Big is beautiful in Laos

By Brian McCartan for Asia Times

BANGKOK – Laos aims to lift itself out of least-developed country status by 2020, but a shift underway from reliance on Western aid to Asian private capital has sparked criticism from development specialists who believe the trend towards large-scale projects is unsustainable and works against the country’s long-term economic goals.

Lao Prime Minister Bouasone Bouphavanh announced new plans to increase foreign investment and reach annual growth rates of over 8% for the next five years at the “Future of Asia” business conference held in Tokyo in May. He said, “From 2011-2015 there are plans by our government to achieve economic growth targets of about 8% or more while at the same time maintaining our stability.”

Towards that end, he announced an overhaul of investment policies and said “we want to develop human resources to cope with this growth and, at the same time, care for and nurture our precious asset – the environment”. Bouasone reiterated the government’s fast growth strategy earlier this month at the World Economic Forum on East Asia in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, where he stated that Laos aimed for “no less than” 8% annual economic growth through 2015.

As part of that plan, the Lao government seeks to promote greater foreign investment in agriculture, electricity generation, alternative energy, hotels and tourism, and logistics and services. It is also promoting expanded investment in infrastructure as part of its plan to transform the country from “land-locked to land-linked” as a trade crossroads in mainland Southeast Asia.

Plans to open a stock exchange this year are also in the works. Officials hope the new bourse will help to finance a mounting mining and hydropower boom driven by foreign investment and a rebound in global commodity prices. The new bourse will be set up though a joint venture with the Korea Exchange and hydropower and mining companies are expected to be the first to list, followed by telecommunications and manufacturing firms.

The World Bank, in its mid-year Lao Economic Monitor, estimated that real gross domestic product (GDP) in Laos will increase from 7% in 2009 to 7.8% this year. The growth is mostly a result of rapid expansion in the natural resources sector, as well as steady growth in agriculture, construction and a rebound in the processing and tourism industries. The multilateral lender has forecast that Lao GDP will average 7.7% per annum between 2011 and 2015.

However, development experts are concerned about the country’s over-reliance on hydropower and other mega-projects to stoke growth

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PM demands 1 mln ton rice purchase

VietNamNet Bridge – Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung demanded Friday Northern and Southern Food Corporations buy one million tons of coarse rice. There is now 500,000 – 600,000 tons of husked rice in the Mekong Delta.

The corporations have been given until February next year to complete the purchase.

The Prime Minister also requested that the Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development to provide loans to the two state-run corporations. The government will support food companies with 100% interest-free loan to assist the two corporations in buying rice stocks.

This is the second time in a month that the Prime Minister has demanded the two food corporations buy rice from farmers.

In the beginning of November, he told the two corporations to buy 300,000 tons of rice from farmers and agricultural businesses.

Moreover, he demanded banks extend low interest loans to farmers to maintain production.

(Source: SGGP)

[Ed] Apols for full quote.

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Exports of agro-forestry-fishery products rocket in value

VietNamNet Bridge | 29/10/2008

Vietnam raked in 13.6 billion USD from the export of agro-forestry-fishery products in the first ten months of this year, up 25.7 percent over the same period in 2007.

According to a report by the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (MARD), aquatic products, rice, wood and wooden furniture, coffee and rubber, have joined the group of 11 export staples posting a turnover exceeding 1 billion USD for the reviewed period. …


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Food prices up, farmers still suffer

Commodity Online – Kochi, Kerala, India
Farmers in the Mekong delta region have almost finished harvesting the winter-spring paddy crop, and rice stocks won’t increase in the next three months. …

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