The report quoted a JETRO survey as saying 52.3% will maintain their current levels of operations in Myanmar and 13.5% will expand them, while 27.5% will scale back their business in the country and 6.7% will withdraw from the country or move their operations to a third country.
The Dec. 9 report said if the business environment continues to deteriorate in Myanmar, more Japanese investors may have no choice but to reduce their operations or withdraw.
With the first anniversary of the Feb. 1 coup approaching, the United Nations said on Dec. 31 that the political and security situation in Myanmar is expected to remain volatile in 2022, and that a fourth wave of COVID-19, due to a relatively low vaccination rate and the emergence of new variants of the coronavirus, is considered a growing risk.
In October, the International Monetary Fund forecast that Myanmar’s economy would shrink 17.9% in 2021, down 9.0 percentage points from the Washington-based institution’s estimate in April.
The IMF also projected that Myanmar’s gross domestic product would contract 0.1% in 2022.
According to the JETRO survey, 63.6% of respondents expected their 2021 operating profits to fall from a year earlier, while 27.8% forecast they would chalk up the same level of profit.
About 180 companies responded to the survey conducted by the Japanese government-backed organization in August and September. As of late June, a total of 433 Japanese companies had invested in Myanmar.
Asked why they would reduce, relocate or withdraw operations from Myanmar, 68.4% of the respondents cited declining sales and 50.9% referred to the country’s low growth and potential.
Some pointed to the deteriorating business environment propelled by the unstable political situation and uncertainty about the future of the country.
Several construction companies touched on Japan’s suspension of new official development assistance in response to the Myanmar military’s overthrow of the democratic government led by civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi.
A U.N. agency has issued a dismal outlook for Myanmar, saying an estimated 14.4 million people, or about a quarter of the country’s population, will require humanitarian aid such as food and medical supplies in 2022.
The U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said the prices of food and other key household commodities surged after the coup, and that the pandemic has exacerbated the country’s humanitarian situation.
Japan times