Re: A proposal to create a theme park within 100 miles from Phnom Penh



On Jan 4, 6:31�am, Chim <Chi...@xxxxxxx> wrote:
The creation of a theme park within 100 miles from Phnom Penh would
tremendously help the economy that is within proximity of the
Cambodian capital as much as a cluster regional economy that will help
lift economic development of Phnom Penh, Sihanoukville and Ho Chi Minh
City. It will employ between 600 and 1000 employees to begin with.
Folks around the area would have stable employment, interesting and
high paying jobs. This is a much better prospect than the garment
factory for the local economy. It will attract tourists from all over
Asia, but mostly from the Asean community.

Such a proposal requires more political and savvy diplomatic overtures
than high finance and entrepreneurial genius.

A good example of theme park is Universal Studios theme park in Japan.
This one currently attracts tourists from Japan, China and South
Korea.

The proposal for a theme park in around Phnom Penh is to attract folks
from the Asean community, India, Australia and New Zealand. As I'm
writing, Universal Studios is doing projects to launch theme parks in
Singapore and Dubai. This may be a direct competition with another
member of the Asean community. But I believe that the prospect for a
theme park in Cambodia would help tremendously lift up the economy of
the region and help both Cambodia and Vietnam to catch up with the
other more advanced economies of the Asean community.

Universal Studios is not the only company in the world that provides
that kind of entertainment. Walt Disney Company operates several theme
parks in the US and also in Tokyo and Paris.

That would spike economic growth in Cambodia to around 7% in 2009.
This is the high expectation alone. But that's the way the world
operates. The actual number may come higher, depending on how folks go
about to manage reality. It's all integrity, knowledge and
communication.

These 4 men from the current Royal government can start the ball
rolling: Cham Prasidh, Hor Namhong, Keat Chhon and Khieu Kanharith.
.


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