Investment Law (same as Outcome 1,
ST Action 5)
Indicative Action 6:
Finalize and promulgate Law on
Competition (same as Outcome 1, ST
Action 5)
Indicative Action 7:
Ensure that all exported goods are
exempt from paying VAT on all
production inputs, whether imported
or purchased domestically

Medium-Term Action: 2016-2018

Provincial Business Score Cards are


updated every two years and serve as
basis for the formulation of
provincial investment promotion
program
Law approved by Parliament and
signed into Law by 2016

Little capacity in place and few


provincial investment promotion
programs

Indicative Action 3:
Strengthened investment promotion
and facilitation capacity of provincial
authorities

478 Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018


Capacity and strategies developed,
but activities need to be more
proactive

Indicative Action 3:
Leveraging the investment promotion
and facilitation capacity of provincial
authorities

705 new trade and service marks


registered by Cambodian businesses
in 2012
192 industrial designs registered as
of 2012, including 25 local designs

Indicative Action 2:
Finalize and promulgate Law on
Geographical Indications
Indicative Action 3:
Finalize and promulgate Law on
Integrated Circuits and Layout
Designs

Indicative Action 1:
Stronger legal system for IP education
and enforcement in place

Drafting under way

Draft text available as of 2013

Draft Anukret in CoM

Draft Anukret in CoM

Short-Term Actions: 2014-2016

Outcome 6: Intellectual Property


Rights
A modern, trade-supportive
intellectual property rights framework
is established, implemented, and
enforced

20 | P a g e

As a result of the implementation of


the new Industrial Policy, significant
new Cambodian and Foreign
investment in parts supply serving
leading manufacturing export
sectors, especially garments,
footwear, and bicycle parts,
including as a result of focused
investment promotion in those
sectors
Provincial investment promotion
activities lead to increased Private
Sector investment at provinciallevel, growing 25% annually by
2018
CDC, MoI, MAFF, MIH,
MoC, SNEC

CDC, MEF, SNEC,


Private Sector

Law approved by Parliament and


signed into Law by 2016

MIH, CoM

MoC, CoM

NCIPR, CoM

NCIPR, CoM

MIH, NCIPR, Private


Sector

60 local designs registered by 2018

Anukret establishing a Sub-National


Committee on IP Education, and
Awareness is adopted
Anukret establishing a Sub-National
Committee on Enforcement of IP
laws and rules
Law approved by Parliament and
signed into Law by 2016

MoC, NCIPR, Private


Sector

Over 1,200 new marks registered by


Cambodian businesses during 2018

Outcome 6: Establishing a Trade-Supportive Framework for Intellectual Property Rights

Some emergence of domestic parts


suppliers in garments, footwear and
bicycles.

Indicative Action 2:
Enhanced policy resulting in growing
linkages between foreign
investors/exporters and
SMEs/domestic suppliers

Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018

479

21 | P a g e

Indicative Action 2:
Implementation of National IP
Strategy for Cambodia well under
way
Indicative Action 3:
Quality of human and IT resources in
IP sector is enhanced

Indicative Action 1:
Align exhaustion clause included in
key IPR legislation (Copyright,
Trademark, Patents and Industrial
Design) with needs of AEC
integration.

The Anukrets creating the NCIPRs


two sub-committees have been
adopted

Key IPR legislations covering


Copyright, Trademark, Patents and
Industrial Design include exhaustion
clauses that may be in conflict with
principles at the core of AEC
integration to which Cambodia is
committed
A National IP Strategy for Cambodia
developed in March 2013

A clear human and IT resources


development plan has been designed,
is financed, and is implemented in
the key IP Offices with a focus on
training/retraining three groups of
professionals:
1. IP Offices staff
2. Officers in IP Border Agencies
3. Judges and practicing lawyers
The plan includes also upgrading of
IT resources

NCIPR, MoC, MIH,


MoCFA, MAFF, MoT,
MoEYS, MoH,
enforcement agencies
NCIPR, MoC, MIH,
MoCFA, IP Border
Agencies, Judicial system

MIH, CoM

50% of the 48 Actions identified in


the National IP Strategy have been
implemented

Law approved by Parliament and


signed into Law by 2016

Drafting under way

MIH, CoM

NCIPR, MoC, MIH,


MoCFA, CoM

Anukret adopted by Government

Drafting under way

MoC, CoM

Exhaustion clauses in current legal


texts or laws have been aligned,
modified, or eliminated, as needed,
as they apply to countries within
AEC by 2018

Law approved by Parliament and


signed into Law by 2016

Draft submitted to CoM in 2013

Medium-Term Action: 2016-2018

Indicative Action 4:
Finalize and promulgate Law on
Trade Secrets and Undisclosed
Information
Indicative Action 5:
Anukret on the Law on Seed Varieties
Indicative Action 6:
Finalize and promulgate Law on
Compulsory Licensing for Public
Health

480 Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018

22 | P a g e

Indicative Action 3:
Invest in a positive Made in
Cambodia brand promoting labor
compliance and quality

Indicative Action 2:
Cambodia is known for the Better
Factories initiative and its compliance
with labor laws

Indicative Action 1:
TVET programs are established to
meet need in technical and
engineering personnel in garments,
footwear, and SEZ sectors (same as
Outcome 17, ST Action 2)
There are 32 Better Factories
Cambodia (BFC) indicators
measuring compliance with legal
requirements relating to workers
conditions and rights. Those are
reported annually in the
BFC Synthesis Report
No industry-wide branding

National manufacturing brand and


logo adopted and used on all export
shipments by 2016

GMACs training institute is


operational. Between 100 to 200
garment sector professionals per
year are getting ASEAN-accredited
(level 1) training in operator
training, machine mechanic, pattern
making, merchandising and other
skills relevant to the sector
Compliance remains at 2013 level or
better

Garment sector requires diversified


skills and accreditation of workforce
based on AFTEX ASEAN. The
sector lacks an established TVET
infrastructure. GMAC is in the
process of establishing a training
institute

24 MT of fabric produced by five


local producers. No local production
of yarn/thread as of early 2013 (May
2013 MoC Survey)

12% export growth per annum


during 2014-2018. No single market
accounts for more than 40% of total
exports by 2018
Domestic production of fabric
increases at average annual rate of
20% between 2014 and 2018. Local
production of yarn/thread
commenced

Outcome 7: Garments
9% export growth per annum during
2007-2011. Share of US exports was
approximately 60% in 2011

Short-Term Actions: 2014-2016

Outcome 7: Garment
Cambodia continues to grow and
diversify its garment export sector
through targeting new markets,
increasing domestic inputs, and
expanding in higher value products

Private Sector, GMAC,


MoC, MIH

Private Sector, GMAC,


MoC, MIH

GMAC, Training Service


Providers, AFTEX

Private Sector, MoC, MIH

Private Sector, MoC,


MIH, GMAC

Pillar 2: Expanding and Diversifying Cambodias Export Base Through


Strengthening Supply in Current and New Sectors, Entering New Markets, and Moving up Value Chains

Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018

481

The Anukret implementing the


Investment Law provides for dutyfree import of materials needed by
supporting industries in the
production of output sold to
exporters. There is no provision for
VAT exemption but it can be
negotiated on a case-by-case basis
Issuance of Certificates of Origin is
manual. CO only issued after
shipment and often takes 5 10
days, leading to delays in the transfer
of documents to buyer and payment
to exporter
The May 2009 Prakas 483 issued by
MEF suspend the monthly advance
profit tax for footwear until 2015

23 | P a g e

Indicative Action 1:
Cambodia diversifies its garment
product mix with more value-added
activities performed in factories
Indicative Action 2:
Enhanced policy resulting in growing
linkages between foreign
investors/exporters and
SMEs/domestic suppliers (same as
Outcome 5, MT Action 2)

As a result of the implementation of


the new Industrial Policy, significant
new Cambodian and Foreign
investment in parts supply serving
leading manufacturing export
sectors, especially garments,
footwear, and bicycle parts,
including as a result of focused
investment promotion in those
sectors

Some emergence of domestic parts


suppliers in garments, footwear and
bicycles

MEF

Monthly advance profit tax


suspended beyond 2015

CDC, MEF, SNEC,


Private Sector

Private Sector, GMAC,


MoC, MIH,

MoC

Certificates of Origin can be applied


for and processed online by 2015

Less than 50% of garment factories


operate on a cut-make-trim basis
only by 2018

MEF

Inputs used in the production of


exports, whether imported or
produced domestically, are exempt
from duties and VAT for all exports
irrespective of sectors

Up to 75% of garment factories


operate on a cut-make-trim basis
only (GMAC)

Medium-Term Action: 2016-2018

Indicative Action 6:
Monthly advance profit tax suspended
beyond 2015

Indicative Action 5:
Further improvements in the
efficiency and timeliness of
Cambodias export services (same as
Outcome 2, ST Action 2)

Indicative Action 4:
Ensure that all exported goods are
exempt from paying VAT on all
production inputs, whether imported
or purchased domestically (same as
Outcome 5, ST Action 7)

482 Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018


Cambodias footwear exports grow
by 25% per annum between 2014
and 2018
Share of UK and German markets is
reduced to 20% of Cambodian
footwear exports in 2018

24 | P a g e

Indicative Action 3:
Cambodia known for the Better
Factories initiative and its compliance
with labor laws (same as Outcome 7,
ST Action 2)

Indicative Action 1:
The industry develops its promotion
and coordination capacity through an
appropriate representative body
(either GMAC or FOCC)
Indicative Action 2:
TVET programs are established to
meet need in technical and
engineering personnel in garments,
footwear, and SEZ sectors (same as
Outcome 17, ST Action 2)

GMAC organizes participation of the


footwear sector to 3 established
international footwear-specific
events (fairs, etc.) every year by
2016
GMACs training institute is
operational. Between 100 to 200
garment sector professionals per
year are getting ASEAN-accredited
(level 1) training in operator
training, machine mechanic, pattern
making, merchandising and other
skills relevant to the sector
Compliance remains at 2013 level or
better

Very limited promotion of the


footwear sector through international
events

Outcome 8: Footwear

Average annual rate of growth in


imported inputs during 2014-2018
period less than average annual rate
of growth in 2007-2011 period

Cambodias footwear exports grew


by 76% per annum between 2008
and 2011
The UK and German markets
captured 32% share of Cambodian
exports in 2011

Imported inputs (aggregate HS 50


60) grew at an average annual rate of
15% over 2007-2011 period
(Comtrade)

There are 32 Better Factories


Cambodia (BFC) indicators
measuring compliance with legal
requirements relating to workers
conditions and rights. Those are
reported annually in the
BFC Synthesis Report

Garment sector requires diversified


skills and accreditation of workforce
based on AFTEX ASEAN. The
sector lacks an established TVET
infrastructure. GMAC is in the
process of establishing a training
institute

Short-Term Actions: 2014-2016

Outcome 8: Footwear
Cambodia continues to grow and
diversify its footwear export sector
through targeting new markets and
developing new market segments

Indicative Action 3:
Garment sector reduces its reliance on
imported inputs for production

Private Sector, GMAC,


MoC, MIH

GMAC, Training Service


Providers, AFTEX

Private Sector, GMAC,


MIH

Private Sector, MoC,


MIH, GMAC

Private Sector, MoC,


MIH, GMAC

Private Sector, MoC,


GMAC, MIH

Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018

483

The May 2009 Prakas 483 issued by


MEF suspend the monthly advance
profit tax for footwear until 2015

The Anukret implementing the


Investment Law provides for dutyfree import of materials needed by
supporting industries in the
production of output sold to
exporters. There is no provision for
VAT exemption but it can be
negotiated on a case-by-case basis
Issuance of Certificates of Origin is
manual in 2013. CO reform plan
introduced by MoC in November
2013

25 | P a g e

Indicative Action 2:
Clusters of suppliers (i.e. tannery,
rubber processors) and assemblers are
developed in Cambodia so that the
Cambodian footwear industry
produces more of the final footwear
product, in particular for contract
manufacturers

Indicative Action 1:
Enhanced policy resulting in growing
linkages between foreign
investors/exporters and
SMEs/domestic suppliers (same as
Outcome 5, MT Action 2)

The ratio of footwear related exportto-import was 16 in 2011 (TradeMap


data.) Imports include footwear
components and leather

Some emergence of domestic parts


suppliers in garments, footwear and
bicycles

Medium-Term Action: 2016-2018

Indicative Action 5:
Further improvements in the
efficiency and timeliness of
Cambodias export services (same as
Outcome 2, ST Action 2)
Indicative Action 6:
Monthly advance profit tax suspended
beyond 2015

Indicative Action 4:
Ensure that all exported goods are
exempt from paying VAT on all
production inputs, whether imported
or purchased domestically (same as
Outcome 5, ST Action 7)

As a result of the implementation of


the new Industrial Policy, significant
new Cambodian and Foreign
investment in parts supply serving
leading manufacturing export
sectors, especially garments,
footwear, and bicycle parts,
including as a result of focused
investment promotion in those
sectors
The ratio of footwear related exportto-import increases to 25 by 2018
(TradeMap data)

Private Sector, MoC,


GMAC, MIH

CDC, MEF, SNEC,


Private Sector

MEF

MoC

Certificates of Origin can be applied


for and processed online by 2015

Monthly advance profit tax


suspended beyond 2015

MEF

Inputs used in the production of


exports, whether imported or
produced domestically, are exempt
from duties and VAT for all exports
irrespective of sectors

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Indicative Action 3:
Investment incentives specifically
targeting the footwear industry in
Cambodia are monitored, extended
and improved
Indicative Action 4:
Increase the availability of finance to
support the development of contract
manufacturers and support quality and
capacity improvements
Indicative Action 5:
Vocational training targeting the
footwear industry is developed in
cooperation between the Government,
GMAC, FOCC and footwear
companies to support the promotion
of Cambodian workers to
management and mid-management
positions
The number of footwear factories in
Cambodia increases by 25 percent
including a number of contract
manufacturers, between 2014 and
2018
The number of foreign employees in
the staff of footwear factories
decreases to 10% by 2018

Cambodia had 47 footwear factories


in 2012, and no contract
manufacturers

The percentage of foreign employees


in the staff of footwear factories was
19% in 2011 (GMAC)

Investment in the footwear sector in


Cambodia doubles between 2014
and 2018

Foreign direct investment in the


footwear sector in Cambodia in 2012
totaled $137 million

Private Sector, MoC,


GMAC, MIH

Private Sector, MoC,


GMAC, MIH

MoC, MIH

Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018

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5% of employees in SEZ have


received training abroad by 2016

1% of employees in SEZ received


training abroad in 2012

Private Sector, CDC,


MIH, MoC, MoLVT,
MoEYS

CDC, CoM

CDC, CoM

CDC, GDCE, MoC, MIH


and other border control
Line Ministries

All Government officials posted in


One-Stop Service Shops located in
SEZs have received specific training.
Quality of service to investors has
improved (data to be collected
through short survey)
Law approved by Parliament and
signed into Law by 2016
Law approved by Parliament and
signed into Law by 2016

Draft text exists in 2013

Indicative Action 2:
Finalize and promulgate Law on SEZs
(same as Outcome 1, ST Action 4)
Indicative Action 3:
Finalize and promulgate revised
Investment Law (same as Outcome 1,
ST Action 5)
Indicative Action 4:
Training of Cambodian workers in
Thailand, Vietnam, China and Japan
is supported to facilitate technology
transfer

CDC, GDCE, MoC, MIH

Private Sector, CDC, MoC

Private Sector, CDC, MoC

Private Sector, CDC,


MIH, MoC

All factories in SEZs can engage


sub-contractors outside their zone
and can freely move goods back and
forth between them and their subcontractors as required

The contribution of manufacturing to


GDP (exclusive of garment and
footwear) increases to 7% by 2018
140 light manufacturing companies
operators in Cambodian SEZs in
2018
The number of SEZs with active
investors doubles to 16 by 2018

Draft amended law exist in 2013

It currently takes 2 days for a


company to prepare documents and
obtain clearance to move goods
outside the Manhattan SEZs for
treatment by sub-contractors (data
from CTIS 2014-2018 field survey)
Most Government officials posted in
the One-Stop Service Shop located
in SEZs do not receive specific
training. Quality of service is
uneven.

Indicative Action 1:
Requirements governing the
movement of goods from SEZ
factories to sub-contractors outside
the SEZ (e.g. wash garments or paint
bikes) and back to the SEZ contractor
are clarified, streamlined and
implemented consistently

Short-Term Actions: 2014-2016

8 SEZs with active investors in 2012

2012 contribution of manufacturing


to GDP (exclusive of garment and
footwear) approximately 5%
69 light manufacturing operators in
Cambodian SEZs in 2012

Outcome 9: SEZs Operations and Light Manufacturing Assembly

Outcome 9A: SEZs


Cambodias SEZs improve their
competitiveness and attract more
manufacturing investment to become
nodes in regional production networks

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28 | P a g e

Indicative Action 2:
TVET and other educational
programs, in part linked to SEZ,
established to improve workers skills
and supply of new technical and
engineering personnel
Indicative Action 3:
Engineering curriculums strengthened
in Universities (same as Outcome 17,
MT Action 4)

Indicative Action 1:
Access, cost and reliability of
electricity in SEZ improves

The number of engineering


graduates in Cambodia in 2008 was
514 (World Bank survey)

2011 electricity price from


Electricit du Cambodge is $0.23 per
Kwh and can reach around $0.40 per
Kwh or more when self-generated
Cambodian managers and
supervisors in firms located in SEZs
represent 1% of the firms total
workforce in 2013 (CTIS 2014-2018
- SEZ field survey)

MoPWT, MEF

The number of Cambodian engineer


graduates triples from 2008

MoLVT, MoEYS, MIH,


Private Sector

MoLVT, MoEYS,
Private Sector, SEZs

Plan to expand rail link from Phnom


Penh to Vietnam border finalized
and financing secured

No rail link

MoPWT

The percentage of Cambodian


managers and mid-level managers in
firms located in SEZs has risen to
10% by 2018

Some scheduled rail freight service


between Sisophon and Phnom Penh
has commenced by 2016

Rebuilding and renovation of rail


link yet to be completed

SEZs, Private Sector


associations, NEA,
MoLVT

SEZs, CDC, EDC

All SEZs have training facilities


(PPP or otherwise) with curriculums
that meet ASEAN standards

No training facilities in SEZs to


assist investors in building a skilled
labor force

SEZs, CDC, Electricit du


Cambodge

Electricity price falls by 1/3 in SEZs,


down to $0.16 per Kwh for
Electricit du Cambodge by 2018

Companies in the four major SEZs


do not face any power interruption

Companies in Manhattan SEZ face


40-50 power interruptions a week on
average

Medium-Term Action: 2016-2018

Indicative Action 5:
The reliability of electricity supply
inside SEZs is improved to support
the automation of production
processes
Indicative Action 6:
Vocational training centers in place in
SEZs to support increase in number of
trained Cambodian tech personnel for
SEZ sector (same as See Outcome 17
ST Action 2)
Indicative Action 7:
Reopen rail connection between
Phnom Penh and Poipet to compete
with road transport (same as Outcome
3, ST Action 7)
Indicative Action 8:
Develop rail link between Phnom
Penh and Vietnam border (same as
Outcome 3, ST Action 8)

Indicative Action 2:
Further improvements in the
efficiency and timeliness of
Cambodias export services. (same as
Outcome 2, ST Action 2)
Indicative Action 3:
The procurement-to-delivery time in
SEZs improves to enable Cambodias
integration in supply chains

29 | P a g e

Indicative Action 1:
Ensure that all exported goods are
exempt from paying VAT on all
production inputs, whether imported
or purchased domestically (same as
Outcome 5, ST Action 7)

Average 2012 procurement-todelivery time is between 3 and 4


months for electronic orders (Survey
of Sihanoukville and Manhattan
SEZs)

The Anukret implementing the


Investment Law provides for dutyfree import of materials needed by
supporting industries in the
production of output sold to
exporters. There is no provision for
VAT exemption but it can be
negotiated on a case-by-case basis
Issuance of Certificates of Origin is
manual in 2013. CO reform plan
introduced by MoC in November
2013

Procurement-to-delivery time in
2016 in all SEZs is on par with
Thailand and Malaysia (3 months)

Certificates of Origin can be applied


for and processed online by 2015

GDCE, MoC, MIH,


GDCE, Ports, Airports,
MoPWT

MoC

MEF

Private Sector, CDC,


MIH, MoC

Light manufacturing exports from


Cambodia triple to $1 billion by
2018

Inputs used in the production of


exports, whether imported or
produced domestically, are exempt
from duties and VAT for all exports
irrespective of sectors

Private Sector, CDC,


MIH, MoC

MoPWT, MEF

MoPWT, MEF

The contribution of manufacturing to


GDP (exclusive of garment and
footwear) increases to 7%

Average road transport of 20


container between the two borders
lowered to 13 hours in 2018 as a
result of road improvements

Average road transport of 20


container between the two borders is
15 hours in 2012
In 2012, the contribution of
manufacturing to GDP (exclusive of
garment and footwear) was
approximately 5%
In 2012, Cambodia exported
$376 million worth of light
manufacturing exports (excluding
garment and footwear)

Four lane highway between Phnom


Penh and Sihanoukville completed

Large sections of the highway


remain two lanes

Short-Term Actions: 2014-2016

Outcome 9B: Light Manufacturing


Assembly
Cambodia emerges as a node in
regional production networks

Indicative Action 4:
Improve road between Phnom Penh
and Sihanoukville (same as Outcome
3, MT Action 7)
Indicative Action 5:
Upgrade highways conditions
between Thai and Vietnamese borders
(same as Outcome 3, MT Action 8)

Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018

487

488 Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018


In 2011 the processed food,
beverage, and tobacco industries
accounted for 2.3 % of GDP.
Exports were estimated at $71.5
million (NIS and Comtrade)

30 | P a g e

Indicative Action 1:
National policy promoting agroprocessing development in Cambodia

Donors have worked in the past with


MIH on development of an AgroIndustry Development Strategic Plan
(AIDSP)

Short-Term Actions: 2014-2016

Outcome 10: Processed Food


Cambodia continues to grow and
diversify its processed food sector
through new export markets, moving
to higher value products, and
expanding domestic inputs

Private Sector, CDC,


MoC, MIH

The value of Cambodian bike


exports triples from 2012 by 2018

A national policy is established,


implemented, and reviewed annually
by 2016

In 2018 the processed food, beverage


and tobacco industry accounts for
4% of GDP. Exports reach $200
million or more by 2018

SNEC, MIH, Private


Sector, MAFF, MoC

Private Sector, MAFF,


MIH, MoH, MoC

Private Sector, CDC,


MoC, MIH
Private Sector, CDC,
MoC, MIH

CDC, MEF, SNEC,


Private Sector

As a result of the implementation of


the new Industrial Policy, significant
new Cambodian and Foreign
investment in parts supply serving
leading manufacturing export
sectors, especially garments,
footwear, and bicycle parts,
including as a result of focused
investment promotion in those
sectors
The electronic and electric
component export-to-import ratio in
2018 rises to 0.1
The bicycle and parts export-toimport ratio in 2018 rises to 5

Outcome 10: Processed Food

The electronic and electric


component export-to-import ratio in
2012 was 0.02 (TradeMap data)
The bicycle and parts export-toimport ratio in 2012 was 1.11
(TradeMap data)
The value of Cambodian bike
exports was $109 million in 2011
and $291 million in 2012

Indicative Action 2:
Clusters of suppliers and assemblers
are promoted so that Cambodia can
mature from part assembler to
producing final products

Indicative Action 3:
Cambodias bike sector continues to
grow rapidly

Some emergence of domestic parts


suppliers in garments, footwear and
bicycles

Indicative Action 1:
Enhanced policy resulting in growing
linkages between foreign
investors/exporters and
SMEs/domestic suppliers (same as
Outcome 5, MT Action 2)

Medium-Term Action: 2016-2018

Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018

489

No recognized industry association


exists in 2012. A Working Group on
Agriculture & Agro-Industry does
convene under the GovernmentPrivate Sector Forum
No national branding exists for local
processed food and beverage sector

7 large food processing facilities


have been certified recently under
HACCP, GMP, ISO 22000 or FSSC
22000 standards

Indicative Action 3:
Safety among food processing
exporting facilities enhanced by
increased adoption of GMP and
HACCP certification (same as
Outcome 4, MT Action 11)

31 | P a g e

Indicative Action 2:
Further Private Sector investment in
the processed food sector encouraged,
with a strong interest from foreign
investors

56 large processing factories


registered in 2011:
Food = 30 Factories
Beverage = 15 Factories
Tobacco = 11 Factories
(MIH)
Approved investment projects with
total fixed assets of $ 74.7 million
between 2000 and June 2010 (CDC)
Of total investment, $21.5 million
(or 28.7%) was FDI

Indicative Action 1:
Policy and regulatory environment
favorable to Private Sector investment
in Cambodias food processing
industry

Medium-Term Action: 2016-2018

Indicative Action 3:
A national brand/logo established for
processed food industry and used to
promote Made in Cambodia on
international markets and trade fairs

Indicative Action 2:
Improved collaboration between
government and Private Sectors on
processed food sector development

Private Sector, MIH,


MoC, CDC

Approved investment in food


processing sector reaches
$100 million between 2014-2018
FDI accounts for 50% of total fixed
assets in food processing sector over
2014-2018
Another 20 large food processing
facilities are certified against
international standards by 2018

Private Sector, MIH, MoH

Private Sector, MIH,


MoC, CDC

Private Sector, MIH, MoC

Private Sector, MIH, MoC

A national Made in Cambodia


brand and logo is in use on exported
processed food and beverage
products by 2016

100 large processing factories


registered in 2018 across the food,
beverage and tobacco industry

Private Sector, MAFF,


MIH, MoC

National processed food industry


association established in 2016
representing medium and large
processors with export potential

490 Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018


Product-specific processor
associations exist in three coastal
provinces. Community Fisheries
organizations participate in comanagement of inland water
resources. No single national
association exists
No clear pathway exists to increase
food safety or regulatory compliance
with international standards

32 | P a g e

Indicative Action 1:
Implementation of SPS standards
(HACCP or GMP) among marine
fishery product processors increases
resulting in improved export
competitiveness (same as Outcome 4,
ST Action 2)
Indicative Action 2:
FiA is upgraded, qualifies as
competent authority for EU, and
can support exports of fisheries
products to EU (same as Outcome 4,
MT Action 5)

FiA has been recognized as EU


competent authority and can
support Cambodian exporters
targeting EU markets by 2018

Export of fisheries products to EU


not yet possible. Public management
of SPS for fisheries weak

MAFF/FiA

Private Sector, MAFF/FiA

Private Sector, MoC,


MAFF/FiA, MIH

Trade facilitation and export


guidelines published by 2015,
including on introducing SPS and
HACCP compliance as well as
improving industry practice in the
Cambodian fisheries sector
12 marine fishery product
processors HACCP/GMP certified in
2018

Private Sector, MoC,


MAFF/FiA, MIH

Private Sector,
MAFF/FiA, MIH

National fisheries association


established by 2015 to drive Private
Sector collaboration, investment, and
export-oriented industry reform

1 marine fishery product processor


HACCP/GMP certified in 2013

Medium-Term Action: 2016-2018

Indicative Action 2:
Increased understanding of and
compliance with regulatory standards
of key importing countries

Indicative Action 1:
A coordinated and export-oriented
value chain

100,000 MT of recorded fish exports


in 2018.

Outcome 11: Fisheries Products


21,000 MT of recorded fish exports
in 2012.

Short-Term Actions: 2014-2016

Outcome 11: Fisheries Products


A sustainable fisheries sector sees
Cambodian exports increase as a
result of improved quality, growing
production volumes, and strengthened
access to markets

Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018

491

Approximately 350,000MT of milled


rice exported in 2013

33 | P a g e

Indicative Action 1:
Rice farmer cooperatives established
to facilitate technical exchanges,
financing, extension services and
stronger linkages with rice millers
Indicative Action 2:
Dry-season production improves
through introduction of improved dryseason seeds, including high value
fragrant seeds

50,000 MT of rice delivered to


millers under contract farming by
2016.

Allow Private Sector competition in


seeds production

Negligible amount of paddy


delivered to millers under contract
farming in 2013

CARDI has de-facto monopoly in


seeds production

More than 1 million MT of milled


rice exported in 2018

Outcome 12: Milled Rice

Consistent formal (recorded) fish


exports between $5 to $10 million to
5 key markets

Fish export to key regional markets


are sporadic and inconsistent from
year to year

MAFF

Private Sector, MoC,


MAFF

Private Sector, MoC,


MAFF, SNEC

Private Sector, MAFF/FiA

Private Sector, MOC,


MAFF/FiA, MRD

MEF

All exported fish products are


exempt from paying VAT

Total aquaculture production (inland


and marine) reaches 200,000 MT in
2018

Private Sector, MoC,


MAFF/FiA, MIH

Fisheries resource management


regime established and implemented,
environmental guidelines developed
for fisheries processors and exporters

Total aquaculture production (inland


and marine) of 74,000 MT in 2012

General awareness of environmental


degradation and reductions in highvalue fish stocks. No action plans or
environmental guidelines exist at
individual firm level
Government currently charges 10%
VAT on exports

Short-Term Actions: 2014-2016

Outcome 12: Milled Rice


Cambodia achieves the 1 million MT
target for export of milled rice set out
under the RGC 2010 Rice Policy

Indicative Action 4:
Ensure that all exported fish products
are exempt from paying VAT (same
as Outcome 5, ST Action 7)
Indicative Action5:
Development of sustainable fisheries
resources, especially in relation to
aquaculture
Indicative Action 6:
Recorded exports of fish products
shipped to a diverse mix of countries,
including countries with SPS
requirements less rigorous than EU

Indicative Action 3:
A sustainable approach to fisheries
activities and industry management

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34 | P a g e

MoUs with key regional markets


Indonesia, Philippines and Malaysia
to facilitate reliable rice trade by
2016. MoUs with trading partners in
key growth regions, such as GCC
states, CIS and West Africa to
facilitate reliable trade by 2016

No agreements with other countries


in the region, except MoU
Cambodia-China on SPS

No modern rice mills certified as of


2012 (one plant certified by ISC, but
ISC is not internationally accredited
as of yet so this certification has no
export value)

Indicative Action 5:
Capacity of rice millers to meet basic
Hazard Analysis & Critical Control
Point (HACCP) or Good
Manufacturing Practice (GMP)
standards is developed through rice
mills certification program (same as
Outcome 4, ST Action 1)
Indicative Action 6: Improved crossborder transport agreements (road and
waterways) are negotiated with
neighbors and regional organization
for an integrated transport market
including improved third-country
transit arrangements and port access
(same as Outcome 3, ST Action 2)
Indicative Action 7:
Bilateral agreements or MoUs signed
with key regional markets as well as
other possible growth markets to
provide more predictable access to the
regional markets

Cross-border agreements (bilateral


and regional) are fully enacted and
implemented, in cooperation with
neighboring countries

No national brand/logo exists for


fragrant rice exports

Indicative Action 4:
National brand/logo established to
market fragrant rice exports with
branding linked to export standards

A single national federation


established by 2016 representing all
exporters. Private Sector through
federation is directly engaged in
periodical review of rice policy with
Government. G-PSF Working
Group #9 is revitalized
Brand / logo adopted by all fragrant
rice exporters by 2016. Guidelines
published outlining criteria and
required standards for millers to be
entitled to logo use
10 Cambodia rice mills that are
HACCP or GMP certified in 2016

Existing agreements have only


partial coverage and are not fully
implemented

Working Group #9 on Rice is


organized under G-PSF. However,
at least 3 fragmented exporter
associations exist, impeding
cooperation and public-private
dialogue

Indicative Action 3:
Effective dialogue between
Government and rice sector is in place

MAFF, MoC, MoFA

MEF, MoC, MoPWT,


MoFA, concerned Line
Ministries and agencies

Private Sector, MIH,


MAFF

Private Sector, MAFF,


MIH, MoC

Private Sector, MoC,


MAFF, SNEC

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35 | P a g e

Indicative Action 14:


Ensure that all exported milled rice is
exempt from paying VAT whether
exported by rice millers or via third
party exporters (same as Outcome 5,
ST Action 7)

Indicative Action 13:


Rice millers can produce electricity
using rice husk as biofuel

Indicative Action 12:


Restrictions on daytime truck traffic
through Phnom Penh have been eased

Indicative Action 8:
Introduce price competition in
fumigation
Indicative Action 9:
Cambodia progresses towards full
computerization of trade related
documents (same as Outcome 2, ST
Action 2)
Indicative Action 10:
Cost of export procedures reduced
Indicative Action 11:
Rail link between Phnom Penh and
Poipet renovated (same as Outcome 3,
ST Action 7)
Cost of trade facilitation reduced by
half
Renovation of rail between Sisophon
and Phnom Penh completed.
Scheduled rail freight service
between Battambang and Phnom
Penh operates by 2016 and offers
alternative/competing land transport
for agricultural commodities like
cassava and rice
Restrictions have been eased by
reducing ban to 6.00am-7.00pm
and/or establishing one or two
daytime corridors for trucks
Policy has been introduced for EDC
to buy-back excess electricity
produced by small producers

Current trade facilitation cost is


$11/MT
Renovation of rail link between
Poipet and Phnom Penh under way

All exported milled rice is exempt


from paying VAT

Certificates of Origin can be applied


for and processed online by 2015

Issuance of Certificates of Origin is


manual in 2013. CO reform plan
introduced by MoC in November
2013

Ban of daytime truck traffic through


Phnom Penh between 6.00am9.00pm are deemed costly and
excessive by rice millers
Rice millers can produce electricity
cheaper than EDC using rice-husk
biofuel. However, RoI is feasible
only if generators run 24/7 and EDC
buys back excess electricity
production. At present, EDC does
not buy back from small producers
Government currently charges VAT
on exports via third party exporters
but not direct exports by rice millers

CCIC de-facto monopoly has been


removed

CCIC has de-facto monopoly in


fumigation

MEF

EDC, MEF, Private Sector

Phnom Penh Municipality,


2014

GDCE, MAFF, MoC,


other border agencies
MoPWT

MoC

MAFF

494 Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018

36 | P a g e

Indicative Action 2: RGCs Rice


Policy is implemented. Capacity of
rice millers to export milled rice to
new markets is developed
Indicative Action 3: RGCs Rice
Policy is implemented. Rice millers
expand capacity in modern mills
Indicative Action 4:
Facilitate greater investment in paddy
storage and drying facilities by
establishing a credit scheme.
Likewise, insufficient thresher
capacity to meet needs of NovemberDecember
Indicative Action 5:
Adoption of improved paddy
cultivation practices, including dryseason production, resulting in
increased productivity and larger
supply for millers

Indicative Action 1:
Access to working capital by rice
growers and rice millers improved

Average paddy yield of 3.2 MT per


hectare in 2011 (AFSIS.) Irrigated
dry-season production accounted for
16% of total cultivated area in 2012
(MAFF+CARDI)

400,000MT annual modern milling


capacity in 2012 (approximately 280
tons per hour)
Credit is provided to investors on a
piecemeal basis

Investment in rice sector supported


by establishment of risk share
facility with local commercial bank,
as well as targeted investments,
including through microfinance
institutions. Limited working capital
financial products available
In 2011, 22 countries imported
shipments of $1 million or more
from Cambodia

Medium-Term Action: 2016-2018

Average paddy yield of 4 MT per


hectare in 2018. Irrigated dry-season
production accounts for 35% of total
cultivated area in 2018

A national credit scheme to facilitate


investment financing in rice
logistics, threshers, other investment
is put in place by the RGC in strong
cooperation with private Banks

35 countries import more than


$2 million annual shipments of
fragrant, non-fragrant or broken rice
from Cambodia by 2018
Modern milling capacity in 2018 in
MT nearly triples from 2012

Short-term financial products using


movable assets and inventories of
rice paddy and milled rice as
collaterals introduced by commercial
banks to meet working capital needs
of rice millers

Private Sector, MAFF,


MRD

MEF, MoC

Private Sector, MEF,


Banking Sector, MIH

Private Sector, MoC,


MAFF

Commercial Banks, MEF

Risk Management Systems is fully


implemented by all border agencies
and profiles are managed centrally
by 2018

Risk Management fully implemented


by Customs as of 2013. Some
progress by non-Customs agencies
but risk management
underdeveloped
Approximately 3 million MT of
formal exports of dried cassava chips
by 2018
Cambodia fifth largest producers of
cassava in Asia (following Thailand,
Indonesia, India, and China PRC) by
2018
Yields 20% higher than baseline in
2016. IPM expanded to 3 million
farmers
Farmers Association(s) and a
National Processor/Exporter
Association established by 2016
Cassava farmer cooperatives
established to facilitate technical
exchanges, financing, extension
services, contract farming
arrangements
Policy is established, implemented,
and reviewed annually by 2016

68,000 MT of formal exports of


dried cassava chips in 2011

Cambodia seventh largest producer


of cassava in Asia in 2011

Indicative Action 4:
RGC develops and implements a
national policy for Cassava sector

37 | P a g e

Indicative Action 1:
Modern crop management and
harvesting and post-harvest practices
implemented
Indicative Action 2:
Strong industry cooperation across
value-chain and dissemination of
market information
Indicative Action 3:
Quantity and quality of supply to
semi-processors and processors
improved

Current cassava yields 22MT/ha at


provincial level in 2011. (Source:
AFSIS). 1 million farmers use IPM.
No national sector association

Lack of ties between farmer


cooperatives and semi-processors
and processors

Outcome 13: Cassava

SPS certificates can be applied for


and processed on line

Sanitary and phytosanitary


certificates required for exports are
processed manually

No formal policy or institutional


framework in 2012

Short-Term Actions: 2014-2016

Outcome 13: Cassava


Cambodia consolidates its exports of
Cassava through direct exports to
such countries as China and Republic
of Korea and lessens its dependency
on exports of unprocessed tubers to
Thailand and Vietnam

Indicative Action 6:
Cambodia progresses towards full
computerization of trade related
documents (same as Outcome 2, MT
Action 3)
Indicative Action 7:
Extend Risk Management System to
non-Customs agencies (same as
Outcome 2, MT Action 4)

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SNEC, MAFF, MIH,


MoC, Private Sector

MAFF, MoC, Private


Sector

Private Sector, MoC,


MAFF

MAFF, CARDI, Private


Sector

Private Sector, MoC,


MAFF

Private Sector, MoC,


MAFF

GDCE, MoC, MAFF and


all other border agencies

MAFF

496 Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018


Private Sector, CDC,
MAFF, MIH

Private Sector, CDC,


MAFF, MIH

Average annual rate of growth of 5


10 percent FDI investment in
cassava sector during 2014-2018
Total demand (or throughput) from
local processors is 4 million MT of
fresh root in 2018. Half (or 2 million
MT) is in full processing sector
including flour, animal feed, ethanol,
other
Short-term financial products using
movable assets and inventories of
cassava as collaterals introduced by
commercial banks to meet working
capital needs of cassava sector

FDI investment in cassava sector


during 2005-2012 was $48 million,
(2 percent of total FDI Approvals for
Agro-Industry Chapter 5)
Total demand (or throughput) from
local processors is 920,000MT of
fresh root in 2010

Limited working capital financial


products available for cassava
growers and processors

Indicative Action 1:
New investment, including FDI,
supports increased semi-processing
and processing capacity, higher export
returns, and transfer of industry knowhow

Indicative Action 2:
Access to working capital for cassava
processors improved (same as
Outcome 12, MT Action 1)

38 | P a g e

Medium-Term Action: 2016-2018

Renovation of rail between Sisophon


and Phnom Penh completed.
Scheduled rail freight service
between Battambang and Phnom
Penh operates by 2016 and offers
alternative/competing land transport
for agricultural commodities like
cassava and rice

Renovation of rail link not yet


completed

Commercial Banks, MEF

MoPWT

MoC

Certificates of Origin can be applied


for and processed online by 2015

Issuance of Certificates of Origin is


manual in 2013. CO reform plan
introduced by MoC in November
2013

Private Sector, MIH,


MAFF

Certification system in place for


processors that produce for
demanding export markets in 2016

No certification system in place

Indicative Action 5:
Capacity of dried cassava processors
to meet basic GMP-based standards
developed through certification
program (same as Outcome 4, ST
Action 3)
Indicative Action 6:
Cambodia progresses towards full
computerization of trade related
documents (same as Outcome 2, ST
Action 2)
Indicative Action 7:
Rail link between Phnom Penh and
Poipet renovated (same as Outcome 3,
ST Action 7)

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Indicative Action 7:
Cambodia progresses towards full
computerization of trade related
documents (same as Outcome 2, MT
Action 3)
Indicative Action 8:
Extend Risk Management System to
non-Customs agencies (same as
Outcome 2, MT Action 4)

Indicative Action 3:
Production of disease resistant new
stems established in Cambodia
Indicative Action 4:
Capacity of processors and exporters
to market overseas is increased
Indicative Action 5:
Bilateral MoUs with importing
markets signed to ensure predictable
market access for semi-processed
cassava
Indicative Action 6:
Implementation of SPS standards
increases among driers and processors
Several MoUs for semi-processed
chips signed

1 million MT of cassava chips


exported to countries enforcing SPS
standards (as reflected in
Cambodias Customs data on
recorded shipments to such country
as China) in 2018
SPS certificates can be applied for
and processed on line

Risk Management Systems is fully


implemented by all border agencies
and profiles are managed centrally
by 2018

One MoU for cassava chips signed


between China and Cambodia

68,000MT of cassava chips exported


to countries enforcing SPS standards
in 2011 (Source: GDCE data)

Risk Management fully implemented


by Customs as of 2013. Some
progress by non-Customs agencies
but risk management
underdeveloped

Sanitary and Phytosanitary


certificates required for exports are
processed manually

New stem reproduction for disease


resistant plants established in
Cambodia
$150 million worth of recorded
exports of processed cassava in 2018

Nearly all new stems are imported


informally from Vietnam or
Thailand and is diseased
$2.3 million worth of recorded
exports of processed cassava in 2011

GDCE, MoC, MAFF and


all other border agencies

MAFF

MAFF, Private Sector

MoFA, MAFF

MAFF, University of
Battambang, Private
Sector
Private Sector, MAFF,
MoC

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Indicative Action 6:
Export tax on rubber reformed to
encourage domestic value added
Indicative Action 7:
CLV Development Triangles focus
on rubber sector proceeds as planned
with formulation of Action Plan by
the three countries

Indicative Action 4:
Cambodia natural rubber value chain
produces high-quality products for
export markets
Indicative Action 5:
Sector policy to support development
of the sector

Indicative Action 1:
Modern cultivation techniques
adopted
Indicative Action 2:
Strong industry cooperation to
facilitate extension services and
exchange of market information
Indicative Action 3:
Shortage of skilled tappers avoided
Industry-wide guidelines and
training manual for best-practice in
rubber tapping by 2016. Training
program implemented
System to register quantities of
natural rubber by grade and price in
place and implemented by 2016

No formal means to address skill


shortage

Current sliding-scale export tax


encourages export of lower quality
rubber with limited value added
The 7th CLV Development Triangle
Summit of Heads of State held in
Vientiane March 12, 2013 requested
preparation of action plan for
development of the rubber sector in
the Triangle

Sector targets but no comprehensive


sector policy

No system in place to monitor


quality of exported natural rubber

Single national producer / processor / Private Sector, MAFF,


exporter association established in
MoC, MIH
2016

No single national-level industry


association exists that encompasses
whole value chain

Action plan fully formulated for the


8th CLV Development Triangle
Summit as requested during 7th
Summit

MEF, MoC, MAFF,


SNEC

Sector policy has been set up by


SNEC, MAFF, MoC,
2016 with strong focus on supporting Private Sector
the development a CLV rubber
triangle
Reform export tax to encourage high MEF, MAFF
quality and domestic value addition

Private Sector, MAFF,


MoC, RRIC

Private Sector, MAFF,


RRIC

Average yields per tapped hectare:


1,250kg by 2016

Private Sector, MAFF,


RRIC

Private Sector, MoC,


MAFF

Average yields per tapped hectare:


1,100kg in 2010

Approximately 150,000MT of
rubber exported in 2018

Outcome 14: Rubber


54,520MT of rubber exported in
2012

Short-Term Actions: 2014-2016

Outcome 14: Rubber


Cambodia progresses towards
becoming a key producer and exporter
of rubber

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Issuance of Certificates of Origin is


manual in 2013. CO reform plan
introduced by MoC in November
2013

41 | P a g e

Risk Management fully implemented


by Customs as of 2013. Some
progress by non-Customs agencies
but risk management
underdeveloped

Risk Management Systems is fully


implemented by all border agencies
and profiles are managed centrally
by 2018

MAFF

SPS certificates can be applied for


and processed on line

Most formal exports in low value


natural rubber (HS 4001).
Small tire manufacturing sector
emerging (HS 4011).
Tire Exports = 106 MT in 2011
(TradeMap)
Sanitary and phytosanitary
certificates required for exports are
processed manually

Indicative Action 4:
Cambodia progresses towards full
computerization of trade related
documents (same as Outcome 2, MT
Action 3)
Indicative Action 5:
Extend Risk Management System to
non-Customs agencies (same as
Outcome 2, MT Action 4)

Private Sector, MAFF,


MIH, RRIC

Significant expansion of tire


manufacturing industry. Tire
Exports = 10,000MT by 2018

Vietnam accounts for 58% of total


recorded Cambodian exports of
rubber products (HS 40) in 2011
(TradeMap)

Indicative Action 2:
Cambodia diversifies its export
markets for natural rubber. Export
marketing capacity of producers is
strengthened
Indicative Action 3:
Processing sector re-aligned with
dynamics of global rubber trade

GDCE, MoC, MAFF and


all other border agencies

Private Sector, MoC,


MAFF, RRIC

200,000ha planted and harvested,


more than 200,000MT produced, and
150,000MT exported in 2018.
(Government targets for 2020:
300,000ha harvested and a total of
400,000ha planted)
Reduced reliance on Vietnam as
export market (to less than 30% of
rubber trade) by 2018.

Private Sector, MAFF

MoC

Approximately 55,000ha planted and


harvested. An additional 225,000 ha
planted but not harvested in 2012.
64,524MT produced and 54,520MT
exported in 2012

Certificates of Origin can be applied


for and processed online by 2015

Indicative Action 1:
RGC strengthens and implements its
policy targets for natural rubber
production.

Medium-Term Action: 2016-2018

Indicative Action 8:
Cambodia progresses towards full
computerization of trade related
documents (same as Outcome 2, ST
Action 2)

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42 | P a g e

Indicative Action 2:
Improved and more diverse tourism
product offerings
Indicative Action 3:
Attract high-spending international
arrivals in the MICE sub-sector
Indicative Action 4:
Traffic congestion in Phnom Penh and
Siem Reap has been reduced

Indicative Action 1:
TVET programs that meet
international standards and ASEAN
Minimum Competency Standards for
Tourism are established and running
for the hospitality sector (same as
Outcome 17, ST Action 3)

Worsening traffic congestion in


Phnom Penh and Siem Reap are
deterrent to developing MICE subsector. No urban transport
development strategy adopted

Average length of stay is 6.30 days


per visit in 2012 (Marked by slight
decline in recent years)
Business visits account for 5% of
total international arrivals

No hospitality management and


services TVET program that meet
international standards and ASEAN
Minimum Competency Standards for
Tourism

No culinary TVET program that


meets international standards and
ASEAN Minimum Competency
Standards

Phnom Penh and Siem Reap


municipalities have taken serious
steps to reduce car traffic congestion
in the two cities. Urban transport
development strategies adopted for
PP and Siem Reap municipalities to
reduce traffic congestion

Business visits account for 20% of


total international arrivals by 2016

Royal Academy of Culinary Arts


(RACA) fully established as PPP.
First full class (2 year curriculum)
graduates with internationally
recognized diplomas by 2016
TVET program focusing on
hospitality management and services
fully established as PPP by 2016.
Graduates to receive diplomas that
meet international standards and
ASEAN Minimum Competency
Standards for Tourism
Average stay of 7 days or more per
visit by 2016

6 million foreign visitors in 2018

Outcome 15: Tourism


3 million foreign visitors in 2012

Short-Term Actions: 2014-2016

Outcome 15: Tourism


Cambodia progresses towards RGCs
2020 target set for Tourism: 8 million
foreign visitors

Municipalities, MoPWT

Private Sector, MoT

Private Sector, MoT

MoT, Private Sector


(Hospitality)

MoT, Hotel, Restaurant


and Chefs Associations

Private Sector, MoT

Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018

501

Labor laws and other regulations


pertaining to the hospitality sector
are not enforced consistently
throughout the sector, putting
establishments that follow laws and
regulations at a competitive
disadvantage with those that do not
There is no scheduled air service
between Phnom Penh and
Sihanoukville, only charter flights

43 | P a g e

Indicative Action 3:
Dependency of Cambodia on
international visitors originating from
a very small number of countries is
reduced

Indicative Action 2:
Increase the number of airlines and
frequency of international flights

Indicative Action 1:
The national Tourism Development
Strategic Plan 2012-2020 is
implemented

Top 4 countries provide nearly 50 %


of all visitor in 2011

17 foreign airlines servicing


Cambodias international airports in
2009

25,658 rooms outside Siem Reap in


2009 (MoT statistics)

37,522 rooms in hotel and guest


houses in 2009 (MoT statistics)

Medium-Term Action: 2016-2018

Indicative Action 6:
Scheduled air service between Phnom
Penh and Sihanoukville established

Indicative Action 5:
Level-playing field competition
enforced in the hospitality sector

MoT, Private Sector

Private Sector, MoT,


CCA, MoPWT, MoFA

Private Sector, MoT,


MIH, MoH

Private Sector, MoT, MIH,


MoH

Private Sector, MoPWT

Scheduled air service between


Phnom Penh and Sihanoukville
established
Number of rooms in hotel and guest
houses increases to approximately
90,000 by 2018
Number of rooms in hotel and guest
houses outside Siem Reap increases
approximately to 70,000 by 2018
20 or more foreign airlines servicing
Cambodias international airports by
2018 including direct services from
Japan, Indonesia, the Philippines and
India. Sihanoukville airport (KOS)
receives daily international flights by
2018
Through proactive promotion
intervention, the share of visitors
from the top 4 countries is reduced to
35%

MoLVT, MoT

Labor laws and other regulations


pertaining to the hospitality sector
are enforced consistently to create
level-playing field competition

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44 | P a g e

Indicative Action 2:
In the absence of a sector policy, the
sector is unlikely to develop.
National sericulture and silk sector
policy developed

Indicative Action 1:
Silk Board established to coordinate
and formalize production chains.

Private Sector, MoH, MoT

Private Sector, MAFF,


MoT

A rating system is in place. 200


restaurants have passed GHP/GMP
audits by 2018
Several large hotel chains have
arrangements to secure most of their
inputs of fruits, vegetables, and other
foods locally through contract
farming or other schemes

Exports (cross-border and sales to


foreign visitors) of finished silk
products estimated at $7 million in
2012

Silk Board established by 2014

New Silk Sector Strategy adopted by


2016
National Sericulture and Silk Sector
Policy developed and endorsed by
Government by 2016

No Silk Board in 2012.

Silk Sector and Plan of Action need


updating
No sector policy as of 2012

Exports of finished silk products


double by 2018

Private Sector, MoC,


MRD, MoWA, MAFF,
MIH
Private Sector, MoC,
MRD, MoWA, MAFF,
MIH
SNEC, CoM, Private
Sector, MoC, MRD,
MoWA, MAFF, MIH

Private Sector, MoC,


MRD, MoWA, MAFF,
MIH

Private Sector, MoH,


RACA, MoT

Repeat baseline survey (CEDEP II)


by 2016-17

Outcome 16: High Value Silk Products

Index from baseline survey of SPS


standards in hotel and restaurant
kitchen to be conducted by the Royal
Academy of Culinary Arts under
CEDEP-II. Also to use info from
voluntary Good Health Practice
(GHP) rating introduced by MoH
Restaurant rating system being
prepared. No restaurants have
passed GHP/GMP audit. Low
hygiene standards in sector
Most large hotel chains buy food
inputs at local markets with the
understanding that a large quantity of
fruits and vegetables are imported
from Vietnam or Thailand

Short-Term Actions: 2014-2016

Outcome 16: High Value Silk


Products
A small but growing number of
Cambodian producers are able to
design and export high-value silk
products

Indicative Action 5:
Quality and quantity of domesticallygrown supply of fruits, vegetables,
and other food inputs increases

Indicative Action 4:
SPS standards in kitchen in hotel and
restaurant improve through enhanced
training of existing and new kitchen
staff (same as Outcome 4, MT Action
7)

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Lack of COs on most imported yarn

45 | P a g e

Weavers have limited to no access to


credit

Three producers have a product


development system in place in 2011

Indicative Action 3:
Selected group of producers have
internalized a product development
scheme
Indicative Action 4:
Weavers have access to micro-credit

Indicative Action 2:
Selected group of producers have
broken into foreign markets

1MT of golden silk yarn produced in


Cambodia in 2012. No white silk
yarn produced in Cambodia in 2012.
Most current silk production in
Cambodia based on imported yarn.
Hard to compete with China or
Thailand. Cambodia should target
high-value products using
Cambodian silk
Three producers have cross-border
export sales in 2011 (approximately
$1.5 million)

Indicative Action 1:
Increased Private Sector investment in
sericulture.

Medium-Term Action: 2016-2018

Indicative Action 3:
Purchasing units in key weaving
cooperatives (e.g. Khmer Silk
Villages) established to assist with
procurement of higher quality yarn.
Quality and traceability of silk yarn
imports ensured (same as Outcome 4,
MT Action 10)

Private Sector, MoC

812 producers have cross-border


export sales to five overseas markets
with sales of approximately
$3 million
812 producers have product
development in place in 2018 as
reflected in regular product addition
to collections and product catalogues
Micro-lending to weavers expanded
to help develop their business

MEF, RDB, micro-lending


institutions

Private Sector, MoC,


MoWA, MIH, MRD

Private Sector, Silk Board,


MoC, MAFF

Private Sector, MoC,


MoWA

5MT of golden silk yarn produced in


Cambodia in 2016. 20MT of white
silk yarn produced in Cambodia in
2016

30% of imported yarn has a clear CO


in 2018

504 Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018


No PPP TVET program in 2012 in
Cambodia. Most TVET is done
through NGOs with inconsistent
outcomes for different NGOs

46 | P a g e

Garment sector requires diversified


skills and accreditation of workforce
based on AFTEX ASEAN. The
sector lacks an established TVET
infrastructure. GMAC is in the
process of establishing a training
institute

Indicative Action 2:
TVET programs are established to
meet need in technical and
engineering personnel in garments
and footwear and in SEZ sectors

No training facilities in SEZs to


assist investors in building a skilled
labor force

National Employment Agency is


new and lacks systems. No job
information and forecasting systems
in place

Indicative Action 1:
A job information system is in place
to match supply and demand at local
and regional level

Short-Term Actions: 2014-2016

Outcome 17: Skill Gap for Exports


RGC and Cambodian exporters meet
the skill gap through the formal
education sector and increased publicprivate partnership to develop
vocational/technical education
Job information system is in place in
NEA including (1) quarterly labor
market information reports; (2)
regular dissemination of forecasting
results with strong sector focus
GMACs training institute is
operational. Between 100 to 200
garment sector professionals per
year are getting ASEAN-accredited
(level 1) training in operator
training, machine mechanic, pattern
making, merchandising and other
skills relevant to the sector
All SEZs have training facilities
(PPP or otherwise) with curriculums
that meet ASEAN standards

SEZ operators, Private


Sector associations,
MoLVT, NEA

GMAC, Training Service


Providers, AFTEX

NEA, TVETs, Private


Sector

A number of PPP TVET programs


Line Ministries, MoLVT,
have been established to support skill Private Sector
development in export sectors by
2018

Outcome 17: Bridging the Skill Gap for Exports

Pillar 3: Strengthening the Capacity of RGC and Cambodian Stakeholders to Manage the Trade Agenda and Trade
Challenges (Trade Reform, Trade Policy, Aid for Trade, Bridging Skill Gaps for Trade, etc.)

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47 | P a g e

Indicative Action 4:
A more peaceful labor relations
environment has been established in
industrial sectors through a reduction
in the number of illegal strikes and
better enforcement of arbitration
rulings and agreements in place
Indicative Action 5:
A set of models (templates) has been
developed to assist line ministries in
developing TVETinstitutions
andprograms based on PPP

Indicative Action 3:
TVET programs that meet
international standards and ASEAN
Minimum Competency Standards for
Tourism are established and running
for the hospitality sector

The excessive number of illegal


strikes that do not respect
agreements in force or that result
from conflicts that have not gone
through appropriate mediation and
arbitration channels is having a
negative impact on competitiveness
Thereis little understanding of how
PPPs can contribute to skills
development and little understanding
of different PPP models that can be
pursued. There is also little
knowledge and information available
as to what is possible in a PPP.

No hospitality management and


services TVET program that meet
international standards and ASEAN
Minimum Competency Standards for
Tourism

No culinary TVET program that


meets international standards and
ASEAN Minimum Competency
Standards

A set of PPP models has been


developed, with the assistance of
development partners and based on
international best-practice, to
provide guidance to
Line Ministries and Private Sector
partners when formulating PPPTVETs including (1) possible
governance structures, (2)
development of curriculums, (3)
structures for student internships and
(4) possible financing structures

Royal Academy of Culinary Arts


(RACA) fully established as PPP.
First full class (2 year curriculum)
graduates with internationally
recognized diplomas by 2016
TVET program focusing on
hospitality management and services
fully established as PPP by 2016.
Graduates to receive diplomas that
meet international standards and
ASEAN Minimum Competency
Standards for Tourism
Use of Collective Bargaining
Agreement in industrial sectors is
promoted (capacity building on CBA
needed.) Enforcement of laws,
regulations, and agreements in place
is strengthened
MoEYS, MoLVT,
CAMFEBA, MEF

Private Sector,
CAMFEBA, Labor
Unions, MoLVT,
Arbitration Council

MoT, Private Sector


(Hospitality)

MoC, MoT, Hotel,


Restaurant and Chefs
Associations

506 Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018


No industry-focused curriculums for
specialized sectors to meet needs of
a diversified economy

Indicative Action 3:
Higher education systems and TVET
develop industry-focused curriculums

48 | P a g e

Indicative Action 4:
Engineering curriculums strengthened
in Universities

Universities lacks curriculum


focusing on plant health, animal
health and food safety to train SPS
specialists

Indicative Action 2:
Greater availability of SPS specialists
to support exports and protecting
health of crops livestock and
consumers

The number of engineering


graduates in Cambodia in 2008 was
514 (World Bank survey)

No industry skills councils to guide


development of educational and
TVET programs that focus on the
needs of specific sectors

RACA is operating

Indicative Action 1:
TVET programs are established for
the hospitality sector to address
current skill gaps

Medium-Term Action: 2016-2018


A minimum of 100 Chefs, kitchen
and food handling personnel is
trained yearly based on ASEAN and
internationally recognized
certification standards through Royal
Academy of Culinary Arts (RACA)
Specialization stream on plant pest
and disease, animal pest and disease,
food safety specialization established
in RUA with dedicated curriculum
for the three areas and associated
teaching materials
At least 2 new curriculums per
Indicative sectors are drafted and
integrated into relevant Higher
Education/TVET programs by 2018.
Curriculums to be linked to ASEAN
standards where they exist
Industry skill councils (employers,
government, and workers
representatives) established to guide
development of educational and
TVET programs that focus on the
needs of specific sectors
The number of Cambodian engineer
graduates triples from 2008
MoLVT, MoEYS, MIH,
Private Sector

MoLVT, Private Sector,


NEA, Line Ministries

MoEYS, MoLVT, and


Line Ministries

MAFF, Royal University


of Agriculture (RUA)

MoT, Private Sector,


RACA

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49 | P a g e

Indicative Action 1:
The Ministry of Commerce has
established a Trade Training and
Research Institute (TTRI) centralizing
all trade-related capacity development
efforts

Capacity needs assessment of MoC


and key trade-related institutions
have been produced. Development
plans have been formulated. A
limited curriculum on trade is
available in the Royal School of
Administration (RSA)
There is no sustained trade-related
research in MoC

Short-Term Actions: 2014-2016

Input Note submitted by MoC to


MoP and SNEC for mainstreaming
trade in NSDP and Rectangular
Strategy

Outcome 18: Mainstreaming Trade


Trade development objectives are
fully mainstreamed in national
development strategy and in product
and service sector strategies

Minimum number of annual public


holidays and leave days has been
lowered to 33 days

TTRI has produced three research


papers commissioned by MoC for
policy-making needs, including in
cooperation with independent
Cambodian Research Institutions

A full-fledged catalogue of at least


20 courses available in Cambodia
and 20 international training courses
is available and being used to train
officials on regular basis through
TTRI

75% of the results identified in Input


Note prepared by MoC have been
achieved by 2018

Outcome 18: Mainstreaming Trade

Under Cambodian labor law,


individuals are entitled to a
minimum of 43 annual public
holidays and leave days per year.
Cambodias minimum entitlement is
far greater than ASEAN average
with a negative impact on
competitiveness (it lowers
productivity, reduces training time, +
a much larger amount of normal
work hours has to be paid for as
overtime)

Indicative Action 5:
The number of annual leave and
public holiday days in Cambodia
closer to ASEAN average

MoC, Independent
Cambodian Research
Institutions

MoC, RSA

MoC, MAFF, MIH, MEF,


trade-other related Line
Ministries

MoLVT, RGC

508 Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018


MoC

All MoC data are available up to


date through MoCs revamped
Website

50 | P a g e

Indicative Action 1:
Sufficient institutional capacity built
to formulate and implement traderelated policies and strategies as well
as trade-sensitized sector policies
Indicative Action 2:
Increased coordination among MoC,
MoP, and Line Ministries to include
trade-related indicators in NSDP-V

4 additional sector policies focusing


on export manufacturing or agro
sectors by 2018 using MoC
generated trade-data and inputs
A revised template and schedule to
include trade-related indicators in
NSDP and sector policies in use by
MoP, MoC and key Line Ministries

1 sector policy focusing on exports


in 2013 (for Rice)

A single template for NSDP


provided by MoP not reflecting the
contributions of trade and related
cross-cutting themes

MoP, MoC, SNEC, key


Line Ministries

SNEC, MoC, MAFF,


MIH, other trade-related
Line Ministries

GDCE, MoC, MEF.


MAFF, NIS

Beginning in 2016, MoC Trade


Training and Research Institute
(TTRI) produces an annual trade
data publication that consolidates
and reconciles data extracted from
different Government sources and
ensure enhanced coherence with
Comtrade mirror statistics

Official Cambodian trade data are


extracted from database maintained
by GDCE (Customs data), MoC (on
COS, import/export, licenses), MEF
(trade repository), and MAFF (SPS
certificates.) There is no structure to
compare and ensure coherence
across sources, limited quality
control systems, no tool to
compare/benchmark Cambodian
statistics against mirror statistics
Some MoC data are difficult to
obtain

MoC, SNEC, MoP

A coherent indicator of sustainable


human development focusing on
employment, gender, income, and
environment at a minimum has been
formulated and measured to measure
the impact of development in the 10
DTIS 2013 priority sectors by 2016

No coherent indicator of sustainable


human development impact of
expansion in the 10 DTIS 2013
priority sector

Medium-Term Action: 2016-2018

Indicative Action 2:
The establishment of national and
sector level indicators for growth and
poverty facilitates comparison of
different trade development and
Private Sector development
approaches in contributing to national
poverty reduction goals
Indicative Action 3:
Improved accessibility, compilation
and use of statistics and trade data to
assist in assessing and formulating
appropriate trade support
interventions

Industrial Policy at the drafting stage

Ensure that implementation of the


Industrial Policy takes into account
linkages identified in Outcome 6 of
CTIS 2014-2018, including linkages
between investment promotion and
Rules of Origin, the need to promote
clusters of domestically-based
suppliers to support exporters, etc.

AfT commitments during 2007-2011


were$1.506 billion; AfT
disbursements were $942.766
million (OECD/DAC data)

Indicative Action 1:
Khmer version of 2014-2018 Trade
SWAp Roadmap and 2013 Matrix of
Ongoing, Pipeline, and Missing AfT
adopted by Government and used to
mobilize additional interventions
Indicative Action 2:
DICO carries out yearly evaluation of
progress against Trade SWAp 20142018 Roadmap goals, outcome, and
expected results. Findings are
reviewed with Government and
Cambodian stakeholders
Indicative Action 3:
DICO organizes annual meeting with
traditional and non-traditional trade
Development Partners (BRICS, southsouth, philanthropic foundations)
pointing to gaps in AfT based on
expected outcomes

51 | P a g e

The M&E Unit in DICO produces an


annual report showing contribution
of all TRTA projects to Trade SWAp
trade goals, outcomes, and expected
results. DICO organizes annual
event to present progress to RGC
and Cambodian stakeholders
Annual event organized by DICO for
senior Government officials and DPs
to review AfT gaps

The M&E Unit in DICO is able to


monitor individual projects but has
no capacity as of yet to show
contribution of individual projects to
program-level objectives and results

The implementation of the Aid-forTrade medium term strategy


formulated in the Trade SWAp
Roadmap is not monitored or
communicated to development
partners

2013 Trade SWAp Roadmap and


AfT Matrix have been adopted by
the Council of Minister

Expected value of AfT during 20142018 grows by 30% from 2007-2011


period

Updated Roadmap and AfT Matrix


under preparation as of 2013

Short-Term Actions: 2014-2016

Outcome 19: Monitoring and


Mobilizing Aid for Trade
RGCs ability to M&E Results or
Trade SWAp is strengthened, leading
to stronger mobilization of AfT inside
and outside SWAp

Outcome 19: Monitoring and Mobilizing Aid for Trade

Indicative Action 3:
Increase coordination among SNEC,
MoC and Line Ministries to ensure
strong linkages between objectives of
Industrial Policy and Outcomes of
CTIS 2014-2018

Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018

509

MoC

MoC, Trade SWAp


implementing agencies

MoC, S-SC on Trade and


Trade-Related Investment,
CoM

MoC, MAFF, MIH, traderelated Line Ministries

MIH, SNEC, MoC, CDC

510 Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018


The number of AfT contributions
and DPs contributing directly to
Trade SWAp goals, outcomes and
expected results that is directly
accounted for and monitored through
Trade SWAp increases significantly

The SWAp governance structure for


AfT tends to focus mostly on
operations of ongoing project and
very little on program and outcomes

Most contributions of trade


development partners to AfT in
Cambodia is not accounted for and
not monitored under Trade SWAp

Indicative Action5:
Dialogue among Government, Private
Sector stakeholders, and Development
Partners shifts, in part, from focus on
project implementation to program
results and effectiveness

52 | P a g e

Indicative Action 1:
The Trade SWAp Management
Framework is simplified so as to
ensure better and faster AfT resource
mobilization and project formulation

Medium-Term Actions: 2016-2018

A dedicated communication team


has been organized in DICO and
implements an up-to-date
communication and outreach
strategy with different media. A
minimum of four key events are
implemented each year
Mandate of S-SC is reviewed to
focus on trade program (CTIS 20142018) progress and results.
Conclusion and recommendations
from PSD TWG feeds into S-SC.
Monitoring of operations is left at
SWAp Implementation Committee
level. Relevant Prakas have been
amended accordingly

A communication strategy for the


SWAp has been endorsed, but is not
being implemented. Communication
actions are not coordinated with DPs
and stakeholders and rely mostly on
international consultant

Indicative Action 4:
DICO is using different
communication tools to raise
awareness about the actions, impacts,
and achievements of Trade SWAp
among a wider audience

MoC, PSD WG

MoC, PSD TWG

MoC,

Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018

511

53 | P a g e

Indicative Action 2:
Improved efficiency and effectiveness
of RGC-Private Sector-donor
consultation mechanisms to address
business environment constraints
through AfT
Indicative Action 3:
Increased awareness of Business
Membership Organizations (BMOs)
on AfT and Trade SWAp through
regular focus group meets led by MoC

Indicative Action 1:
New PSD Technical Working Group
(DP-RGC) mandate and modus
operandi are approved and
implemented

There is no structured event for MoC


to communicate progress on AfT and
Trade SWAp implementation with
Private Sector

G-PSF and PSD WG are no longer


functioning as effective mechanisms
to leverage government support on
solving key business constraints

No comprehensive data base of


Value Chain analyses and TA
support

Current PSD Technical Working


Group is ineffective

Short-Term Actions: 2014-2016

Private Sector participation in


Government-led project design is
limited to individual company
participation

DICO organizes annual information


event to inform business sector
through BMOs about progress in
Trade SWAp implementation and
AfT deployment

PSD Technical Working Group has


been re-established with new
mandate and new modus operandi
A data base of DPs on PSD and
Value Chain Analyses and TA
support is developed in collaboration
between DICO and DPs as an input
to PSD Technical Working Group
G-PSF and PSD WG meetings are
organized twice a year at operational
level with clear agendas focusing on
solutions to previously identified
business constraints issues

At least 3 PPPs are established on an


annual basis with participation from
government and Private Sector in
support of Cambodias trade
development goals by 2018

Outcome 20: Enhancing Private Sector Participation in AfT

Outcome 20: Enhancing Private


Sector Participation in AfT
A better structured dialogue between
Private Sector and Government
contributes to efficient public-private
partnerships for trade development
based on AfT resources

MoC

G-PSF, MoC, CDC,


Private Sector

MoC

MEF, CDC, PSD TWG

G-PSF, MoC, CDC,


Private Sector

512 Trade SWAp Roadmap 2014-2018


All new AfT TA projects must
include activities and outputs
involving BMOs by 2018

Limited or inexistent involvement of


Private Sector representatives in
most AfT TA projects

Indicative Action 2:
Increased Private Sector participation
in AfT project design, formulation
and implementation

54 | P a g e

Trade objectives proposed by


Government under NSDP and
Rectangular Strategy are reviewed
and formulated jointly through
consultation with BMOs

There is no structured consultation


between Government and Private
Sector on trade objectives to be
pursued under NSDP and
Rectangular Strategy

Indicative Action 1:
The trade inputs to NSDP and
Rectangular Strategy are jointly
produced by government and Private
Sector through G-PSF dedicated
working group

Medium-Term Action: 2016-2018

MoC, Private Sector

MoC

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