'Lanka has business-friendly climate'
Sri Lanka has enormous potential to offer in terms of business and
the country has great opportunity to attract Belgian investments as it
has a positive business-friendly climate, Ambassador of Belgium to
India, Sri Lanka and other SAARC nations, Jan Luykx said.
He said that the overall outlook for investments in Sri Lanka was
encouraging. "The investment climate in Sri Lanka has ensured that
around 20 Belgium companies had invested in the country and were
performing quite well," Luykx said.
"Sri Lanka has the potential for economic growth and is one of the
emerging economies in South Asia," he added, delivering the keynote
address at a breakfast meeting held with a Belgian delegation organised
by the European Chamber of Commerce of Sri Lanka (ECCSL) in Colombo.
There are many opportunities to capitalise on particularly when one
considers traditional trading and investment partners. We have well
reputed companies specialised in domains such as technology, drinking
water, renewable energy and wastewater treatment, where Belgium has the
possibility of providing financial assistance to these kinds of
investments, he added.
Therefore, the Ambassador invited Sri Lankan companies to explore
these impending business opportunities.
Despite Europe being one of Sri Lanka's key trading and investment
partners, during the past couple of years trade between Belgium and Sri
Lanka has dropped significantly.
During 2013, trade between the two countries amounted to € 500
million and it further declined to € 220 million in 2014.
Luykx said that Sri Lanka was the only country which incurred a trade
deficit out of all the countries they traded with.
Breaking the deadlock on reaching international trade, Sri Lanka
should explore the opportunity ahead of the country in finalising the
CEPA with India, Luykx, said.
He said that there was great potential that Sri Lanka could look
forward to in terms of economic expansion.
"We feel that there is great potential for economic expansion through
such an agreement which would be very imperative for Sri Lanka in
reaching the next level of economic growth.
Noting that South Asia was one of the world's regions where economic
interaction between countries was at its lowest, he emphasised that this
would be a great opportunity for Sri Lanka to remove barriers to
international trade and enhance its trade relations within the region.
"I think it is also something that European countries should look at
because participating in it will enable whole economic integration and
good economic collateral," he said.
He also pointed out that South Asia is strongly withstanding the
global financial turbulence and it is a great indication that the region
has much potential for trade and investment in this part of the world.
- SJ |