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Nepal: A sizzling opportunity June 22, 2006 I remember, while editing a weekly documentation magazine for the Press Foundation of Asia in Manila, back in the mid-1970s, I used to be amazed by the correctness of statistical data in Nepal Rashtra Bank's quarterly research bulletin. To be honest, one never expected that kind of efficiency from a country that was hardly noticed by the world; and yet, it took its obligation for public information quite seriously. I was given a neatly produced book that contained all the information up to mid-April 2005 and a supplementary piece of paper that had all the updates till mid-April 2006. I couldn't have asked for more. Of the total foreign-invested projects, India accounted for the most - 331 - followed by China with 121, Japan with 110, the US with 98, South Korea with 56, Germany with 45, and the UK with 41. The rest of the investments came from a host of other countries, including New Zealand, Bermuda, the British Virgin Islands, the Philippines, Brazil, Ghana, and Azerbaijan. These laws, which allow FDI in the form of equity, reinvestment of earnings, and loans, will now surely be looked at to make them more conducive and applicable to newer areas. It's the best possible way to develop the industrial base, acquire the technology to build upon it later, and create immediate employment. The idea will attract countries like India and China since Nepal is too small a market to be an investment destination for its own sake. For all the goodwill generated by India's unstinting offer of help to Nepal's new transitional government, there's still an undercurrent of sentiment that one could often sense as anti-Indian. It's reassuring that Prime Minister Manmohan Singh is taking a personal interest in Nepal's affairs and it's necessary that he keeps a personal tab on the blueprinting of Nepal's economic future. There has been a lot of misunderstanding in the past on this account, but Nepal can't do without India's help to produce the electricity to run its industries and build the roads to spread its investments around. Geography has created the potential for cooperative growth. It's now diplomacy's turn to exploit it. Powered by More Guest Columns
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