2022.04.11
US firms willing to invest more in Korea: AMCHAM survey
By Kim So-hyun, The Korea Herald - A majority of American businesses in South Korea were optimistic that investment here will continue over the next two years and picked Korea as the second most preferred location for regional headquarters in Asia after Singapore, survey results showed on Thursday.
In
an annual survey of member companies by the American Chamber of Commerce in
Korea, 44 percent of the respondents said they will increase investment in
Korea through 2024, while another 42.9 percent said there will be no change to
their investment levels. Six percent said their investment will decrease in the
next two years, and 7.1 percent said their investment outlook was unclear.
More
than 80 companies responded to the survey between Feb. 24 and March 25, which
was designed to gather opinions on the business environment here ahead of the
inauguration of the new government and provide insight to make Korea a more
attractive investment destination, AmCham Korea said.
As
for the current business environment in Korea, 29.8 percent said it was good;
47.6 percent said it was average; and 21.4 percent said it was below average. When
asked about key areas for improvement, for which respondents could choose
multiple answers, nearly four out of five (78.6 percent) respondents picked
Korea’s unique regulations, followed by CEO risks (42.9 percent), rigid labor
laws (42.9 percent), high tax rates (25 percent) and others (16.7 percent).
As
for the biggest difficulty for businesses in Korea, to which respondents could
also choose two or more answers, labor policy (67.9 percent) topped the list,
followed by tax policy (56 percent) and CEO liability (46.4 percent). Only 15.5
percent chose immigration policy and 13.1 percent chose education policy such
as foreign schools as difficulties.
Slightly
over half (51.2 percent) of the respondents said government policies had a
negative impact on their business operations last year, while another 40.5
percent said the impact was neutral. Only 3.6 percent said they had a positive
impact. Almost four out of five respondents expected to see moderate to
significant change under the incoming government.
Two
out of five companies said they did not meet their growth targets last year due
to COVID-related supply chain problems, uncertain economic conditions and other
relevant issues that hindered sales.
“AmCham
is confident that President-elect Yoon Suk-yeol recognizes the value of
creating a global investment environment to enhance South Korea’s
competitiveness. We will work closely with his administration to make Korea the
top business destination for global companies in Asia,“ AmCham chairman James
Kim said.
AmCham
plans to release later this month a Korea-US FTA implementation scorecard that
examines the concerns and suggestions of the international business community
in Korea in regard to the bilateral FTA.
Source: http://news.koreaherald.com/view.php?ud=20220407000667&md=20220408003023_BL