More than one-sixth of Cambodian businesses
in 2011 were part of the Kingdom’s information and communications sector, a
government census showed.
Of the
182,439 new enterprises that sprang up in the country between June 2009 and
March 2011, some 95,590 serviced the sector, according to the 2011 Economic
Census of Cambodia.
The
census was issued this week by the National Institute of Statistics, the
Ministry of Planning and the Japan International Cooperation Agency.
Growth
in information and communication technology, or ICT, during the past few years
highlighted not only demand for the services, but also the gap between
Cambodia’s sector and those of more developed countries, experts said.
A large
majority of Cambodian businesses were small, with one- or two-person operations
accounting for about 80 per cent of the country’s near 505,000 enterprises, the
census showed. Industry insiders confirmed that recent developments in
Cambodia’s ICT sector had been made by small businesses.
“There
is lots of potential business here, but there aren’t many big local
businesses,” Thai Dinh, a Cambodia-based project assistant at International
Data Group, said yesterday.
“The
market is not big enough for big companies to come in, so any [international]
companies are looking to co-operate with local partners.”
The
biggest areas of ICT growth in Cambodia were in data centres and server
hosting, Thai Dinh said.
Although
growth has been quick during the past few years, much of that growth has been
in technologies that are outdated in more developed countries in the region,
Thai Dinh said.
“Technology
that is old in other countries is still new in Cambodia,” he said.
A
recent increase in the number of middle-class income earners had helped
springboard the ICT industry in Cambodia, Emerging Markets Consulting senior
consultant Gordon Peters said yesterday.
The
growing market for devices such as smartphones and computers led to the
establishment of more businesses, and space in the market remained for data
centres, information technology training, web services and web hosting, Peters
said.
The
lack of shipping services and interbank language – which enables online
transactions – detracted from the short-term potential of online markets in the
Kingdom, he said.
Diep Ho
Seng, CEO of the Phnom Penh-based IT firm Interflex, which specialises in
systems integration, said there were relatively few large technology firms in
Cambodia, and that recent growth in the sector could be attributed to small
start-ups.
“You
have people who used to work for bigger companies leaving and starting their
own small companies,” Diep Ho Seng said.
The new
entrants to the market were opening programming and networking services, he
added.
Don
Weinland
The
Phnom Penh Post
Business & Investment Opportunities
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