Home  Web Resources Free Advertising

 Home > News Business News

Change Your Life!

UNCTAD-ICC workshop for reliable investment guide

News
Sports
Chat
Travel
Dhaka Today
Yellow Pages
Higher Education
Ask a Doctor
Weather
Currency Rate
Horoscope
E-Cards
B2K Poll
Comment on the Site
B2K Club

April 18, 2000

 

Dhaka, Apr 17 (UNB) - As an UNCTAD-ICC joint workshop began here today to prepare a reliable and authentic investment guide for Bangladesh, private sector leaders identified corruption and bureaucracy as hurdles standing in the way of FDI. 

 

They felt the other reasons that kept investors away despite Bangladesh’s potentials and favourable policy support for investment must be detected and remedies prescribed to attract more FDI which the country needs to develop industries and widen exports.

 

The UNCTAD and the ICC-Bangladesh organised the two-day workshop, second and last of the series that began last year, at Sonargaon Hotel to draft an investment guide and FDI strategy for Bangladesh.

 

UN Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) and International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) took up a joint project on “Investment Guides and Capacity-building for Least Developed Countries” to help the LDCs attract more FDI.

 

The project is intended to provide prospective investors with objective and up-to-date information on investment conditions in 48 LDCs that share only 0.5 per cent of world FDI inflows and build up investment-related capacity to help them sustain in the face of a sharp decline of official development assistance.

 

The joint project initially included Bangladesh and five African LDCs.

 

Local and foreign private sector leaders, experts and investment promotion officials at the workshop will discuss the draft investment guide prepared for Bangladesh after the first such workshop in Dhaka in November last year.

 

The guide is likely to be finalised by June 2000 after incorporating the feedback from the workshop.

 

Inaugurating the workshop, Board of Investment executive chairman M Mokammel Haque said preparing investment guide is BOI’s routine work and the UNCTAD-ICC joint project would enrich the Board’s activities.

 

He presented a brief scenario of investment in Bangladesh and stated that Bangladesh’s policies and incentive packages for foreign investment were the best in South Asia.

 

ICC-Bangladesh president Mahbubur Rahman said fast-track trade liberalisation and reforms have not made any tangible impact on the economy, nor brought a good response from foreign investors. “…as a result, the country became a free-dumping ground of commodities from immediate neighbour and abroad,” he said.

 

He added that Bangladesh must have an accelerated flow of investment to offset the unfortunate situation.

 

Rahman said it is to be researched why Bangladesh, despite having resources, cheap labour and good investment policy, could not be a favourable destination for FDI, and what causes kept the investors at bay?

 

The ICC president said that although many obstacles had been removed, yet much more would have to be done.

 

Mentioning the worries of intending investors, he identified many obstacles that still exist in the way of FDI flow to Bangladesh. These include snags in land procurement for industrial projects, inadequate infrastructure facilities like electricity, gas and telecommunications, and corruption and bureaucratic tangles.

 

He also referred to the concern voiced by development partners at the April 13-14 Bangladesh Development Forum (BDF) meet in Paris and said: “We must do our homework first and quick.”   

 

Twenty-eight global companies have lent their support for the UNCTAD-ICC project, funded by five countries - China, Finland, France, India and Norway.

 

UNCTAD project manager Vishwas P Govitrikar, underlining the importance of the workshop, said such a dialogue can bring about the conditions necessary to attract more FDI in an increasingly competitive global environment.      


Copyright © Bangla2000. All Rights Reserved.
About Us  |  Legal Notices  |  Contact for Advertisement