Border Industry in Myanmar: Turning the Periphery into the Center of Growth


Autoria(s): Kudo, Toshihiro
Data(s)

29/10/2007

29/10/2007

01/10/2007

Resumo

The Myanmar economy has not been deeply integrated into East Asia’s production and distribution networks, despite its location advantages and notably abundant, reasonably well-educated, cheap labor force. Underdeveloped infrastructure, logistics in particular, and an unfavorable business and investment environment hinder it from participating in such networks in East Asia. Service link costs, for connecting production sites in Myanmar and other remote fragmented production blocks or markets, have not fallen sufficiently low to enable firms, including multi-national corporations to reduce total costs, and so the Myanmar economy has failed to attract foreign direct investments. Border industry offers a solution. The Myanmar economy can be connected to the regional and global economy through its borders with neighboring countries, Thailand in particular, which already have logistic hubs such as deep-sea ports, airports and trunk roads. This paper examines the source of competitiveness of border industry by considering an example of the garment industry located in the Myanmar-Thai border area. Based on such analysis, we recognize the prospects of border industry and propose some policy measures to promote this on Myanmar soil.

Identificador

IDE Discussion Paper. No. 122. 2007.10

http://hdl.handle.net/2344/631

IDE Discussion Paper

122

Idioma(s)

en

eng

Publicador

Institute of Developing Economies, JETRO

日本貿易振興機構アジア経済研究所

Palavras-Chave #Myanmar (Burma) #Greater Mekong Sub-region (GMS) #Regional cooperation #Border industry #Cross-border trade #Migrant workers #Logistics #Center-periphery #Regional economic cooperation #International trade #Apparel industry #Migrant labor #ミャンマー(ビルマ) #国境貿易 #域内経済協力 #貿易 #アパレル産業 #外国人労働者 #AHBR Myanmar ミャンマー #F15 - Economic Integration #F22 - International Migration #J31 - Wage Level and Structure;etc. #L67 - Other Consumer Nondurables: #333.7 #330.2
Tipo

Working Paper

Technical Report