Cambodia Increases Garment Industry Minimum Wage


Cambodia agreed Wednesday to raise the minimum wage in its important clothing industry by 28 percent to $128 a month, falling short of labor unions’ $140 proposal.

The Labor Advisory Committee, representing employers, workers and the government, originally agreed on a $123 minimum wage. A Labor Ministry statement said it was increased to $128 after instructions were received from long-serving Prime Minister Hun Sen to do so. The new wage level takes effect at the beginning of next year.

Two years ago, a militant union campaign to double the then-minimum wage of $80 in the textile, garment and footwear sector resulted in clashes with police and a consequent crackdown on public protests. A $100 level was set for 2014, and the unions scaled back their demand for the negotiations over the 2015 level. Employers had proposed the minimum wage be set at $110 for next year.

The clothing industry is Cambodia’s biggest export earner, employing about 500,000 people in more than 500 garment and shoe factories. In 2013, the Southeast Asian country shipped more than $5 billion worth of products to the United States and Europe.

The Coalition of Cambodian Apparel Workers’ Democratic Union has not yet accepted the 2015 wage level, said union president Ath Thorn, who took part in the negotiations.

The Labor Ministry’s statement said that when other benefits were calculated, the workers would be making an average of $147 to $156 monthly next year.

Labor Minister Ith Samheng said he believed that the wage hike would result in better living conditions for the workers.

Labor militancy is a concern for the government, especially because major unions are generally allied with the opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party, whose political strength has been growing in recent years.

Source: Yahoo News | November 12, 2014

Benefits There For the Taking


Thailand will lose its beneficial tax treatment on exports to the European Union next year, and Cambodia’s manufacturing sector could be set to capitalise.

Following three consecutive years of upper-middle income status as defined by the World Bank, Thailand will on January 1 lose its Generalised System of Preferences (GSP) privileges, which reduce or entirely remove duties on the export of selected products to EU member states.

As some countries migrate to higher income levels and lose their trade preferences, those that continue to receive duty-free access to the EU, such as Cambodia, are expected to become more attractive investment destinations.

“Reducing GSP to fewer beneficiaries has resulted in a further improvement of the competitive position of Least Developed Countries on the EU market and provided for additional opportunities for both exports of products already produced, and for the diversification in to new products,” Alain Vandersmissen, minister-counselor of the EU Delegation to the Kingdom of Cambodia, said in an email yesterday.

As an example, Vandersmissen pointed to Cambodia’s garment and footwear industry, for which trade benefits helped achieve a record €2.4 billion ($3.2 billion) in exports to the EU in 2013, a 30 per cent increase on the previous year.

Hiroshi Suzuki, chief economist at the Business Research Institute for Cambodia, said Thailand’s change of status will accelerate a regional trend already under way.

“Recently, many companies are seeking a next destination for investment. Especially companies in countries such as China, Thailand and Vietnam – which are facing a drastic increase in costs, including labour costs – are very keen to shift their production bases to new emerging countries, including Cambodia,” he said.

Observers say that Cambodia’s economy could stand to benefit most from Thailand losing its preferential status in export areas such as garments and auto parts.

Chartchai Singhadeja, executive director of the Thai Garment Manufacturers Association (TGMA), told the Post that the loss of GSP privileges meant Thai garment producers were looking to expand regionally to locations where EU tax benefits were still available.

“We have already begun to move, and in the future it may be much more than this,” Chartchai said.

Labour shortages and buyers seeking to diversify production in multiple countries were additional reasons for at least 22 Thai garment factories relocating in recent years, he went on to say.

TGMA has asked for an extension on the apparel-related GSPs, but the EU is waiting for a democratically elected Thai government to be installed before considering the request, Chartchai said.

Ken Loo, secretary-general of the Garment Manufacturers Association in Cambodia, said that Thailand’s GSP loss was more likely to impact the Kingdom’s higher-value exports, such as auto parts.

“[Thai garment makers] weren’t really enjoying many benefits for exports going out to the EU, so Cambodia had the advantage over Thailand from the beginning,” he said, referring to the benefits Cambodia receives under the Everything But Arms agreement.

“So this maybe won’t impact the apparel industry too much, but it will impact other industries,” he said.

At the Phnom Penh Special Economic Zone, however, where several Japanese manufactures are leading the way in Cambodia’s higher-value manufacturing sector, including auto parts, the removal of Thailand’s GSP status has not raised any eyebrows.

The zone’s CEO, Hiroshi Uematsu, said that most Japanese manufacturers based in Thailand were exporting auto parts throughout Asia and thus did not expect any sudden changes as a result of the rule change, which will only affect EU-bound exports.

“So far, no one from auto parts industries talked about this to me,” he said.

Independent economist Srey Chanty also did not expect the move to trigger any immediate investment in value-added manufacturing, saying the government was not prepared to respond quickly to changes in the investment landscape.

“Cambodia has to have implementable, actionable industrial strategy, to take advantage of these things – and at the moment we don’t have this kind of strategy,” he said.

Source: Phnom Penh Post | August 6, 2014 | By: Daniel de Carteret

Certificate of Origin No Longer Required


Cambodian authorities will remove the requirement on exporters to provide a Certificate of Origin (CO) when exporting goods to destinations for which it is not needed, the newly elected minister of commerce said yesterday.

A CO certifies a product’s place of origin, and until now it was a requirement on all products leaving Cambodia’s shores despite whether it is needed by importing countries.

The Minister of Commerce Sun Chanthol said the removal of the CO will strengthen procedures for local exports.

“Today I am happy to inform you that I already proposed to the Prime Minister Hun Sen to remove the issue of CO to countries which do not [require it]. Hun Sen quickly approved to remove it,” Chanthol said at a two-day meeting with private sector representatives at the Hotel InterContinental in Phnom Penh yesterday.

“Today I will sign the announcement to remove the CO [for exports] to the US, Japan and some other countries [which do not require a CO],” he said.

Chanthol added that he met with private companies to discuss the possibility of implementing an automated electronic CO system, where, for those importing countries still requiring it, local exporters will be able to apply and pay a fee online.

“Later on, the exporters do not need to come to the Ministry of Commerce, they are just at their office, [in the] factory and can write down information in the computer, then we will look at it at the ministry and then we will issue [a confirmation for the CO],” Chanthol said.

“The fee for the CO will be withdrawn from the bank account of the exporter so the CO can be printed anywhere and wherever they want,” he added.

Ken Loo, secretary-general of Garment Manufacturers Association in Cambodia welcomed the idea.

“Well, it is good because we won’t make more expenses [both official and unofficial] for applying for the CO which the buyers do not need, that’s really important,” he said.

“It can also reduce the factory’s expenses. And, we also won’t waste much time on preparing the documents.”

Lim Bun Heng, president of the largest local milled rice exporting company, Loran Import-Export Company, also welcomed the initiative, saying that it would be advantageous for local exporters.

“I really support the idea because it is not necessary for us to apply for it [CO] for some countries which do not need it,” he said.

“The minister of commerce decided to do it, so it is a good move for us as an exporter because it can reduce unnecessary expenses . . . causing us to lose our competitive advantage at the global market.”

“If the government keeps on reducing the unnecessary expenses, I do believe our export prices will be much lower than in the global market.”

He added that most of his milled rice was exported to European and Asian countries which still required a CO.

Heng said normally it takes at least three days to receive a CO.

Sun Chanthol said yesterday the commerce ministry needs between six to nine months for testing the program before it officially launches.

Source: Phnom Penh Post | November 25, 2013 | By: May Kunmakara