Third UN Conference on LDCs
11th Meeting (PM)
DEV/BRU/12
16 May 2001
ENTREPRENEURS
FROM POOREST COUNTRIES CAN SEIZE GLOBAL ECONOMY’S OPPORTUNITIES, SAY SPEAKERS
AT BRUSSELS CONFERENCE BUSINESS ROUND TABLE
Despite
facing serious supply-side and market-access challenges, entrepreneurs from the
world’s poorest countries can seize emerging opportunities in the global
economy. This was the message of a
business-sector round-table discussion today at the Third United Nations
Conference on Least Developed Countries, being held this week in Brussels.
Some 75 participants -- entrepreneurs and senior policy-makers from least developed countries (LDCs), buyers of LDC products from developed countries and LDCs’ bilateral and multilateral development partners involved in trade development -- took up a variety of topics related to the meeting’s theme: “Converting Least Developed Country Export Opportunities into Business: a Strategic Response”.
Among the points raised
were that successful entrepreneurs from the world’s poorest countries had
overcome the enormous obstacles facing them by proper selection of markets for
their products, building a strong and sustainable position within the selected
market, and consistently working to increase competitiveness. Speakers pointed out that there were many
impediments to trade, including tariffs and non-tariff barriers, and called for
efforts to overcome them. In that
context, they urged governments to consider all aspects of the private sector.
Other speakers drew links
between the success of local entrepreneurs and the overall success of a
country’s economy and pointed out that, although their revenues might be
relatively small on the global scale, LDC entrepreneurs had achieved
considerable success. Others noted
that, despite efforts to reduce trade barriers, LDCs were not always in a
position to take advantage of them. The
need for new thinking and approaches to the problems facing LDCs, such as the
use of new information technology, was also supported, as was the absolute
imperative of public-private sector partnerships in efforts to improve
trade.
The meeting was divided
into two segments: products and markets
for LDC exports; and creating an enabling environment for export competitiveness.
During the first segment, presentations were made by a number of successful entrepreneurs from LDCs. The Managing Director of Nali Ltd., a chili-and-hot
sauce exporter from Malawi, for example, noted the difficulties she had faced in penetrating market barriers, and called on her Government to place greater emphasis on trade to help exporters like herself. She said her success was attributable to long-term ownership, the relative stability of the country, the fostering of a good working environment, and an improved product.
Other
success stories were told by representatives of: Frager, in Haiti; Nabekam-Bio, Guinea; Etho Metho Tours and Treks
Ltd., Bhutan; Meskel Flower Inc., Ethiopia; Magin Confeccoes Lda, Mozambique;
Cheetah Zambia Ltd., Zambia; Greenfields Ltd., and Tiviski, Mauritania. The last speaker, Tiviski’s managing
director, noted how many jobs the companies of those who had spoken provided. Small-scale private operators created great
wealth, but had to face many barriers.
She had the feeling that the aid flows to LDCs did not go to her sector. She urged governments to take exporters into
consideration, as part of their poverty- reduction efforts.
In the
second segment, speakers addressed a number of subjects related to
trade-strategy formulation and the importance of quality and standards for the
export competitiveness. They placed
great stress on the importance of trade as a development tool and emphasized
the need to create adequate conditions for trade and investment in LDCs. Presentations during this segment focused on
three LDCs: Guinea; Cambodia; and Burundi.
During a
presentation on Cambodia, Uri Dadush, the Director of the Economic Policy and
Development Prospects Group of the World Bank, said that it was possible even
for the poorest countries to integrate into the world economy and achieve
reasonable growth if the proper conditions -- macroeconomic stability,
openness, and peace -- were in place.
He cited, however, the considerable impediments to exports, both inside
and outside an LDC’s borders. Exposing
those impediments was essential, as was ownership of the process by the
countries concerned.
Adien
Sibomana, President of Gexhobu, an agricultural export company in Burundi, drew
the participants’ attention to the great difficulty posed to the private sector
by crisis and conflict. Throughout the
segment, representatives of both the public and private sector stressed the
need for governments to create environments suitable for trade and
investment. The private sector,
speakers urged, should be closely involved in all efforts to improve trade.
In an
opening statement delivered at the outset of the meeting, Rubens Ricupero,
Secretary-General of the United Nations Conference for Trade and Development
(UNCTAD), noted the interactive format of the LCD Conference and emphasized the
importance of coming up with “deliverables” that could be practically applied. Trade was very frequently taken as meaning
trade negotiations, but that was only one side of the coin. Measures must be taken at the policy and
entrepreneurial levels to implement the outcome of the negotiations. He stressed the importance of making
developing countries competitive, so that they could take advantage of trade
negotiations.
Ablasse
Ouedraogo, Deputy Director General of the World Trade Organization (WTO), also
made an opening statement, saying the private sector and governments must work
together towards sustainable growth.
The WTO agreements were signed by governments, but would end up being
used by the private sector. One of the
prime concerns of the private sector was that more liberalization should take
place in market access, he noted.
Tariff and non-tariff obstacles were still placed as
blocks against imports, making it difficult to
export high-value products from LDCs.
A
representative of the United Nations Industrial Development Organization
(UNIDO) stressed the need to master globalization, so it was a positive force
for globalization. The private sector
was the international community’s most powerful ally in the fight against
poverty, he stressed. Competitiveness
was really the imperative for globalized trade, he noted. He announced that UNIDO had launched a new
and comprehensive initiative on enabling LDCs to participate in international
trade.
Kweronda Ruhemba, Uganda’s
Minister for Economic Monitoring, gave an overview of Uganda’s efforts over the
past 10 years to improve the trade climate in his country. Sok Siphana, Secretary of
State, Ministry of Commerce of Cambodia, presented his country’s economic
situation, as did Guinea’s Trade Minister.
Mpho Malie, Minister for Trade, Marketing and Industry of Lesotho, moderated the segment of the meeting on products and markets for LDCs exports, while Musa Sillah, Minister for Trade, Industry and Employment of the Gambia, moderated the segment on creating an enabling environment for export competitiveness.
Jean-Denis Belisle, Executive Director of the International Trade Centre, presided over the meeting and made introductory remarks.
At 10
a.m. Thursday, 17 May, in another of the Conference’s parallel events, there
will be a forum on young entrepreneurs.
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