Company formation traditionally worked in Myanmar by applying to the Directorate of Company and Investment Administration (DICA) to obtain a permit to trade and to register. This granted the applying company with a temporary company registration, followed by a permanent company registration, before a tax registration was issued to the company: a process that could take anywhere between two months to a year.
DICA has confirmed it is now abolishing the first stage, so companies will immediately receive their final documentation, including a Permit to Trade and Certificate of Incorporation, in a move aimed at reducing the administrative burdens for the authorities and investors.
DICA reports the rate of foreign investment there has grown 500 per cent since revisions to its Foreign Investment Law were made in 2012.
Foreign direct investment in Myanmar accounted for over $3 billion in 2013, while the number of company formations has boomed and around 20,000 new jobs have been created.
Officials there plan to rewrite the Myanmar Companies Act and submit a draft for approval in May, to help maintain the pace of growth.
Worldbox CEO, Adrian Ashurst, commented: “Foreign direct investment has been put at the forefront of economic reforms in Myanmar, with existing laws governing this area, particularly, the Foreign Investment Law, being overhauled to ease or remove traditional foreign investment restrictions.
“This has greatly-improved the business environment in the country to the extent it can now compete with its historical ‘go-to’ neighbours for investment, China and Thailand. The international community has responded, importantly, by lifting some economic sanctions on Myanmar, leading to increased investor confidence.”
Few US and European companies had set up in Myanmar since the military handed over power to a quasi-civilian government in 2011. Multinationals who either are in the country now or are planning to set up there include Coca-Cola, British American Tobacco and Nissan.
When the Lord Mayor of London visited Myanmar in October last year, he accused British companies of being late into a market of 60 million people. McKinsey estimates market growth could reach $200 billion in Myanmar by 2030.
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