Industries (2024)

Industries (1)

Workers working on apartment construction in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. Photo by Axel Drainville, taken on 28 January 2015. Licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 2.0.

Industries in Cambodia (excluding extractive industries and mining) are mostly within the garment, light manufacturing, agricultural, construction and tourism sectors.

The Royal Government of Cambodia has set directions to transform Cambodia into a middle-income economy by 2030 and high-income country by 2050, as mandated in the National Strategic Development Plan for 2014–2018. The directions emphasize the role of industry and small and medium enterprises as a key driver of future growth.1

The government prepared and adopted an Industrial Development Policy (IDP) in March 2015 as a guide to provide systemic solutions to developing a competitive industrial sector in Cambodia.2 A key aim of the IDP is driving economic (and export) diversification beyond garment and footwear manufacturing. The target was for these dominant products to fall to 55% of total exports by 2020 and 50% by 2025.3

In July 2017 it was announced that the World Bank will provide Cambodia with US$540 million over 2018–2021 to finance economic development, with a particular focus on supporting the implementation of the Industrial Development Policy.4

Key industries include garment and light manufacturing, food and beverage processing, construction and real estate, tourism, as well as the emerging mining and exploration industry (see Extractive industries for detail of mining and exploration).

Manufacturing

The manufacturing sector accounted for 31 percent of Cambodia's economy in 2016.5 The country's growth rate for value added in industry is the highest in Southeast Asia.6 The Asian Development Bank has forecast the country's manufacturing tocontinue to grow by around 9.6%, "with a slowdown in garments and footwear off set by stronger growth in emerging industries: electrical parts, automobile components, bicycles, milled rice, and rubber."7 In 2017, Cambodia became the European Union's number one supplier of bicycles.8

Cambodia’s light manufacturing assembly sector, located primarily but not exclusively in special economic zones, covers principally labor-intensive operations. The government noted that Cambodian industries remain weak through having a narrow base, low level of technological sophistication, low value segmentation and concentration in a few sectors. The production of construction materials, electronics, machinery, engines, and chemical products is still small.9

There were 1,528 factories in Cambodia at the end of 2018 according to figures from the Ministry of Industry and Handicraft, with 922 – almost two-thirds – operated by weaving, bag, garment, and footwear manufacturers.10 2018 saw178 new factories opening, compared to 150 in 2017. Total income from production of both domestic and export products was about US$13.17 billion in 2018 – an increase of 23 percent on 2017.

The garment sector continues to be onekey engine of growth, providing on average 635,000 jobs in early 2017, at 643 factories.11 Around 90 percent of the workforce is female.12 Exports totalled US$8.02 billion in 2017 (up 9.5 percent from 2016), and made up 72 percent of Cambodia's total merchandise exports.13Footwear exports grew by 14.4 percent year-on-year, to US$873 million for 2017.

The European Union takes 46 percent of the sector’s exports and the United States, 24 percent14, but exports to other markets have been growing strongly. Canada took just 0.5 percent of these exports in 2010, but 8 percent in 2016; Japan took just 2.7 percent in 2010, but 9 percent in 2016. China is the major foreign investor in Cambodian garment and footwear factories.15

Currently, the unit labor cost for manufacturing a cotton shirt in Cambodia is estimated at $0.33, compared to $7 in the United States.16 This advantage may be lost with the further development of robotics in the garment industry – the ADB quotes observers saying that robots could drop the US production cost to around $0.40.17

Better Factories Cambodia (BFC – a partnership between the International Labour Organization and the International Finance Corporation, a member of the World Bank Group) was established in Cambodia in 2001, largely to improve working conditions and competitiveness. A memorandum of understanding between BFC, the government and the Garment Manufacturers' Association has been renewed five times since then, the current agreement running to 20 December 2019.18

After garments and footwear, bicycles are third largest export category, at US$355 million in 2017.19 Electrical and vehicle parts exports together reached US$430 million in 2017,20 but these are often assembled or subject to further processing overseas.

Agriculture

The agriculture sector accounted for about 26 percent of Cambodia’s economy in 2016.21 Agricultural output grew by about 1.7 percent in 2017.22As part of the government’s policy to support the agriculture industry, materials and equipment used in agricultural production are exempt from import duties. The government hoped these policies would increase milled rice exports to one million tonnes by 2015, but that goal was not met.23Rice milling is an emerging industry.

Real estate

Cambodia is experiencing a property boom. According to a World Bank report, construction overtook agriculture and tourism as the second largest growth driver in 2014. This has been reflected by the $2.5 billion in construction permits approved by the Ministry of Land, Construction and Urbanization and the $258 million fixed assets investment in tourism sector approved by the Council for Cambodian Development.24However, the lack of construction regulations remains a concern.25

Tourism

Tourism is a significant and growing part of the Cambodian economy. In its October 2017 regional update, the World Bank said that tourism contributed 28.3 percent of Cambodia's GDP and 25.9 percent of employment.26 Domestic tourist numbers were estimated at 10 million in 2016.27 This shows a doubling over 10 years according to statistics from the Ministry of Tourism. The growth rate is estimated at 5–7 percent a year.28The Tourism Ministry announced in early 2017 that it had prepared a master plan for the development of the industry to attract investment in the sector and create more products for tourists.29

Cambodia has targeted 7 million foreign tourists by 2020, but will need at least 10 percent annual growth numbers to achieve that.30 That is currently being achieved – total tourist arrivals for 2017 were 5.6 million, 11.8% growth over the previous year.31

The countries that provide most of the tourists to Cambodia have changed over the last decade. While western countries were the top markets for foreign tourism in the early 2000s, they have been overtaken by tourists from China, Vietnam and other Asian countries. Over 1.2 million Chinese visitors arrived in 2017, an increase of 46% from the previous year.32 Three-quarters of international tourists today come from the Asia/Pacific region, with only 15 percent from Europe.33

The growth of Chinese tourism and investment is having a significant impact on Sihanoukville and the wider coastline of Cambodia. It was reported that just in the first week of November 2018, the Council for the Development of Cambodia approved five, 5-star hotel projects with a total of 3,000 rooms.34

For all tourists from overseas, a key drawcard is the Angkor Wat temple and surrounding area, protected as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. In July 2017 the seventh-century temple ruins at Sambor Prei Kuk in Kampong Thom province also became a World Heritage Site.

Last updated: 27 January 2019

References

Industries (2024)

FAQs

Industries? ›

industry, group of productive enterprises or organizations that produce or supply goods, services, or sources of income. In economics, industries are generally classified as primary, secondary, tertiary, and quaternary; secondary industries are further classified as heavy and light.

What are the types of industries? ›

In economics, industries are customarily classified as primary, secondary, and tertiary; secondary industries are further classified as heavy and light.

What is an industry and examples? ›

An industry is a group of manufacturers or businesses that produce a particular kind of goods or services. Workers in the textile industry design, fabricate, and sell cloth. The tourist industry includes all the commercial aspects of tourism.

What are called industries? ›

An industry is a group of companies that are related based on their primary business activities. In modern economies, there are dozens of industry classifications. Industry classifications are typically grouped into larger categories called sectors.

How many industries are there? ›

The GICS structure consists of 11 sectors, 25 industry groups, 74 industries and 163 sub-industries into which S&P has categorized all major public companies. The system is similar to ICB (Industry Classification Benchmark), a classification structure maintained by FTSE Group.

What are 11 industrial sectors? ›

There are 11 stock market sectors, as classified by GICS, which stands for Global Industry Classification Standard. These sectors include healthcare, materials, real estate, consumer staples, consumer discretionary, utilities, energy, industrials, consumer services, financials, and technology.

What are the 4 four types of industry? ›

  • Primary industry.
  • Secondary industry.
  • Tertiary industry.
  • Quaternary industry.
Mar 31, 2024

What are the five major types of industries? ›

Industry sectors
  • Primary sector of the economy (the raw materials industry)
  • Secondary sector of the economy (manufacturing and construction)
  • Tertiary sector of the economy (the "service industry")
  • Quaternary sector of the economy (information services)
  • Quinary sector of the economy (humanitarian services)

How do you categorize industries? ›

At the top level, they are often classified according to the three-sector theory into sectors: primary (extraction and agriculture), secondary (manufacturing), and tertiary (services). Some authors add quaternary (knowledge) or even quinary (culture and research) sectors.

What are the US major industries? ›

What are primary industries? ›

What is Primary Industry? A primary industry deals with the extraction of natural resources. Forestry, agriculture, fishing, quarrying, mining, and mineral exploitation are all part of a country's economy. It is thus named because it serves as the foundation for all other items.

What are new industries called? ›

Emerging industries frequently come into existence when one technology begins to eclipse and replace an older technology. Stocks of companies in emerging industries are often volatile and can experience wide price swings.

Why is industry called industry? ›

Etymology. From Middle English industry, industrie, from Old French industrie, from Latin industria (“diligence, activity, industry”), from industrius (“diligent, active, zealous”), from Old Latin indostruus (“diligent, active”); origin unknown.

What is the #1 industry? ›

1. Commercial Banking in the US. The Commercial Banking industry is composed of banks regulated by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the Federal Reserve Board of Governors (Fed) and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC).

What are the three main industries? ›

The 3 major types of industries are primary industry, secondary industry and tertiary industry.

What are the three types of industries with examples? ›

The Types of Industries are primary, secondary, and tertiary. Examples of primary industries are lumbering, mining, and farming, examples of secondary industries are oil refinery and cement industry and examples of tertiary industries are warehousing, insurance, banking, and transport.

What are three major types of industries? ›

The 3 major types of industries are primary industry, secondary industry and tertiary industry.

What are the 10 sectors of the economy? ›

They are telecommunication, consumer staples, utilities, industrials, consumer discretionary, materials, energy, real estate, financials, health care, and technology.

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