3/11/2013

US delegation to visit Myanmar


Fifty U.S. business executives will visit Myanmar  - also known as Burma -  next week to explore trade and investment opportunities in the resource-rich nation now that the United States has eased sanctions, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce said on Friday.

"This delegation trip is an important milestone," Tami Overby, the chamber's vice president for Asia said in a statement. "We have made tremendous progress in normalizing economic relations between our countries. It is now time to take the relationship to the next level."

It will be the first major U.S. business delegation to go to Myanmar since President Barack Obama's historic visit to the country last November.

It will include representatives of companies from agribusiness and the automotive, electronics, energy, retailing, telecommunications, and other sectors.

Among the two dozen companies going to Myanmar are MetLife, Cargill, Fedex, Chevron, General Motors, General Electric, Target, Honeywell, and eBay.

The group will take part in a trade and investment symposium in Yangon that will bring together senior business executives and government officials from both countries.

The United States has softened sanctions on Myanmar and removed a ban on most imports from the Southeast Asian nation in response to the country's democratic reforms.

Washington relaxed sanctions on four large banks in Myanmar on Friday, allowing them access to the U.S. financial system.

The Treasury Department issued a general license to the Myanma Economic Bank, Myanma Investment and Commercial Bank, Asia Green Development Bank and Ayeyarwady Bank. This general license will ease restrictions and let the banks deal with U.S. citizens and companies.

Obama was the first American president to visit the country.



The country's name has long had two forms in the Burmese language: Myanmar is the formal name, recognized by the United Nations and the whole international community , while Burma has traditionally been used in informal conversation.








source: Reuters