- Published in Business & Economics
Cambodia Customs, Trade Regulations and Procedures Handbook by IBP
Cambodia Customs, Trade Regulations and Procedures Handbook
Cambodia Customs, Trade Regulations and Procedures Handbook
2009 Reprint, updated, printed ‘on demand’ - Cambodia Business Intelligence Report.
The largest retail branch bank network is built in one of the most formidable environments in the world. This book takes the journey from Year Zero to the present, tracing the trials and triumphs of a group of people as they built an employment generation project for demobilized soldiers in 1992 into the largest commercial retail bank branch network in Cambodia by 2003.
Learn everything you need to about Cambodia!
2009 Reprint, updated, printed ‘on demand’ - Cambodia Business Law Handbook
Over the last decade, Cambodia’s gross domestic product (GDP) grew at an average rate of 8.2 percent. In 2013, the economy grew by over seven percent, and it is expected to continue to grow at a similar rate over the next two years.
This report is a comprehensive research about the conditions of doing business in Cambodia.
The first chapter of the report contains general information on Cambodia, including its geopolitical situation, administrative structure, political system and level of economic development. Special attention is delivered to peculiarities of negotiations conduct in Cambodia.
Cambodia is poised to join a new generation of Asian frontier economies transitioning from low-income to emerging-market. But the path to greater and more shared prosperity requires a solid foundation of sound macroeconomic policies, enabling new growth drivers, tackling a highly dollarized and fragmented financial system, and creating more fiscal policy space to help meet Cambodia's vast development needs.
The Kingdom of Cambodia is a country in South East Asia with a population of over 14 million people. The kingdom’s capital and largest city is Phnom Penh. Cambodia is the successor state of the once powerful Hindu and Buddhist Khmer Empire, which ruled most of the Indochinese Peninsula between the 11th and 14th centuries.
Late industrializing countries are able to pick strategies for economic development based on the experiences of countries that preceded them. Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar and Vietnam (the CLMV countries) were closed off from the international community for many years, and each began to embrace a market economy at around the same time.
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