Erbil ranked 5th Middle East city with potential for foreign direct investment

ideas

New member
London - UK (UK.KRG.org) - An international investment magazine has awarded Erbil fifth place in a ranking of the top Middle East cities with potential for foreign direct investment. This places Erbil ahead of Muscat and Riyadh.

FDI Magazine, a subsidiary of the Financial Times, in this month's edition, ran a feature on Middle East cities of the future, ranking cities by economic potential, infrastructure, business friendliness and FDI promotion strategy.

In the listing for cities with the most potential for FDI, the magazine gave Amman top place followed by Dubai, Manama, and Ras Al Khaimah and then Erbil. Rhiyad was ranked 9th and Muscat 6th.

Bayan Sami Abdul Rahman, the KRG High Representative to the UK, said, "FDI Magazine's recognition of Erbil as a Middle East city of the future with potential for foreign direct investment confirms what many who have been doing business in Kurdistan already know - that Kurdistan and its capital are ripe for investment and ready to do business."

The Kurdistan Region is increasingly seen as the commercial gateway to Iraq and is attracting trade and investment from around the world, particularly from neighbouring countries. The region's trade with Turkey comes to about $7.5 billion dollars a year, followed by Lebanon, Iran and the Gulf states.

The Kurdistan Board of Investment and Ministry of Trade and Industry go out of their way to ease business in Kurdistan, with the assistance of the chambers of commerce and other trade organisations. The Board of Investment estimates $17 billion has been invested in projects ranging from cement factories to shopping malls in Kurdistan in the past five years.

European business communities are also turning to Kurdistan and there are regular trade delegations visiting the region from the UK, France, Italy, Austria, Germany and other EU countries. Erbil's international airport offers direct flights to Frankfurt, Vienna, Amman and many other destination and an increasing number of hotels in the capital make it a business friendly environment.

A trade and investment conference in London last year attracted over 600 people representing 205 companies, 60 media organisations and close to 20 diplomatic missions.

Kurdistan has also recently been listed as a favourite tourist destination. The New York Times placed the region in its top 34 places to visit and National Geographic Magazine listed it as 20.

See also the FDI magazine website

http://krg.org/articles/detail.asp?l...=223&anr=39238
 
Cond? Nast Traveler (US): The capital, ERBIL (HAWLER) is among the 15 Best Places to See Right Now, Please SHARE it on your profile.

Destination: ERBIL, Kurdistan Region, Iraq

Why to go; The capital, Erbil, is stunningly set against snowcapped mountains that rise above rolling green fields and is one of the oldest continually inhabited ...cities in the world.

for more info; http://www.concierge.com/cntraveler/...503536?all=yes

Note that; Cond? Nast Traveler is a US magazine published by Cond? Nast Publications.


Kurdistan, Iraq

Why go: The capital, Erbil, is stunningly set against snowcapped mountains that rise above rolling green fields and is one of the oldest continually inhabited cities in the world.

Why go now: War has ended, at least in this small corner of Iraq, making it possible for travelers to visit for the first time in years. Go soon, though. Thanks to oil money, reconstruction is in full swing, which means that the few villages left after Saddam Hussein destroyed 4,000 of them won't remain villages for long.

If you go: Postwar curiosity is drawing an increasing number of travelers to this now serene region of Iraq, says Middle East political analyst Carolyn McIntyre, who recently scouted the area for the travel company Geographic Expeditions. The U.S. State Department maintains that the area remains dangerous, but the British government disagrees. According to the British Foreign and Commonwealth Office, the risk of terrorism in Kurdistan is "markedly and statistically lower than in other parts of Iraq." In Erbil, the city's first hotel with luxury aspirations, the Rotana, opened in January (964-66-210-5555; doubles, $260?$450). Beyond Erbil, visitors can journey up into the mountains and past waterfalls along the Hamilton Road: Once a route fiercely fought over by warring factions, it is now a tourist trail. Just be careful about following the road to its end, which is at the Iranian border.
 
It's because companies don't have to pay taxes here. They only have to pay off the government. Medical companies, pharmaceutical companies, water companies - and many more - have actually avoided investment because they can't afford the baksheesh.
 
Back
Top