Turkmenistan: Investment Conference Highlights Slow Pace Of Reform

TURKMENISTAN: INVESTMENT CONFERENCE HIGHLIGHTS SLOW PACE OF REFORM

ghtb/articles/eav101909.shtml
10/19/09

Attempting to develop an image as an investment-friendly destination,
Ashgabat hosted what was billed as the inaugural International
Investment Forum of Turkmenistan in mid-October. Turkmen leaders
spent lavishly to produce a slick three-day event. Nevertheless,
some business executives were not sold on the concept of Turkmenistan
being an open economic environment.

Roughly 450 international participants from approximately 50 countries
attended the October 15-17 conference, according to the forum’s
co-organizer, the London-based conference management consultancy IC
Energy. Attendees included high-level representatives of oil majors,
but also a wide range of mid-sized and non-energy companies looking
to get involved in Turkmenistan.

During the tenure of Turkmenistan’s mercurial former dictator
Saparmurat Niyazov, the self-styled Turkmenbashi, or father of all
Turkmen, the country was largely closed to foreign businesses,
save for a few large and opaque gas and construction firms. But
since Gurbanguly Berdymukhamedov took over the presidency in 2007,
the Turkmen government has proclaimed an interest in opening up
its economy.

Berdymukhamedov himself was due to open the conference, but pulled out
at the last minute because he was "very busy," according to Turkmen
officials. He was, however, able to find time to attend the lengthy
opening of a local chicken farm, which took place on the forum’s
second day, and which was widely covered on local television.

During the opening session, Hans Gerd Prodoehl, Managing Director
of Goetzpartners Management Consultants, extolled the virtues of
the country as an investment destination. His firm has been employed
by the Turkmen government for a little over a year with the task of
aiding economic reform.

"His Excellency the President of Turkmenistan is a driving force for
continuous reform and modernization of this state. This president is
truly an innovator," said Prodoehl, to smiles and applause from the
large delegation of Turkmen officials present. Meanwhile, the small
group of foreign journalists covering the event had quizzical looks
on their faces.

Prodoehl mentioned the country’s "very high political stability and
internal security" as a key factor that made Turkmenistan a secure
foreign investment bet. Despite the much-trumped political stability,
none of the forum participants thought it fit to mention that just days
before the forum’s opening, Berdymukhamedov carried out a wide-scale
purge of energy-sector officials. [For background see the Eurasia
Insight archive].

Praise for the Turkmen government’s reform performance did not come
only from those on the state’s payroll. "During the past five years,
Turkmenistan has had impressive economic growth, even during the
global crisis," said Dr. Ahmen Mohammed Ali Madani, President of the
Islamic Development Bank. "The wise leadership of the country leads
to political and economic stability."

"In the last couple of years, we have found that a lot of cooperation
is now possible with the Turkmen government," said Neil McKain,
Head of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD)
office in Turkmenistan. He referred to the textile factory in the
Caspian port town Turkmenbashi, which produces jeans for Dolce &
Gabbana, Lee and Levi’s, as "an excellent demonstration of what is
possible when investing in Turkmenistan."

But amid the praise for Berdymukhamedov’s regime, there was the
occasional dissenting voice among the forum delegates.

"It’s one thing to thank the president and government for inviting
you to speak, but when people start lavishing praise on the country’s
system of governance, it can make you feel quite uneasy," said one
forum delegate, who questioned whether such obsequiousness and flattery
was the most healthy approach for foreign delegates to be taking
towards the Turkmen government, which remains, under Berdymukhamedov,
one of the most repressive countries on the planet.

[For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

Delegates agreed, however, that the country had become somewhat easier
to work with since the death of Niyazov. Some noted the currency
reforms of May 2008 that allowed the country’s currency, the manat,
to be freely exchanged on international markets. This helped remove
the huge discrepancy between the official and black market dollar
exchange rates.

"This reform almost overnight changed the number of projects we could
consider investing in," said McCann of the EBRD.

Prodoehl of Goetzpartners admitted that one of the most pressing
problems for foreign businesses was the difficulty obtaining Turkmen
visas. "We know that the government is on the way to liberalization
of the visa regime," he insisted.

While the oil majors and top-level investors are able to arrange
meetings with the president or ministers, smaller companies found the
unusually easy access to Turkmen ministers and top officials available
at the conference to be a genuine help. Many were confident that the
first steps towards lucrative contracts had been made at the forum.

However, there were doubts from some quarters as to whether
international companies really are ready for genuine non-energy-sector
investment in the country, where almost all enterprises are still
state controlled.

"There’s no denying that people have made a lot of money in
Turkmenistan, but while this might be called an investment forum, very
few people here are actually investors," said one Western participant
on the sidelines of the conference. "They’re vendors. They will happily
build the Turkmens a sparkling new building; they’ll even gold-plate
it if paid well enough. But there’s a big difference between that,
and actually risking money with a long-term investment in the country."

For that to happen, he said, the country needs to make genuine systemic
reforms, rather than simply pay lip service to the idea.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/insi

Emil Lazarian

“I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people, whose wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled, literature is unread, music is unheard, and prayers are no more answered. Go ahead, destroy Armenia . See if you can do it. Send them into the desert without bread or water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh, sing and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a New Armenia.” - WS