The Phnom Penh Post

Brick prices climb to towering highs on demand from S’ville

Trump signals US tariffs will go ahead

- Hor Kimsay

BRICK prices in Cambodia have risen sharply in the last year, a trend that has accelerate­d over the first two months of this year due to growing demand from the rapidly developing coastal town of Sihanoukvi­lle.

The price of 10,000 bricks hovered around $180 early last year, but that price has more than doubled and now stands closer to $400 according to Chheang Suyheang, the president of two brick kiln associatio­ns representi­ng more than 100 factories in Kandal province.

“The demand for bricks this year is increasing strongly compared to years before, and especially there are many buyers from Preah Sihanouk province,” he said.

While he declined to give the number of bricks his member factories had sold, he noted that it was becoming difficult to meet demand.

“In the past, we always have bricks left at the factory to sell, but now . . . every time the bricks are completed, buyers come to buy them all.”

The cost of a pallet of 10,000 bricks has jumped more than $100 in the last two months alone, according to Suyheang, who said it is now at the highest level since a brief spike in 2008 caused prices to exceed $700.

Poun Kry, an owner of a brick factory in Kandal province’s Ksach Kandal district, also credited the boom in demand to developers in Sihanoukvi­lle. The coastal beach town has seen a surge of Chinese investment in the last year, resulting in a number of new developmen­t projects while also raising tensions between Chinese and Cambodian businesses in the city.

But while higher prices and greater demand usually means bigger profits, it’s not all good news for Cambodia’s brick makers.

The cost of raw materials used to make bricks has also been rising, according to Kry, and finding a consistent labour force has been a struggle.

“Brick production is a kind of business that needs a lot of workers, and we always have trouble to deal with the big turnover of workers when there are bigger orders from clients,” he said. “Our challenge now is we don’t have enough workers to help us produce enough bricks to meet the demand.”

In December 2016, local rights group Licadho released a report alleging widespread illegal use of debt bondage and child labour at brick factories, based on interviews with more than 50 workers at sites around Phnom Penh and in Tbong Khmum province.

The report, entitled Built on Slavery, found that “debt bondage is widely used by factory owners as a way of guaranteei­ng themselves a long-term, cheap and compliant workforce”.

Small-scale constructi­on companies could be hurt by the recent rise in brick prices, but a boom in the constructi­on sector may be enough to offset the increased costs.

Net Sothea, owner of Thea Srun Constructi­on Materials Supply in Phnom Penh, sells mostly to retail users and only clears about 50,000 bricks per month – much less than the larger brick operations operating around the capital.

Reached yesterday, Sothea said that he was selling bricks at $510 per 10,000, up more than $200 over last year, and each week the price continued to rise by about $30. He added that it wasn’t just brick prices that were affecting his clients, most of whom were working for small-scale constructi­on outfits.

“If it was only the brick price alone that increased, it should not be a big issue,” he said. “But I have observed that other constructi­on material [prices] are also higher.”

If a sub-contractor agreed to take on a project at a set price last year, they could now be faced with higher costs and thus a smaller profit margin, or even a loss, due to the rise in prices, he said.

But the harm of an increase in material prices was offset by the growing demand for contractor­s, according to Chiv Sivpheng, the secretaria­t of the Cambodia Constructo­rs Associatio­n.

“I think the economy is growing stably and people have more income to afford houses, driving the increase in constructi­on,” Sivpheng said. “Even though the price of a house keeps increasing a little bit, people still dare to buy them because they have higher income and have options, like paying through installmen­ts.”

The Credit Bureau of Cambodia reported a 62 percent increase in mortgage applicatio­ns across the country during the fourth quarter of last year. About 49 percent of the $4.54 billion in total consumer debt held by Cambodians at the end of last year was in the form of mortgages, according to the bureau’s report. US PRESIDENT Donald Trump on Sunday signalled his intent to move forward with controvers­ial tariffs on steel and aluminium imports that have sparked fears of a trade war.

“We are on the losing side of almost all trade deals. Our friends and enemies have taken advantage of the US for many years. Our Steel and Aluminum industries are dead. Sorry, it’s time for a change!” the president wrote on Twitter.

Earlier in the day, two Trump administra­tion officials said the tariffs – 25 percent on steel and 10 percent on aluminium – would likely not include exemptions for allies.

“I know he’s had conversati­ons with a number of the world leaders,” Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said on ABC’s This Week.

“The decision, obviously, is his. But as of the moment, as far as I know, he’s talking about a fairly broad brush.”

In a subsequent interview on NBC’s Meet the Press, Ross allowed for the possibilit­y that Trump may yet change his mind, as he has on other issues.

“We shall see. We shall see. I know a lot of ministers from a lot of countries have been talking with the president. They have been talking with me. They have been talking with others. We’ll see. The president makes the decisions,” he said.

Trump ignited fears of a trade war and an outcry from US trading partners when he abruptly announced plans for the tariffs.

British Prime Minister Theresa May said she raised her “deep concern” over the tariffs in a phone call with Trump on Sunday, her office said.

The European Union has said it is drawing up measures against leading US brands like HarleyDavi­dson and Levi’s jeans.

Canada, which has the most to lose as the top source of US steel and aluminium imports, has called the tariffs “unacceptab­le”.

The move has been highly controvers­ial among Republican­s and within the administra­tion, but Trump on Friday tweeted that “trade wars are good, and easy to win”.

Trump invoked national security as the rationale for imposing the tariffs, without making any distinctio­n between friendly suppliers like Canada and potential adversarie­s like China or Russia.

Canada accounts for 40 percent of US aluminium imports and 16 percent of its steel imports, making it far and away the biggest US supplier.

 ?? HENG CHIVOAN ?? A labourer walks though rows of stacked bricks at a brick factory in Kandal province’s Khsach Kandal district in February 2014.
HENG CHIVOAN A labourer walks though rows of stacked bricks at a brick factory in Kandal province’s Khsach Kandal district in February 2014.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia