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This leaflet introduces our programme, informs about the general background and the specific approaches on regional economic cooperation and integration. It introduces the programme's focus areas and reports on results and prospects.
7
Regional Economic Cooperation and Integration in Asia
Transcript
Page 1: Programme Leaflet

Regional Economic Cooperation and Integration in AsiaThe Deutsche Gesellschaft für International Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH in Asia

As a federally owned enterprise, GIZ supports the German Government in achieving its objectives in the field of in-ternational cooperation for sustainable development. As an international cooperation enterprise for sustainable de-velopment with worldwide operations, has been operating in Asia for almost 30 years. As an instrument of bilateral cooperation, we act on behalf of the German government and in the interests of both Germany and Asia.

We constantly adjust the performance profile to address long-term objectives of the region. This includes the current implementation gap of bilateral and regional approaches within Asia. GIZ serves as a gear-wheel between selected partner initiatives working on the goal of sustainable economic development. Bringing together regional expertise and best practices from the GIZ portfolio enhances the capacities of partners and the programme alike.

Cooperation with German businesses is a key component of our projects. By virtue of the longstanding nature of its cooperation, GIZ has developed close ties with partners in the region and is building upon this relationship to foster German-Asian cooperation.

Deutsche Gesellschaft für

Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH

Regional Economic Cooperation and Integration in Asia

Office China

Ta Yuan Diplomatic Office

14 Liangmahe South Street, Chaoyang District

100600 Beijing, PR China

Office Mongolia

Naiman Zovkhis Building

Seoul Street 21,

Ulaanbaatar 14251, Mongolia

Office Thailand

193/63 Lake Rajada Office Complex

New Ratchadapisek Road, Klongtoey

Bangkok 10110, Thailand

Dr. Jürgen Steiger

Programme Director & Deputy Country Director GIZ China

T +8610 8532 3114

F +86 10 8532 5774

E [email protected]

Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH

Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenar-beit (GIZ) GmbH, on behalf of the German Government, has been involved with regional economic cooperation and integration for many years. GIZ supports several regional initiatives in Asia, Africa, Eastern Europe and Latin America. Taking into account the specific needs of our partners we use tailor-made approaches and instruments in different sub-regions. Our work targets actors at both regional and national level and includes stakeholders from the public sector like officials and technical staff at regional secretariats and national governments, private sector associations and cham-bers of commerce, and civil society organisations.

How we support Regional Economic Integration

© GIZ/Frommann

Page 2: Programme Leaflet

Regional Economic Cooperation and Integration in AsiaThe Deutsche Gesellschaft für International Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH in Asia

As a federally owned enterprise, GIZ supports the German Government in achieving its objectives in the field of in-ternational cooperation for sustainable development. As an international cooperation enterprise for sustainable de-velopment with worldwide operations, has been operating in Asia for almost 30 years. As an instrument of bilateral cooperation, we act on behalf of the German government and in the interests of both Germany and Asia.

We constantly adjust the performance profile to address long-term objectives of the region. This includes the current implementation gap of bilateral and regional approaches within Asia. GIZ serves as a gear-wheel between selected partner initiatives working on the goal of sustainable economic development. Bringing together regional expertise and best practices from the GIZ portfolio enhances the capacities of partners and the programme alike.

Cooperation with German businesses is a key component of our projects. By virtue of the longstanding nature of its cooperation, GIZ has developed close ties with partners in the region and is building upon this relationship to foster German-Asian cooperation.

Deutsche Gesellschaft für

Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH

Regional Economic Cooperation and Integration in Asia

Office China

Ta Yuan Diplomatic Office

14 Liangmahe South Street, Chaoyang District

100600 Beijing, PR China

Office Mongolia

Naiman Zovkhis Building

Seoul Street 21,

Ulaanbaatar 14251, Mongolia

Office Thailand

193/63 Lake Rajada Office Complex

New Ratchadapisek Road, Klongtoey

Bangkok 10110, Thailand

Dr. Jürgen Steiger

Programme Director & Deputy Country Director GIZ China

T +8610 8532 3114

F +86 10 8532 5774

E [email protected]

Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH

Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenar-beit (GIZ) GmbH, on behalf of the German Government, has been involved with regional economic cooperation and integration for many years. GIZ supports several regional initiatives in Asia, Africa, Eastern Europe and Latin America. Taking into account the specific needs of our partners we use tailor-made approaches and instruments in different sub-regions. Our work targets actors at both regional and national level and includes stakeholders from the public sector like officials and technical staff at regional secretariats and national governments, private sector associations and cham-bers of commerce, and civil society organisations.

How we support Regional Economic Integration

© GIZ/Frommann

Page 3: Programme Leaflet

CAREC GTI

PBG

GMS

Progress, Results and Prospects

Focus Areas

Approach

Background

Regional economic cooperation and integration are consensu-ally seen as key to Asia’s future development, whose architecture is built largely on sub-regional initiatives with so far only few, lean regional institutions. The flexible character of Asian regionalism reflects the region’s great economic, social, political and cultural diversity. Sub-regional economic cooperation initiatives – Greater Mekong Sub-region Economic Cooperation Programme (est. 1992), Greater Tumen Initiative (est. 1995), Central Asia Regional Economic Cooperation (est. 2001), Pan-Beibu Gulf Economic Cooperation (est. 2006), and others – provide platforms for groups of countries, economies and territories to join the

integration process at their own speed. They aim at promoting cooperation in specific areas, like trade and transport, investment, tourism, energy or environment.

The flexibility of Asian regionalism, however, leaves national governments the option to limit their commitments and to slow down the progress of formal integration. Given the development gaps in the region it is even more important to make regional cooperation inclusive and to ensure that the smaller countries can access benefit from regional actions.

The RCI-Programme supports regional and national stakehold-ers in the context of sub-regional cooperation initiatives by providing capacity building, organizing trainings and dialogue events, and conducting sector studies. Wherever suitable, we

• Addressing functional aspects of regional cooperation and integration within PBG by organizing studies and capacity building activities on key subjects such as trade facilitation and port cooperation. Strength-ening the capacity of smaller PBG-countries to engage in regional cooperation.

• Contributing to the implementation of concrete projects in the GTI priority areas of trade, multi-destination tourism and local cross-border cooperation through ongoing technical trainings and provision of international expertise.

• Promoting peer-to-peer learning and exchange of good practices among regional initiatives, leading to pilot replication of lessons learnt.

To support PBG cooperation, the RCI-Programme contributes to the drafting of a road map by supporting selected priority sector studies. A study on potentials for port cooperation in the region is currently underway, which will be accompanied by workshops and study tours. In order to improve the competencies of smaller PBG countries to engage in regional cooperation and integration processes the programme activities in 2013 will cover trade capacity building measures for stakeholders from Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam.

In the scope of its cooperation with GTI, the RCI-Programme contributes to a multi-destination-tourism study trough interna-tional expertise and consultancy. It furthermore provides input to capacity building courses on cross-border activities for Northeast Asian local governments as well as project manage-ment courses for GTI secretariat on a regular basis. In Mongolia, the RCI-Programme supports the national single window imple-mentation process by conducting technical trainings and facilitating the transfer of lessons learnt through study tours to other countries which went through similar reforms (e.g. Central Asian countries and Senegal).

Many regional cooperation and integration good practices are created within the region. To make this knowledge accessible the RCI-Programme organizes expert hearings with participants from member countries of the sub-regional initiatives. This framework provides a platform for professional exchange of

knowledge and lessons learnt regarding regional cooperation and cross-border trade strengthening network building among the initiatives’ members.

Regional economic cooperation and integration play an increasingly important role in Asia’s economic landscape. They help countries to overcome the limitations of domestic markets and foster inclusive develop-ment, both by boosting economic growth and by providing the resources for pro-poor policies. The GIZ Programme “Regional Economic Cooperation and Integration (RCI) in Asia” supports regional stakeholders with the aim to strengthen selected core processes of regional economic cooperation and integration and to contribute to sustainable and inclusive economic development in the region.

Commissioned by: German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ)Key subjects: Trade and investment facilitation, port cooperation and local cross-border economic cooperationOverall term: July 2011 – June 2015

include European integration experiences, and – in cooperation with other GIZ projects in the region – regional good practices by facilitation of knowledge exchange.

Pan-Beibu Gulf Economic Cooperation (PBG): Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, People’s

Republic of China (PRC) (Guangxi, Guangdong and Hainan), Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam

Greater Tumen Initiative (GTI): Mongolia, PRC (Liaoning, Jilin, Heilongjiang and Inner Mongolia), Republic of Korea and Russian

Federation (Primorsky Territory)

Central Asia Regional Economic Cooperation (CAREC): Afghanistan, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Mongolia, Pakistan, PRC

(Xinjiang and Inner Mongolia), Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan

Greater Mekong Sub-region Economic Cooperation (GMS): Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, PRC (Yunnan and Guangxi), Thailand and

Vietnam

© GIZ/Ostermeier

Page 4: Programme Leaflet

CAREC GTI

PBG

GMS

Progress, Results and Prospects

Focus Areas

Approach

Background

Regional economic cooperation and integration are consensu-ally seen as key to Asia’s future development, whose architecture is built largely on sub-regional initiatives with so far only few, lean regional institutions. The flexible character of Asian regionalism reflects the region’s great economic, social, political and cultural diversity. Sub-regional economic cooperation initiatives – Greater Mekong Sub-region Economic Cooperation Programme (est. 1992), Greater Tumen Initiative (est. 1995), Central Asia Regional Economic Cooperation (est. 2001), Pan-Beibu Gulf Economic Cooperation (est. 2006), and others – provide platforms for groups of countries, economies and territories to join the

integration process at their own speed. They aim at promoting cooperation in specific areas, like trade and transport, investment, tourism, energy or environment.

The flexibility of Asian regionalism, however, leaves national governments the option to limit their commitments and to slow down the progress of formal integration. Given the development gaps in the region it is even more important to make regional cooperation inclusive and to ensure that the smaller countries can access benefit from regional actions.

The RCI-Programme supports regional and national stakehold-ers in the context of sub-regional cooperation initiatives by providing capacity building, organizing trainings and dialogue events, and conducting sector studies. Wherever suitable, we

• Addressing functional aspects of regional cooperation and integration within PBG by organizing studies and capacity building activities on key subjects such as trade facilitation and port cooperation. Strength-ening the capacity of smaller PBG-countries to engage in regional cooperation.

• Contributing to the implementation of concrete projects in the GTI priority areas of trade, multi-destination tourism and local cross-border cooperation through ongoing technical trainings and provision of international expertise.

• Promoting peer-to-peer learning and exchange of good practices among regional initiatives, leading to pilot replication of lessons learnt.

To support PBG cooperation, the RCI-Programme contributes to the drafting of a road map by supporting selected priority sector studies. A study on potentials for port cooperation in the region is currently underway, which will be accompanied by workshops and study tours. In order to improve the competencies of smaller PBG countries to engage in regional cooperation and integration processes the programme activities in 2013 will cover trade capacity building measures for stakeholders from Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam.

In the scope of its cooperation with GTI, the RCI-Programme contributes to a multi-destination-tourism study trough interna-tional expertise and consultancy. It furthermore provides input to capacity building courses on cross-border activities for Northeast Asian local governments as well as project manage-ment courses for GTI secretariat on a regular basis. In Mongolia, the RCI-Programme supports the national single window imple-mentation process by conducting technical trainings and facilitating the transfer of lessons learnt through study tours to other countries which went through similar reforms (e.g. Central Asian countries and Senegal).

Many regional cooperation and integration good practices are created within the region. To make this knowledge accessible the RCI-Programme organizes expert hearings with participants from member countries of the sub-regional initiatives. This framework provides a platform for professional exchange of

knowledge and lessons learnt regarding regional cooperation and cross-border trade strengthening network building among the initiatives’ members.

Regional economic cooperation and integration play an increasingly important role in Asia’s economic landscape. They help countries to overcome the limitations of domestic markets and foster inclusive develop-ment, both by boosting economic growth and by providing the resources for pro-poor policies. The GIZ Programme “Regional Economic Cooperation and Integration (RCI) in Asia” supports regional stakeholders with the aim to strengthen selected core processes of regional economic cooperation and integration and to contribute to sustainable and inclusive economic development in the region.

Commissioned by: German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ)Key subjects: Trade and investment facilitation, port cooperation and local cross-border economic cooperationOverall term: July 2011 – June 2015

include European integration experiences, and – in cooperation with other GIZ projects in the region – regional good practices by facilitation of knowledge exchange.

Pan-Beibu Gulf Economic Cooperation (PBG): Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, People’s

Republic of China (PRC) (Guangxi, Guangdong and Hainan), Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam

Greater Tumen Initiative (GTI): Mongolia, PRC (Liaoning, Jilin, Heilongjiang and Inner Mongolia), Republic of Korea and Russian

Federation (Primorsky Territory)

Central Asia Regional Economic Cooperation (CAREC): Afghanistan, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Mongolia, Pakistan, PRC

(Xinjiang and Inner Mongolia), Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan

Greater Mekong Sub-region Economic Cooperation (GMS): Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, PRC (Yunnan and Guangxi), Thailand and

Vietnam

© GIZ/Ostermeier

Page 5: Programme Leaflet

CAREC GTI

PBG

GMS

Progress, Results and Prospects

Focus Areas

Approach

Background

Regional economic cooperation and integration are consensu-ally seen as key to Asia’s future development, whose architecture is built largely on sub-regional initiatives with so far only few, lean regional institutions. The flexible character of Asian regionalism reflects the region’s great economic, social, political and cultural diversity. Sub-regional economic cooperation initiatives – Greater Mekong Sub-region Economic Cooperation Programme (est. 1992), Greater Tumen Initiative (est. 1995), Central Asia Regional Economic Cooperation (est. 2001), Pan-Beibu Gulf Economic Cooperation (est. 2006), and others – provide platforms for groups of countries, economies and territories to join the

integration process at their own speed. They aim at promoting cooperation in specific areas, like trade and transport, investment, tourism, energy or environment.

The flexibility of Asian regionalism, however, leaves national governments the option to limit their commitments and to slow down the progress of formal integration. Given the development gaps in the region it is even more important to make regional cooperation inclusive and to ensure that the smaller countries can access benefit from regional actions.

The RCI-Programme supports regional and national stakehold-ers in the context of sub-regional cooperation initiatives by providing capacity building, organizing trainings and dialogue events, and conducting sector studies. Wherever suitable, we

• Addressing functional aspects of regional cooperation and integration within PBG by organizing studies and capacity building activities on key subjects such as trade facilitation and port cooperation. Strength-ening the capacity of smaller PBG-countries to engage in regional cooperation.

• Contributing to the implementation of concrete projects in the GTI priority areas of trade, multi-destination tourism and local cross-border cooperation through ongoing technical trainings and provision of international expertise.

• Promoting peer-to-peer learning and exchange of good practices among regional initiatives, leading to pilot replication of lessons learnt.

To support PBG cooperation, the RCI-Programme contributes to the drafting of a road map by supporting selected priority sector studies. A study on potentials for port cooperation in the region is currently underway, which will be accompanied by workshops and study tours. In order to improve the competencies of smaller PBG countries to engage in regional cooperation and integration processes the programme activities in 2013 will cover trade capacity building measures for stakeholders from Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam.

In the scope of its cooperation with GTI, the RCI-Programme contributes to a multi-destination-tourism study trough interna-tional expertise and consultancy. It furthermore provides input to capacity building courses on cross-border activities for Northeast Asian local governments as well as project manage-ment courses for GTI secretariat on a regular basis. In Mongolia, the RCI-Programme supports the national single window imple-mentation process by conducting technical trainings and facilitating the transfer of lessons learnt through study tours to other countries which went through similar reforms (e.g. Central Asian countries and Senegal).

Many regional cooperation and integration good practices are created within the region. To make this knowledge accessible the RCI-Programme organizes expert hearings with participants from member countries of the sub-regional initiatives. This framework provides a platform for professional exchange of

knowledge and lessons learnt regarding regional cooperation and cross-border trade strengthening network building among the initiatives’ members.

Regional economic cooperation and integration play an increasingly important role in Asia’s economic landscape. They help countries to overcome the limitations of domestic markets and foster inclusive develop-ment, both by boosting economic growth and by providing the resources for pro-poor policies. The GIZ Programme “Regional Economic Cooperation and Integration (RCI) in Asia” supports regional stakeholders with the aim to strengthen selected core processes of regional economic cooperation and integration and to contribute to sustainable and inclusive economic development in the region.

Commissioned by: German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ)Key subjects: Trade and investment facilitation, port cooperation and local cross-border economic cooperationOverall term: July 2011 – June 2015

include European integration experiences, and – in cooperation with other GIZ projects in the region – regional good practices by facilitation of knowledge exchange.

Pan-Beibu Gulf Economic Cooperation (PBG): Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, People’s

Republic of China (PRC) (Guangxi, Guangdong and Hainan), Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam

Greater Tumen Initiative (GTI): Mongolia, PRC (Liaoning, Jilin, Heilongjiang and Inner Mongolia), Republic of Korea and Russian

Federation (Primorsky Territory)

Central Asia Regional Economic Cooperation (CAREC): Afghanistan, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Mongolia, Pakistan, PRC

(Xinjiang and Inner Mongolia), Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan

Greater Mekong Sub-region Economic Cooperation (GMS): Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, PRC (Yunnan and Guangxi), Thailand and

Vietnam

© GIZ/Ostermeier

Page 6: Programme Leaflet

CAREC GTI

PBG

GMS

Progress, Results and Prospects

Focus Areas

Approach

Background

Regional economic cooperation and integration are consensu-ally seen as key to Asia’s future development, whose architecture is built largely on sub-regional initiatives with so far only few, lean regional institutions. The flexible character of Asian regionalism reflects the region’s great economic, social, political and cultural diversity. Sub-regional economic cooperation initiatives – Greater Mekong Sub-region Economic Cooperation Programme (est. 1992), Greater Tumen Initiative (est. 1995), Central Asia Regional Economic Cooperation (est. 2001), Pan-Beibu Gulf Economic Cooperation (est. 2006), and others – provide platforms for groups of countries, economies and territories to join the

integration process at their own speed. They aim at promoting cooperation in specific areas, like trade and transport, investment, tourism, energy or environment.

The flexibility of Asian regionalism, however, leaves national governments the option to limit their commitments and to slow down the progress of formal integration. Given the development gaps in the region it is even more important to make regional cooperation inclusive and to ensure that the smaller countries can access benefit from regional actions.

The RCI-Programme supports regional and national stakehold-ers in the context of sub-regional cooperation initiatives by providing capacity building, organizing trainings and dialogue events, and conducting sector studies. Wherever suitable, we

• Addressing functional aspects of regional cooperation and integration within PBG by organizing studies and capacity building activities on key subjects such as trade facilitation and port cooperation. Strength-ening the capacity of smaller PBG-countries to engage in regional cooperation.

• Contributing to the implementation of concrete projects in the GTI priority areas of trade, multi-destination tourism and local cross-border cooperation through ongoing technical trainings and provision of international expertise.

• Promoting peer-to-peer learning and exchange of good practices among regional initiatives, leading to pilot replication of lessons learnt.

To support PBG cooperation, the RCI-Programme contributes to the drafting of a road map by supporting selected priority sector studies. A study on potentials for port cooperation in the region is currently underway, which will be accompanied by workshops and study tours. In order to improve the competencies of smaller PBG countries to engage in regional cooperation and integration processes the programme activities in 2013 will cover trade capacity building measures for stakeholders from Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam.

In the scope of its cooperation with GTI, the RCI-Programme contributes to a multi-destination-tourism study trough interna-tional expertise and consultancy. It furthermore provides input to capacity building courses on cross-border activities for Northeast Asian local governments as well as project manage-ment courses for GTI secretariat on a regular basis. In Mongolia, the RCI-Programme supports the national single window imple-mentation process by conducting technical trainings and facilitating the transfer of lessons learnt through study tours to other countries which went through similar reforms (e.g. Central Asian countries and Senegal).

Many regional cooperation and integration good practices are created within the region. To make this knowledge accessible the RCI-Programme organizes expert hearings with participants from member countries of the sub-regional initiatives. This framework provides a platform for professional exchange of

knowledge and lessons learnt regarding regional cooperation and cross-border trade strengthening network building among the initiatives’ members.

Regional economic cooperation and integration play an increasingly important role in Asia’s economic landscape. They help countries to overcome the limitations of domestic markets and foster inclusive develop-ment, both by boosting economic growth and by providing the resources for pro-poor policies. The GIZ Programme “Regional Economic Cooperation and Integration (RCI) in Asia” supports regional stakeholders with the aim to strengthen selected core processes of regional economic cooperation and integration and to contribute to sustainable and inclusive economic development in the region.

Commissioned by: German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ)Key subjects: Trade and investment facilitation, port cooperation and local cross-border economic cooperationOverall term: July 2011 – June 2015

include European integration experiences, and – in cooperation with other GIZ projects in the region – regional good practices by facilitation of knowledge exchange.

Pan-Beibu Gulf Economic Cooperation (PBG): Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, People’s

Republic of China (PRC) (Guangxi, Guangdong and Hainan), Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam

Greater Tumen Initiative (GTI): Mongolia, PRC (Liaoning, Jilin, Heilongjiang and Inner Mongolia), Republic of Korea and Russian

Federation (Primorsky Territory)

Central Asia Regional Economic Cooperation (CAREC): Afghanistan, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Mongolia, Pakistan, PRC

(Xinjiang and Inner Mongolia), Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan

Greater Mekong Sub-region Economic Cooperation (GMS): Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, PRC (Yunnan and Guangxi), Thailand and

Vietnam

© GIZ/Ostermeier

Page 7: Programme Leaflet

Regional Economic Cooperation and Integration in AsiaThe Deutsche Gesellschaft für International Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH in Asia

As a federally owned enterprise, GIZ supports the German Government in achieving its objectives in the field of in-ternational cooperation for sustainable development. As an international cooperation enterprise for sustainable de-velopment with worldwide operations, has been operating in Asia for almost 30 years. As an instrument of bilateral cooperation, we act on behalf of the German government and in the interests of both Germany and Asia.

We constantly adjust the performance profile to address long-term objectives of the region. This includes the current implementation gap of bilateral and regional approaches within Asia. GIZ serves as a gear-wheel between selected partner initiatives working on the goal of sustainable economic development. Bringing together regional expertise and best practices from the GIZ portfolio enhances the capacities of partners and the programme alike.

Cooperation with German businesses is a key component of our projects. By virtue of the longstanding nature of its cooperation, GIZ has developed close ties with partners in the region and is building upon this relationship to foster German-Asian cooperation.

Deutsche Gesellschaft für

Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH

Regional Economic Cooperation and Integration in Asia

Office China

Ta Yuan Diplomatic Office

14 Liangmahe South Street, Chaoyang District

100600 Beijing, PR China

Office Mongolia

Naiman Zovkhis Building

Seoul Street 21,

Ulaanbaatar 14251, Mongolia

Office Thailand

193/63 Lake Rajada Office Complex

New Ratchadapisek Road, Klongtoey

Bangkok 10110, Thailand

Dr. Jürgen Steiger

Programme Director & Deputy Country Director GIZ China

T +8610 8532 3114

F +86 10 8532 5774

E [email protected]

Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH

Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenar-beit (GIZ) GmbH, on behalf of the German Government, has been involved with regional economic cooperation and integration for many years. GIZ supports several regional initiatives in Asia, Africa, Eastern Europe and Latin America. Taking into account the specific needs of our partners we use tailor-made approaches and instruments in different sub-regions. Our work targets actors at both regional and national level and includes stakeholders from the public sector like officials and technical staff at regional secretariats and national governments, private sector associations and cham-bers of commerce, and civil society organisations.

How we support Regional Economic Integration

© GIZ/Frommann


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