Myanmar: Market Profile
Recent developments
- Myanmar has shown solid GDP growth in recent years, expanding by 6.5% in 2016. For 2017, the economy is expected to grow by 6.9% as private and public investments in infrastructure, light manufacturing and hospitality are forecast to rise.
- In July 2016, the NLD government released its first economic policy, promising to provide support in agriculture, industry and infrastructure development, as well as highlighting the need to boost foreign investment and improve the ease of doing business in the country.
- A new investment law, which consolidates and replaces the Foreign Investment Law of 2012 and the Myanmar Citizens’ Investment Law of 2013, will be implemented in April 2017, levelling the playing field between local and foreign investors.
- Cumulative FDI into Myanmar reached US$67.2 billion in December 2016. Major FDI sources were the Chinese mainland, Singapore, Thailand and Hong Kong. Myanmar is part of the China-ASEAN Free Trade Area (CAFTA). It has entered double tax agreements (DTAs) with the UK, Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, India, Laos, Vietnam and Korea, and concluded an investment protection agreement (IPA) with Hong Kong.
- Myanmar’s exports slipped by 11% to US$11 billion in the fiscal year ending March 2016, with imports dropping by 0.4% to US$16.5 billion.
- In 2016, Hong Kong’s exports to Myanmar dropped by 24.2% year-on-year (YOY) to US$196 million, while imports from Myanmar rose 20.2% YOY to US$77 million.
Current Economic Situation
Myanmar
is the seventh largest economy of the 10-member ASEAN[1] bloc. It has a
large service sector which accounts for about 46% of GDP, with industry
and agriculture respectively accounting for 28% and 26% of GDP. Major
sectors include processing, manufacturing, construction and
transportation.
Myanmar’s GDP growth has been
robust in recent years. In 2016, GDP growth decelerated to 6.5% due to a
slow recovery in the agricultural sector from the 2015 floods and
slowing foreign investment. For 2017, GDP growth is expected to grow by
6.9% as private and public investments in infrastructure, light
manufacturing and hospitality are projected to rise.
Economic reforms
After
the NLP’s landslide victory in the parliamentary elections in November
2015, Htin Kyaw, a close ally of Aung Shan Suu Kyi, was sworn in to
become Myanmar's first democratically-elected president and the first
NLD president in late March 2016. In keeping with the election
platforms, the new government has pledged to continue reforms. This
includes reduction of the number of ministries to 21, with Aung Shan Suu
Kyi now overseeing the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the President’s
Office.
In July 2016, the new NLD government
released its first economic policy with 12 main points, highlighting the
importance of developing a market-oriented system in Myanmar and
providing support to development of the agriculture, industry and
infrastructure sectors. The policy also emphasised the need to boost
foreign direct investment (FDI) and improve the ease of doing business
in the country. Prior to that, important reform measures were introduced
within the new government’s 100-day tenure. For example, on the
infrastructure side, two road sections on the Yangon-Mandalay highway
are being upgraded as a pilot project.
As part of
Myanmar’s continued liberalisation process, foreign exchange control was
abolished in April 2012. Under the new managed float system, the Central Bank of Myanmar (CBM)
announces a reference rate for the kyat against the US dollar following
daily foreign exchange auctions conducted with authorised domestic
dealer banks. It also allows FDI to be set at market exchange rates. In
July 2013, Myanmar’s president signed a new law granting CBM greater
independence from the Ministry of Finance. In the same month, the Securities Exchange Law was passed, which facilitates the establishment of a stock exchange that was launched in December 2015.
In 2014, the CBM
started granting operation licences to nine foreign banks. Each of the
licensed foreign banks is permitted to open one branch and restricted to
lending to foreign companies in foreign currency. With four new banks
gaining approval in 2016, a total of 13 foreign banks have now been
given permission to operate inside the country. FDI in the banking
sector was barred previously, making it the first time in 50 years that
Myanmar let in foreign banks.
In a bid to upgrade
the infrastructure, Myanmar’s government liberalised the telecom sector
and allowed foreign investors to bid for the national telecom licences.
In January 2014, two licences were granted to international telecom
operators (Norway's Telenor and Qatar's Ooredoo)
for a licence period of 15 years. The opening up of the telecom sector
is considered an important step for economic reforms and infrastructure
upgrading. According to the World Bank, the
mobile subscriptions rate of Myanmar jumped from 13% in 2013 to 77% in
2015, reflecting the huge growth potential of the country’s largely
under-served telecom market. In the same year, subscription rate of
Cambodia and Laos recorded 133% and 53% respectively.
Myanmar’s
reforms and opening up have caught the attention of foreign companies
seeking to relocate their labour-intensive production facilities. After
implementing a temporary monthly minimum wage of US$65 (including
overtime and allowances) for workers in industrial zone, the government
announced in September 2015 to introduce the first country-wide minimum
wage of Kyat 3,600 (US$2.7) for employees working a standard eight-hour
day.
International relations
After
the formation of the new government under President Htin Kyaw, Chinese
Foreign Minister Wang Yi visited Myanmar in the first week of April
2016, meeting his counterpart Aung Shan Suu Kyi, who said that the new
Myanmar government was willing to strengthen friendly cooperation with
China, which would be conducive to the national development of Myanmar.
Since
early 2012, Western countries started to ease their sanctions against
Myanmar in response to the latter’s political reforms and parliamentary
elections. Following Aung San Suu Kyi’s visit to the US in September
2016, the US reinstated Myanmar’s eligibility for the benefits under the
GSP scheme in November 2016, allowing Myanmar to export duty-free
approximately 5,000 products to the US. As early as in 2013, the EU had
lifted its economic sanctions (except military arms sales) against
Myanmar.
In January 2013, Myanmar entered into an
agreement with the Paris Club of creditor nations (including the UK,
France, Germany and Japan) and multilateral lenders such as the World Bank,
cutting down the outstanding debts owed to allow the country seeking
fresh lending, which will be helpful in upgrading its transport and
telecom infrastructure. With Western countries suspending economic
sanctions and expanding their investment in Myanmar (including in its
manufacturing sector), this will bode well for the country’s external
sector.
Myanmar’s construction industry is
expected to have a growing contribution to economic growth on the back
of rising infrastructure projects from private and overseas investment
and aid from multinational donors. In November 2012, the World Bank announced the resumption of lending to Myanmar. In January 2014, the World Bank
committed US$2 billion of lending to supporting the government’s plans
of universal healthcare coverage and access to electricity by 2030.
Investment Policy
To
promote and facilitate both foreign and domestic investment in Myanmar
and open more economic sectors to private investment, a new investment
law will be implemented in April 2017. This new investment law, which
consolidates and replaces the Foreign Investment Law of 2012 and the Myanmar Citizens’ Investment Law of 2013, is expected to level the playing field between local and foreign investors.
Under
the investment law, FDI in the form of 100% foreign ownership or joint
venture is allowed. Sectors open to FDI include manufacturing, services,
infrastructure construction, retail and wholesale businesses. Moreover,
foreign firms are entitled to a tax holiday in the first three to seven
years of operation and other forms of income tax or customs duty
reliefs are also available. For details of the new investment law,
please refer to Myanmar’s Directorate of Investment and Company
Administration (DICA). In addition, the new government has adopted an overhaul of the century-old Myanmar Companies Act, which is due to take place in the first half of 2017.
In
addition, foreign investors may invest under the new Myanmar Special
Economic Zone (SEZ) Law, which took effect in January 2014. Besides
incentives such as income tax holidays, income tax relief, and customs
duty and import tax exemptions, investors can lease land from the
government or authorised private owners for up to 50 years and renew for
further 25 years. The main SEZ watchdog is the Central Body for the
Myanmar Special Economic Zone.
Foreign investment
According
to DICA, the country’s cumulative inward FDI reached US$67.2 billion as
at December 2016. Major FDI sources were the Chinese mainland (US$18.5
billion, 27.5% of the total), Singapore (US$15.7 billion, 23.3%),
Thailand (US$10.6 billion, 15.8%) and Hong Kong (US$7.5 billion, 11.2%).
Under its national economic development plan, the government targets to
attract FDI of US$140 billion by 2030.
About 63%
of the FDI stock in Myanmar was tied to the sectors of oil & gas and
power, while FDI in the sectors of manufacturing, transport and
communication accounted for 11% and 10% of the total respectively.
Further information is available in the Myanmar Investment Guide.
Trade Policy
Myanmar has been a member of the World Trade Organisation (WTO)
since January 1995. Import tariffs are imposed mostly on an ad valorem
basis. The average MFN applied duty rate on agricultural imports is
8.6%, and more than half of the agricultural products are subject to
tariff rates of less than 15%. Meanwhile, the average MFN applied duty
is 5.1% for non-agricultural products. For example, textiles imported
into Myanmar are subject to an average MFN applied tariff of 8.3%, with
electrical machinery at an average MFN applied tariff of 4.5%.
Myanmar
is a member of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), a
regional bloc consisting 10 countries. As an ASEAN member 1997, Myanmar
is part of the China-ASEAN Free Trade Area (CAFTA), the world’s largest
free trade area by population. Under CAFTA, China’s average import
tariff rate on products from Myanmar was gradually lowered from 8.3% in
2005 to 0.6% in 2012. For example, China’s tariff rate on imports of
textile and clothing items from Myanmar was lowered from an average of
15% in 2005, to 5% in 2009, and zero-rated in 2012. Similarly, Myanmar
will gradually lower the tariff rates on China-origin products. The
average tariff rate on Chinese furniture, for example, was cut from an
average of 9% in 2010 to 0.02% by 2015.
Myanmar
has double taxation agreements (DTAs) with the UK, Singapore, Malaysia,
Thailand, India, Laos, Vietnam and Korea, with the negotiation of an Investment Promotion and Protection Agreement (IPPA) with Hong Kong concluded in 2013.
External trade
Myanmar’s
total exports slipped by 11% to US$11.0 billion in FY2015/16
(April-March). Major export destinations included China, Thailand,
Singapore, India and Japan. Major exports included fuels, minerals,
agricultural products and garment. During the same period, the country’s
total imports dropped 0.4% to US$16.5 billion. Major import sources
were China, Singapore, Japan and Thailand. Myanmar’s imported goods
mainly comprised machinery, transport equipment, basic metals and
manufactures.
Hong Kong's economic ties with Myanmar
Hong
Kong’s exports to Myanmar represented only 0.6% of its total exports to
the 10-member ASEAN during 2016, and Myanmar ranked 8th among ASEAN
countries in absorbing Hong Kong exports (ahead of Brunei and Laos). In
2016, Hong Kong’s exports to the country dropped by 24.2% YOY to US$196
million. Major Hong Kong exports to Myanmar included telecom equipment
and parts (24.6%), knitted or crocheted fabrics (12.4%) and optical
goods (9.5%).
In the same period, Hong Kong’s
imports from Myanmar increased by 20.2% YOY to US$77 million. Major
imports from the country during the period were optical goods (26.6%),
crustaceans, molluscs & aquatic invertebrates, chilled, frozen,
dried, salted or in brine (21.7%), and telecom equipment & parts
(11.5%).
Ref:http://emerging-markets-research.hktdc.com/business-news/article/Asia/Myanmar-Market-Profile/mp/en/1/1X000000/1X09SI4E.htm
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