Thursday 4 June 2020

Cambodia avoids coronavirus carnage, but faces economic disaster



Khmer Circle


The Phnom Penh Post under its Australian owner [Yes, the very same owner/editor who kept repeating that lie about the Khmer word for Vietnam/Vietnamese - 'Yuon'- being "derogatory" and who also described the country as enjoying some of "the freest media climate" in the region [a description purportedly made 'under pressure' but one that would come to haunt him subsequently as his ownership /editorship of the paper was unceremoniously stripped off him by none other than the man to whom the compliments had been aimed!] not so long ago proclaimed "Cambodians are richer now than they had ever been in their history"!!

A coronavirus pandemic and impending EBA sanctions measure later and Cambodians are all of a sudden up to their eyeballs in debt and on the brink of economic destitution? By the recent World Bank report on the country at least two million more Cambodians are likely to drop into that category of severe economic hardship whilst the regime - despite boasting much in the way of financial relief - is doing nothing to address the crisis...


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World Bank forecasts pandemic could sink nation into 1st contraction since 1994

A daughter and mother in a rice paddy near Svay Chek village, outside Phnom Penh, on May 7. The pandemic has revealed Cambodia's urgent need for a functioning welfare system.   © AP
SHAUN TURTON, Contributing writer
June 3, 2020 13:43 JST



PHNOM PENH -- Cambodia is enjoying a public health success four months after detecting its first coronavirus case, but the pandemic's impact is setting the stage for an economic disaster in the nation of 16 million.

The country, with one of Southeast Asia's poorest health systems, has avoided the type of fast-spreading outbreak that has overwhelmed several developed nations.

At the same time, the World Bank has warned the country faces the "greatest threat" to its development in 30 years, predicting the pandemic's economic fallout could push GDP into a contraction of between 1% and 2.9% this year in what would be Cambodia's first bout with negative growth since 1994.

In an assessment released on Friday, the bank estimated at least 1.76 million jobs are at risk as the virus-induced global slowdown slams the country's three most important sectors: apparel exports, tourism and construction.

Those industries account for 71% of growth and 20% of total employment in a country that lacks a functioning social safety net.



The grim forecast contrasts with Cambodia's apparent success at containing COVID-19, which has infected more than 6 million people worldwide, killing almost 370,000.

As of Monday, Cambodia had recorded 125 infections -- two currently active -- and no deaths.


The Ministry of Health, which did not return a request for comment, has tested more than 10,000 people, most via the Pasteur Institute in Phnom Penh, one of 17 World Health Organization coronavirus reference laboratories.

The country's public health response has been praised by the WHO and the U.S Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Both groups, which are working closely with Cambodian health authorities, say they are confident there is currently no widespread transmission of the virus.

"They've done a good job," WHO country representative Li Ailan told the Nikkei Asian Review, adding, however, the risk of a second wave remains and much more preparation is needed.

"They're still in the early stage," she said. "If there was a large scale outbreak, the system could be overwhelmed."

Like in other countries with low caseloads, there are questions about what factors -- among them the country's climate, its lack of mass public transport, its relatively low density and more open-air living arrangements -- have helped Cambodia avoid the type of widespread outbreak experienced in Europe, South America and the United States.

Michael Kinzer, director of the U.S. CDC's Cambodia global health security program, said environmental and social factors may have contributed to the low caseload but that there is "no convincing argument for any one reason."

He said government measures -- including restrictions on arrivals from heavily impacted countries, school and some business closures, a ban on mass gatherings and travel constraints during the Cambodian New Year holidays -- made "a direct impact."

More than two-thirds of Cambodia's cases have been imported. The rest have been linked to these patients, with outbreaks centering on five clusters.

Kinzer said the CDC had worked closely with the Ministry of Health's rapid response teams to follow up confirmed cases, monitoring more than 2,000 contacts and finding 27 infections via contact tracing.

"It's not perfect surveillance by any means and I'm sure that we've missed cases, we might have even missed clusters, but the idea that there's widespread transmission doesn't really match the evidence we have," Kinzer said, adding COVID-19 "doesn't hide."

As some restrictions are eased, like the ban on incoming travelers from certain countries, authorities face a continuing battle to prevent a new wave of infections.

At the same time, the government faces what the World Bank describes as an "urgent" need to provide economic relief for the hundreds of thousands of workers hit by the economic fallout.

The bank forecasts poverty will increase between 3% and 11% if families working in Cambodia's major industries experience a 50% loss of income that lasts for six months.

Job losses are also likely to exacerbate Cambodia's already strained $10 billion microcredit sector.

Recent figures don't bode well. After consumer demand collapsed, more than 237 apparel and footwear factories that employ almost 120,000 people combined suspended operations. International arrivals, the backbone of Cambodia's more than 600,000-worker tourism sector, have dropped by half in the first quarter.

Construction, the country's largest economic driver and the employer of 200,000 workers, has also been hit as foreign direct investment, mainly from China, slows. Steel imports, an indicator of building activity, dropped by 47 percent year-on-year in the first two months of 2020.

Meanwhile, close to 100,000 migrant workers returned from Thailand before borders were shut, precipitating what's likely to be a sharp drop in remittances, which generated $2.8 billion in 2019, according to Ministry of Labour figures.

The government has set aside $350 million to provide some relief, including cash for vulnerable groups, and $40 wage subsidies for suspended garment and tourism workers.

But workers' rights advocate Moeun Tola said the crisis has highlighted an urgent need to build a "holistic" welfare system, rather than resorting to "panicked" and piecemeal measures that would see many fall between the cracks.

"There could be a social crisis also, if people don't have income," Tola said. "People need to survive."

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Ah Kwack Hun Sen and Ah Kwen Heng Samrin are now facing one more vital problem - need money to support the dead economy.

Cambodia is a beautiful country with plenty of natural resource, but this idiot leader Hun Sen was never able to make Cambodia a prosperous country. Hun Sen has made only his family and his cronies prosperous.

Hun Sen should have saved at least fifty billion dollars ($50,000,000,000.00) during his over thirty years tenure in power thanks to the richness of the country. On the contrary, this ignorant leader has depended heavily on begging the money from foreigners; when the hard time comes, he has no reserved fund to make the country afloat.

Hun Sen's incompetency may produce a catastrophic result for Cambodia in the near future. He should recognize and accept the fact that education, knowledge, and good judgment are necessary requirements for any leader to have. Savage's behavior that Hun Sen possesses will come to haunt and hurt him during this critical time.

We will wait and see how this one eyed monster Hun Sen solve Cambodia's crisis while hell is opening its widen door to welcome him as celebrity.

93 Years Old Woman

Anonymous said...

Ah Kwack Hun Sen and Ah Kwen Heng Samrin are now facing one more vital problem - need money to support the dead economy.

Cambodia is a beautiful country with plenty of natural resource, but this idiot leader Hun Sen was never able to make Cambodia a prosperous country. Hun Sen has made only his family and his cronies prosperous.

Hun Sen should have saved at least fifty billion dollars ($50,000,000,000.00) during his over thirty years tenure in power thanks to the richness of the country. On the contrary, this ignorant leader has depended heavily on begging the money from foreigners; when the hard time comes, he has no reserved fund to make the country afloat.

Hun Sen's incompetency may produce a catastrophic result for Cambodia in the near future. He should recognize and accept the fact that education, knowledge, and good judgment are necessary requirements for any leader to have. Savage's behavior that Hun Sen possesses will come to haunt and hurt him during this critical time.

We will wait and see how this one eyed monster Hun Sen solve Cambodia's crisis while hell is opening its wide door to welcome him as celebrity.

93 Years Old Woman

Anonymous said...

That's a big lie. Hun Sen covered up covid-19 cases and deaths, arrested many CNRP activists exposing the lies. He labeled them as inciting to over throw the government.