• 3 days ago
The small Asian nation is battling a weak currency and a dip in foreign investment. Local business owners say their country needs to boost local production and exports if it wants to jumpstart the economy.
Transcript
00:00Chicken feet are a bestseller at this market in Laos' capital, Vientiane.
00:07But in her 24 years in the meat business, shopkeeper Buamani Sipubong says these are
00:12the hardest times she's faced.
00:15The price per kilo of imported chicken feet has jumped from 70 cents to over 2 euros in
00:22recent years.
00:24Technically she's making more money, but that money has lost value.
00:32When the currency was stronger, I could buy more products with the same amount of money.
00:40But now, not only am I losing, my customers are buying less too.
00:49Many of those customers have turned to the black market to get foreign currencies at
00:54a cheaper rate.
00:56But that only fuels inflation, driving up the cost of imported goods even more.
01:02High inflation also makes it tougher for Laos to pay back foreign debt.
01:07Like the 6 billion US dollars China-Laos railway project.
01:12China is Laos' biggest creditor, holding nearly half of its public debt.
01:18Some debt relief from China has been granted, but more negotiations are ongoing.
01:25This local businesswoman believes that in the long run, Chinese investment will pay
01:30off.
01:31She thinks the bigger issue is local production.
01:35Most of the trade on the railway is one-way, goods coming from China into Laos.
01:43The government is trying to boost exports, but Laos just doesn't produce enough.
01:48There are hardly any local products.
01:50They need to support local businesses to get things going.
01:57These pipes are one of the few items made locally.
02:02Everything else is imported from Thailand or China, meaning the family business has
02:07to pay for them in foreign currencies.
02:14Back at the market, shopkeeper Sipu Wong is paid in Thai baht.
02:18A bit of good news, since almost all her meat is imported from Thailand, like most products
02:24here.
02:25For now, they arrive via a bumpy road.
02:29But plans are underway to extend the railway from Vientiane across the Mekong River into
02:35Thailand.

Recommended