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Viewing cable 05NEWDELHI7159, ECONOMIC INTERVIEWS IN BHUTAN

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
05NEWDELHI7159 2005-09-14 12:15 2011-08-30 01:44 UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Embassy New Delhi
This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 12 NEW DELHI 007159 
 
SIPDIS 
 
SENSITIVE 
 
DEPT FO EB/TPP AND SA/INS 
USDOC FOR 4530/MAC/ANESA/OSA/LDROKER/ASTERN 
DEPT PASS USTR FOR S.ASIA - AWILLS/BSTILLMAN 
GENEVA FOR USTR 
E.O.  12958:  N/A 
TAGS: ECON ETRD IN BT
SUBJECT:  ECONOMIC INTERVIEWS IN BHUTAN 
 
REF:  NEW DELHI 6903 
 
1.  (SBU)  SUMMARY.  Econoff traveled to Bhutan in late 
August to interview several Ministry officials at the 
working level and to establish additional contacts with 
non-governmental organizations (NGOs).  The three day 
visit, which included over 15 meetings around Thimphu, 
resulted in a number of important introductions. 
Econoff met with the folks heading up the World Trade 
Organization (WTO) accession bid.  The Ministry of 
Finance was instrumental in completing a data call from 
the Millennium Challenge Corporation, and additional 
possibilities for Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) 
enforcement training were identified.  The Bhutan 
Chamber of Commerce, along with the National 
Statistical Bureau, furnished some very useful 
statistics, including the Statistical Yearbook of 
Bhutan 2004.  Discussions ranged from Foreign Direct 
Investment (FDI) to microfinance.  On more than one 
occasion, Bhutan presented its view on urban pressure 
and the difficulties facing an increasingly educated 
and skilled workforce.  Refugee and human rights 
issues, discussed on the margins, were reported in 
Reftel.  END SUMMARY. 
 
2.  (SBU)  During the week of August 22, Econoff 
conducted a series of working level visits in Thimphu, 
Bhutan.  After attending a suite of discovery and 
introductory meetings with various Ministries and NGOs 
to establish working level contacts, Econoff followed 
up on prior visits by other officers, and asked 
additional questions.  Econoff identified and 
interviewed persons with reporting responsibility for 
the Millennium Challenge Corporation, IPR and Bhutan's 
WTO accession bid.  NGOs candidly furnished their 
interpretation of the situation on the ground and this 
proved a useful barometer for subsequent and follow-up 
interviews with the several Ministries. 
 
------------------------------------------- 
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE ON THE BHUTANESE ECONOMY 
------------------------------------------- 
 
3.  (SBU)  Econoff met with Bhutan Chamber of Commerce 
and Industry (BCCI) Vice President Bap Kinga, who had a 
very positive outlook on Bhutan's economy.  According 
to Kinga, Bhutan's GDP has been growing at a steady 
rate of about 6.8 percent over the past twenty years. 
Imports have been steadily rising and inflation is 
around 5.4 percent.  Kinga presented statistics showing 
US imports rising to $1.3 million in 2002, while US 
exports have remained fairly flat at about $330,000. 
According to Kinga, the US buys from Bhutan primarily 
fishing equipment, lemon grass oil, carpets, 
handicrafts, linens, and indigenous red rice.  The US 
sells Bhutan white rice, soya bean oil, bows, arrows, 
mattresses, industrial and textile machinery, sheet 
aluminum, furniture and paints.  (COMMENT:  Archery is 
Bhutan's national sport and American-made compound bows 
are considered the best.  In Thimphu, Econoff noted 
several storefronts displaying American archery 
equipment.  Alternately, Bhutan's hand-tied fishing 
lures are prized by American anglers.  END COMMENT.) 
 
4.  (SBU)  Kinga added that the Royal Government of 
Bhutan (RGOB) is currently implementing its 2002 
Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) policy.  Kinga 
maintains that FDI is currently limited to joint 
ventures in hotels, resources, infrastructure 
development, and tourism, with a 70% cap in both 
manufacturing and services sectors.  In trade 
development, the RGOB is also focusing on mineral-based 
industries, according to Kinga.  He noted that Bhutan 
is often referred to as a "geologic museum," and has 
considerably large oxidized copper and zinc deposits. 
However, Kinga said, Bhutan does not have the 
technology for oxidized copper and zinc extraction. 
When Econoff asked Kinga about possible additional 
trade opportunities with Bhutan, Kinga stated that the 
Ministry of Trade and Industry is currently developing 
its distribution infrastructure, but that the lower 
volume of trade was largely due to Bhutan's landlocked 
status. 
 
5.  (SBU)  Kinga said that BCCI is trying to promote 
cottage industries and small scale initiatives.  The 
BCCI has elected regional representatives to work with 
local residents to develop small business.  Although 
Kinga admitted that there is a gross shortage of 
entrepreneurs with adequate accounting skills, he 
pointed out that small businesses pay no taxes for the 
first seven years of operation.  A sub-committee within 
BCCI has been created to promote private sector 
development.  Kinga noted that efforts to promote small 
business through exchange programs had met with mixed 
results in the past.  He specifically mentioned the 
Small Business Women's Development Program, which is 
administered by Martha Morton (Director, Bringing China 
to Arkansas Program).  According to Kinga, when this 
program was initiated, several of the Bhutanese 
participants who went to the US overstayed their visas. 
However, Kinga said that those participants had finally 
returned.  After re-examining this program, the BCCI is 
now considering the establishment of a resource center 
within Bhutan wherein aspiring women entrepreneurs 
would be trained extensively for two weeks before 
sending them to the US for hands-on training.  Kinga 
believes that women who are trained in advance of a US 
visit would have more incentive to return to Bhutan to 
implement their skills.  BCCI is currently seeking 
financial assistance to develop the women's resource 
center. 
 
6.  (SBU)  According to Kinga, human resources 
development is severely lacking throughout Bhutan. 
Most non-government workers are farmers with no 
management skills.  There are severe funding 
constraints and most of the programs currently in place 
are subject to donor participation. 
 
------------------------------------------- 
MICROFINANCE SCHEMES FOR RURAL BHUTAN 
------------------------------------------- 
 
7.  (SBU)  Econoff met with Bhutan Development Finance 
Corporation's (BDFC) Managing Director, Nawang Gyetse. 
Gyetse described his role as microfinancer.  According 
to Gyetse, the BDFC was established with help from the 
Asian Development Bank (ADB) in 1988 and focuses 80 
percent of its resources in agro-rural areas, aiming at 
higher yields and efficiency.  Gyetse noted that he has 
financed everything from home renovations to purchase 
of livestock.  The BDFC has 24 branch offices (at least 
one office in each district).  According to Gyetse, 
each branch manages its own loans, however he admitted 
that two-thirds of BDFC's portfolio ultimately is 
managed from Thimphu.  ADB's soft loans have 
historically been the BDFC's primary source of funding, 
but Gyetse noted that the organization has also 
received funding from the Kuwait Fund for Economic 
Development.  The United Nations has also been a 
contributor and originally the United Nations Capital 
Development Fund (UNCDF) financed BDFC's micro- 
operations.  Gyetse mentioned that the BDFC recently 
had to borrow internally from its pension fund in order 
to continue operations.  According to Gyetse, less and 
less money has been available from the NGOs for BDFC's 
micro-finance schemes.  This year, the BDFC announced a 
savings program for rural Bhutan.  Gyetse hopes that, 
in the future, the BDFC will be able to operate using 
money borrowed from the savings program combined with 
additional funds from NGOs.  The BDFC, with a staff of 
150 people and outstanding loans in excess of $2.6 
million, is actively seeking donors. 
 
------------------------------------------- 
TELECOM PRIVATIZATION SLOW-GOING 
------------------------------------------- 
 
8.  (SBU)  Econoff met with Bhutan Telecom's (BT) 
Managing Director, Thinley Dorji.  According to Dorji, 
although Bhutan Telecom is government-owned, it is 
taking gradual steps to privatization.  Currently, 
several other companies are providing internet service 
privately, although this is primarily for dial-up 
service.  Large volume users, Dorji said, tend to be 
the cyber cafes springing up in Thimphu, which actually 
lease lines to the BT local area network for better 
speed.  Dorji was curious to know whether the US would 
ever start requiring the URL www.______.co.us for its 
US-based websites.  He mentioned that, since every 
other country is using it, the country ID makes it easy 
to identify.  Dorji said this would be especially 
useful in helping BT to filter junk mail and spam from 
its limited LAN capacity.  He also mentioned that BT 
had received a sizable loan from Denmark recently, but 
that no other FDI was currently in the sector.  Dorji 
said that, even though BT is government-owned, it is 
run very much like a private corporation.  He added 
that there has not been much interest in FDI in the ITC 
sector because it is still very small.  Infrastructure 
is also an inhibiting factor.  According to Dorji, 
service is currently limited to urban areas--which are 
very few. 
 
------------------------------------------- 
ROYAL MONETARY AUTHORITY'S PERSPECTIVE 
------------------------------------------- 
 
9.  (SBU)  In a meeting with the Royal Monetary 
Authority's (RMA) Managing Director, Daw Tenzin, most 
of the conversation revolved around Bhutan's impending 
labor crisis.  Tenzin, like others Econoff interviewed, 
was not confident that the cadre of higher-educated 
students in the country would be able to find work 
easily in Bhutan.  Successful education efforts and 
increasing urbanization are causing Bhutan's children 
to leave the farm for the city.  This, according to 
Tenzin, has led to other problems such as urban poverty 
and homelessness.  In spite of Bhutan's recent growing 
pains, Tenzin said that skills in ITC, accounting, and 
management have increased and diversified.  However, a 
market requiring many of these new skills has yet to 
fully develop, leaving a surplus of disappointed recent 
graduates without jobs.  In the past, Tenzin noted, 
education opportunities were limited such that most 
graduates were immediately offered government jobs. 
However, even with the shortage of jobs, Tenzin 
mentioned that almost 100 percent of Bhutan's 
construction labor force comes from India and estimated 
that approximately 40,000 Indian men currently work on 
construction sites around Bhutan (including road 
construction).  According to Tenzin, even under a 
contract with all its associated administration costs, 
Indian labor was still quite reasonable--so much so, in 
fact, that the Bhutanese scoff at the wages offered and 
avoid the sector altogether.  Tenzin said that data, 
facts and figures about the RMA are easily accessible 
online at its website:  www.rma.org.bt. 
 
10.  (SBU)  Tenzin said that most of the money in 
foreign reserves, while in US dollars, is derived from 
grant aid and loans.  The remainder, $9 to $10 million, 
is from tourism revenue.  The RMA also manages rupee 
reserves and, after a recent slew of counterfeit Rs 500 
and Rs 1000 notes ($10s and $20s), the RGOB has 
forbidden the use of any rupee notes larger than Rs 
100.  The Bhutanese ngultrum is pegged to the Indian 
rupee and Indian currency has been accepted in the same 
manner as Bhutanese currency until this past February, 
Tenzin noted.  (COMMENT:  Tenzin is intending to travel 
to Washington from September 20 to October 4 with his 
wife and niece, for the annual International Monetary 
Fund meeting.  On leaving Tenzin's sparsely furnished 
office, Econoff noticed one lone framed photo on 
Tenzin's wall---a poster sized frame filled with dollar 
bills.  END COMMENT.) 
 
------------------------------------------- 
ECONOMIC STATISTICS AND THE CENSUS 
------------------------------------------- 
11.  (SBU)  At the National Statistical Bureau (NSB), 
Econoff interviewed Director Kuenga Tshering.  (NOTE: 
In 2003, the NSB was given autonomy from the Department 
of Planning and Policy in order to begin work on the 
census, which is currently being analyzed.  The Census 
Bureau is an ad-hoc office of the Census Commissioner; 
even though the re-organization is only a paper 
exercise--no employees were moved.  After the current 
census has been processed, responsibilities will be 
transferred back to NSB.  END NOTE.)  Tshering said 
that the census was a much larger undertaking this time 
and his analysts are putting data through a process of 
100 percent validation against errors.  The manual 
editing and coding phase is almost complete, according 
to Tshering. 
 
12.  (SBU)  Perhaps the most interesting part of 
Tshering's discussion on the census was that the RGOB 
 
SIPDIS 
believes that it should reach 100 percent of the 
population.  Local citizens confirmed being asked to 
stay in their homes until after being officially 
surveyed and wrist-banded.  Tshering noted that, for 
this census, the RGOB used local guides and entered a 
Global Positioning System (GPS) point for every citizen 
in the country.  The RGOB even surveyed the herdsmen 
living in remote mountain caves.  Tshering said that 
the RGOB plans to use the GPS points to create 
Geographic Information System maps, which will help 
divide the country into constitutional districts by 
population density. 
 
13.  (SBU)  While the effort is much larger in scope 
than in the previous census, Tshering admitted that 
this was not a complete survey.  A copy of the 
questionnaire was unavailable, but Tshering said that 
questions about family size, education level, major 
sources of income, and other social indicators were 
asked.  When asked whether questions on religious 
preference were in the survey, Tshering had no comment. 
(NOTE:  However he did confirm that every respondent 
was asked whether or not he was happy.  END NOTE.) 
According to Tshering, once the data is validated 
manually, analysts will also quality control the 
digital data.  They are using CSPro, MS Access and SPSS 
for statistical analysis. 
 
14.  (SBU)  Tshering furnished several useful reports 
on Bhutanese society and the economy, and discussed 
some of the more relevant statistics.  According to 
Tshering, Bhutan's current budget deficit is between 
 
SIPDIS 
two to three percent of GDP.  Tshering said that the 
deficit reflects a programmed pay raise for civil 
servants.  He added that the civil service is in 
transition from cadre to position classification at the 
moment and he was very interested in learning more 
about the USG civil servant position classification 
system.  (COMMENT:  Apart from the census and 
employment classification systems, Tshering also stated 
that the constitution would be ratified in 2007 and 
that the delay is due to having to translate the 
document into common Dzongkha.  Tshering said the first 
draft was too sanskritized to be understood.  END 
COMMENT.) 
 
------------------------------------------- 
GROWING PAINS IN URBAN AREAS 
------------------------------------------- 
 
15.  (SBU)  "Education is destroying traditional lore 
and knowledge." At least that is what the Ministry of 
Works and Human Settlement's (MWHS) Secretary, Tshering 
Dorji, believes.  Dorji also said that urban migration 
leads to lack of infrastructure capacity.  According to 
Dorji, the goals of MWHS are to prevent the occurrence 
of slums and to provide shelter for everyone.  He added 
that the emphasis has actually been to develop the 
rural areas.  He noted that most of Bhutan's rural 
farming has not yet been mechanized and that the 
marketing capacity has also not been developed 
adequately to date.  According to Dorji, since the 
RGOB's recent improvements in education policy, 
educated rural children have been flocking to the urban 
centers.  Whereas formally children were only educated 
through grade six, they are now being taught through 
grade ten.  The result, according to Dorji:  hardly any 
child goes back to the village.  The RGOB is trying to 
find ways to promote balanced regional development and 
keep the expanding urban centers from encroaching on 
rural areas while still making these areas attractive 
and desirable destinations for returning educated 
Bhutanese youth, Dorji added.  In the urban centers, he 
went on, housing pressure is causing tremendous 
problems.  One of the side-effects of this development 
pressure is that waterborne disease has increased in 
the urban areas.  Citing Thimphu as a prime example of 
development pressure, Dorji said the area of the city 
limits had to be increased from nine square kilometers 
to twenty six.  In spite of the development pressure, 
Dorji said (with some pride) that Bhutan has moved 
forward with new urban schemes such as user fees for 
water and parking, although he admitted that the public 
response to these fees was initially not very positive. 
 
16.  (SBU)  Dorji stated that industrial development in 
Bhutan is limited due to high production and 
transportation costs.  However, health and education 
industries in regional rural areas are being 
encouraged.  In contrast, the construction industry has 
exploded.  The RGOB is pushing development to rural 
areas in an effort to control the size of the urban 
centers.  Dorji believes that Thimphu's population 
capacity is around 150,000 people.  However, the RGOB's 
Land Act prohibits overdevelopment of rural areas.  The 
Land Act does promote farming and reserving land for 
agriculture, which has frustrated some developers. 
However, Dorji noted that the trade-off between arable 
land and mountain slopes had always been an issue. 
Soils on steep slopes are equally unsuitable for 
construction and farming, according to Dorji.  So, the 
competition for developable land is growing. 
 
17.  (SBU)  While other sectors of the Bhutanese 
economy have yet to open, Dorji insisted that the 
economy is slowly liberalizing.  He pointed to the 
latest Bhutanese phenomenon, the family car.  According 
to Dorji, people would rather own a vehicle and rent a 
house than the other way around.  This trend has at 
least been good for trade.  On infrastructure, Dorji 
commented that road building in Bhutan is very 
expensive because of the myriad environmental best 
management practices that must be followed in steep 
terrain.  He acknowledged that the country's road 
network was critical and that the Asian Development 
Bank (ADB) and World Bank (WB) had been consulted for 
further financial assistance.  According to Dorji, 202 
blocks (similar to counties) had facilities and road 
networks or suspension bridges connecting them.  He 
added that only in the remotest rural areas were 
facilities still lacking.  Dorji admitted that road 
building projects take years to complete.  In one 
example, Dorji mentioned that the RGOB had just started 
the first 70 kilometers of Bhutan's second East-West 
highway, which will ultimately be about 300 kilometers 
long, but the entire project may take over ten years to 
finish.  Infrastructure and urban planning are Dorji's 
biggest concerns,  closely followed by finding 
employment for new graduates. 
 
------------------------------------------- 
LEGAL AFFAIRS AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY 
------------------------------------------- 
 
18.  (SBU)  Econoff also met with RGOB's Office of 
Legal Affairs (OLA) Director, Kuenlay Tshering and 
Legal Officer Ugyen Wangdi.  Tshering explained that 
OLA is an autonomous arm of RGOB's Executive Branch. 
He noted that Bhutan was now divided into 202 blocks 
(geogs) and 20 districts (dzongkhas), with OLA 
representation in each district.  Tshering said that 
the OLA included 60 lawyers nationwide at all levels 
plus another 164 paralegals (jabmis).  According to 
Tshering, the legal process in Bhutan has not become 
 
SIPDIS 
very complicated yet.  There is a list of counselors 
currently available, he said, but most of the 
representatives in the private sector are only 
paralegals.  Tshering noted that these paralegals have 
licenses for three to five years, and are intended to 
fill the void until the law sector is fully 
operational.  OLA is currently only prosecuting 
government offences such as embezzlement, Tshering 
stated.  According to Tshering, OLA was established in 
2000 and will eventually become the Law Ministry, 
resembling and functioning like the US Attourney 
General's Office.  He added that the OLA will have 
three specific functions:  to provide legal services to 
the government; to draft and review laws of the 
executive branch and deconflict new with existing 
legislation; and to prosecute for and defend the 
government. 
 
19.  (SBU)  Ugyen Wangdi is currently the RGOB point 
man for Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) issues in 
OLA.  The OLA assists with legal opinions for IPR 
matters and is working closely with the Ministry of 
Trade and Industry's (MTI) IP division.  Wangdi said 
that Bhutan passed the IP Act in 2001.  Both Wangdi and 
Tshering understood that adequate IPR protection is a 
 
SIPDIS 
prerequisite for World Trade Organization (WTO) 
accession and Tshering noted that he was a member on 
the WTO accession bid committee. 
 
------------------------------------------- 
ON THE CONSTITUTION, BRIEFLY 
------------------------------------------- 
 
20.  (SBU)  OLA Director Kuenlay Tshering is also the 
member secretary and committee member drafting the 
Constitution.  After public review, Tshering felt 
confident that the Constitution would be adopted in the 
National Assembly.  An article in the Constitution on 
political parties limits the primary round to every 
five years, Tshering added.  When asked whether 
currently banned political parties will be allowed to 
operate after the Constitution is ratified, Tshering 
could not confirm. 
 
21.  (SBU)  National Assembly (NA) Deputy Director 
Lobzang Dorji stated in a brief meeting in NA offices 
that ratification of the constitution will also have a 
big impact on the economy.  Although liberalization of 
the RGOB economy is already underway, Dorji 
acknowledged, the new constitution will change 
parliamentary procedures in their current form, which 
will hopefully fuel economic reforms.  According to 
Dorji, the NA will be divided into four secretariats: 
Research and Development, Legal Affairs, 
Administration, and Information Technology and 
Communications.  (COMMENT:  Although the NA was 
originally constructed to house a South Asian 
Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) meeting, 
the actual meeting never occurred.  The NA is ornately 
decorated with numerous Buddhist symbols, murals, 
tapestries and flags.  The Assembly Hall will have to 
be completely re-designed to accommodate the new 
members.  END COMMENT.) 
 
------------------------------------------- 
FINANCIAL OVERVIEW 
------------------------------------------- 
 
22.  (SBU)  Econoff met with Ministry of Finance (MF) 
Department of Customs and Revenue Director Sangay Zam, 
and Department of Aid and Debt Management Director 
Sonam Wangchuk, and Program Officer Thinley Namgyel. 
Wangchuk explained that the Department of Aid and Debt 
Management was created in 2000 to coordinate external 
assistance.  According to Wangchuk, Bhutan's first 
preference is grants, but concessional loans are also 
common--both bilateral and multilateral.  Denmark, 
Japan, Austria, Norway and Switzerland are regular 
donors, Wangchuk said.  Zam stated that 45 to 50 
percent of Bhutan's domestic revenue is used for 
current expenditures and the external aid in grants and 
loans is used for capital expenditures, e.g., 
infrastructure development.  One of the primary reasons 
that Bhutan has remained an attractive recipient of 
external aid, according to Zam, has been the country's 
ability to consistently cover its current expenditures. 
Zam added that customs revenue only accounts for two to 
three percent of RGOB's total income, although imports 
continue to increase.  She added that, aside from 
alcohol and tobacco, the highest tariff currently is 
around thirty percent.  However, Zam insisted that most 
of Bhutan's tariffs are much lower than that.  (NOTE: 
Both Zam and Wangchuk agreed to furnish data in 
consideration of Millennium Challenge Account funding. 
Econoff has since received the data and has provided 
this information to the Millennium Challenge 
Corporation.  END NOTE.) 
 
------------------------------------------- 
FOREIGN AFFAIRS AND WORLD TRADE 
------------------------------------------- 
 
23.  (SBU)  Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA) Under 
Secretaries Tenzin Wangchuck and Chitem Tenzin met 
 
SIPDIS 
Econoff in the MFA offices at the NA building.  Tenzin 
reported that his office dealt with multilateral 
affairs.  He added that, of Bhutan's fifty official 
diplomats, twenty were in the MFA.  He also noted that 
two MFA officials were on the World Trade 
Organization's (WTO) accession team.  Tenzin was in 
Geneva in November 2004 for the first accession 
meeting.  The second meeting is scheduled for sometime 
this fall, probably in November.  He said that the US 
has been the biggest supporter of Bhutan's accession 
and that the US is sometimes the only other country to 
show up for Bhutan's accession meetings in Geneva. 
Tenzin believes that Bhutan may get final approval as 
early as 2007 for WTO accession.  He noted that Bhutan 
is willing to give some concessions in services and 
manufacturing, but that, it will be difficult to do 
this for all 300 trade items.  Tenzin said that a final 
list should be available before the next working party. 
He added that Bhutan is the only SAARC member who is 
not a member of the WTO.  Bhutan already has Free Trade 
Agreements (FTAs) with India, Thailand, SAARC, and 
SAFTA, and more could be in the works.  He cited the 
Bangladesh-India-Myanmar-Sri Lanka-Thailand Economic 
Cooperation (BIMST-EC) as a prime example of deals in 
the pipeline. 
 
24.  (SBU)  Tenzin believes the US support of Bhutan 
has been good for both political and economic reasons. 
Tenzin said his focus is on international conventions 
and agreements and multilateral issues.  (NOTE:  Since 
MFA is responsible for protocol, Econoff asked Tenzin 
about promoting exchange of high level visits.  Tenzin 
said that, if a Bhutanese professional is invited to 
visit the US for professional reasons, such as 
training, the MFA needs about two weeks advance notice 
to get all the necessary paperwork in order for the 
person to travel.  END NOTE.) 
 
------------------------------------ 
NGO VIEWS OF THE RURAL ECONOMY 
------------------------------------ 
 
25.  (SBU)  The Tarayana Foundation's (TF) executive 
officer, Chime Wangdi and her Director, Tshering 
Yangzom, gave a more critical account of the economic 
situation outside the city limits.  According to 
Wangdi, the economic state of affairs for most of 
Bhutan's rural children is bleak.  Wangdi stated that 
the Tarayana Foundation runs its program entirely with 
donated funding.  She noted that Tarayana has placed 
project staff in rural areas with two primary goals: 
education and rural economic development at the 
grassroots level.  Tarayana is currently funding a 
program for 265 students, to ensure they have a 
complete education through high school.  Another 
program that has gained momentum, according to Wangdi, 
is one that provides care for people in rural areas who 
have no next of kin.  (NOTE:  Wangdi explained that the 
Bhutanese do not understand the culture of eldercare 
facilities and orphanages.  When a Bhutanese citizen is 
unable to care for themselves, the responsibility 
automatically falls on the next of kin.  However, women 
that have traditionally born the primary caregiver 
responsibility are increasingly entering the workforce. 
The economic aspirations of rural Bhutanese women has a 
spiraling effect in the caregiver chain.  Young teenage 
girls in the family are now frequently saddled with 
caring for younger and elder relatives.  The Tarayana 
Foundation routinely receives applications for 
assistance from families with severely handicapped 
relatives, especially for handicapped children who have 
grown too large for the caregiver to move from one 
location to another.  END NOTE.)  According to Wangdi, 
Tarayana's goal is not to provide permanent support to 
the rural Bhutanese, but to teach life skills and make 
them self-sufficient.  Wangdi said that Tarayana 
enlists teachers from the National Technical School to 
assist with more complicated teaching concepts.  One of 
the more difficult tasks, according to Wangdi, is the 
actual trek to the rural locations.  She noted that, 
during one recent monsoon, staff members had to cross 
the same river over twenty times before reaching the 
intended village. 
 
26.  (SBU)  Wangdi highlighted two projects in which 
Tarayana is working with locals to develop folk arts 
and crafts.  Nettle weaving, a traditional skill that 
had almost been abandoned and lost to history, has been 
revived.  Wangdi has been pleased with the success of 
the weaving project.  Young students are being taught 
not only how to weave their products, but also how to 
market them and develop entrepreneurial skills.  Wangdi 
was quick to point out that Tarayana is not promoting 
child labor, rather teaching the children early that 
they could develop marketable skills.  Tarayana is also 
helping older Bhutanese by introducing simple handtools 
and labor-saving devices that expand and facilitate 
traditional craft making skills.  Wangdi noted that, 
since the urban areas have recently banned the sale of 
plastic bags altogether, hand crafted paper bags from 
rural Bhutan are used in many of the shops.  According 
to Wangdi, Tarayana is also experimenting with the use 
of hemp (marijuana) as a paper and cloth making input. 
She noted that marijuana grows throughout the Himalayas 
and eradication campaigns have been ineffective. 
Wangdi said there have been several public education 
efforts to discourage smoking marijuana, but actually 
using the weed for craft making is a recent 
consideration. 
 
27.  (SBU)  Wangdi echoed other interviewees 
sentiments:  educated children cannot farm and thus 
become a liability to the family.  Wangdi added that 
those children educated beyond tenth grade also are not 
able to find good job opportunities in the village and 
either eventually revert to farming or move to urban 
areas, competing with other educated children for 
increasingly limited jobs.  Wangdi said that, in her 
opinion, there were two limiting factors in the rural 
economy.  The first was that culture and custom had 
created a mindset that was difficult to challenge or 
change.  She mentioned the next of kin issue as one 
example.  Another example was the farming practices in 
some areas.  According to Wangdi, in many areas of 
rural Bhutan, when a person dies his accumulated wealth 
is buried with him, along with any tools and utensils 
that may have been his personal property.  The dead are 
usually buried in mounds, above ground in flat areas 
with rocks piled on top.  Wangdi said this uses up much 
of the farmable flat land, leaving the Bhutanese to 
farm the steep, uncultivated areas.  The second 
limiting factor, according to Wangdi, is that rural 
Bhutanese are beginning to suffer urban scourges such 
as alcoholism.  Wangdi reported that many Bhutanese 
borrow money and drink themselves to death. They then 
pass on their debt to the next generation, which custom 
and culture require to honor.  Wangdi said alcoholism 
is particularly pervasive in central and south central 
Bhutan. 
 
28.  (SBU)  According to Wangdi, Tarayana is working 
closely with the government and the BDFC on micro- 
finance issues.  Tarayan's role as guarantor in the 
micro-finance schemes allows the Foundation to provide 
support and oversight during the loan period--so that 
the borrower does not overspend or overdrink.  Wangdi 
noted that many of the Bhutanese used to go to India to 
borrow money, selling their harvest under-ripe and 
foregoing considerable efficiency in the process. 
Tarayana is also working to document traditional 
knowledge, Wangdi stated.  According to Wangdi, many 
plants in Bhutan have yet to be documented and 
classified.  Tarayana is working with local guides to 
identify the ethnobotanical use of plants.  The 
enthusiasm for cataloguing the plants is gaining 
momentum, said Wangdi.  Botanists from the agricultural 
Ministry have started participating in the program and 
volunteers are growing in numbers.  The Bhutan 
Foundation, an internationally recognized charity, can 
route tax exempt donations directly to Tarayana, if 
Tarayana is the designated beneficiary.  The program 
has been expanding annually, but Wangdi insists the 
primary focus for Tarayana is the rural children of 
Bhutan. 
 
29.  (SBU)  UNICEF Representative Anoja Wijeyesekera 
reported that the RGOB appears to be committed to 
protecting the rights of children.  She said that 
Bhutan had ratified the Rights of the Child Convention 
and that 27 percent of the budget is spent on health 
and education, exceptional for a developing country. 
Like others Econoff met, Wijeyesekera discussed the 
education dilemma.  She said that, in spite of the 
advances in education that have led to recent 
observations that children are abandoning the farm and 
crowding the urban areas, many Bhutanese in rural areas 
are not being taught.  This is especially true for 
nomads and rural residents of eastern Bhutan, where the 
literacy rate for females is only 27 percent, compared 
to better than 50 percent in most other parts of the 
country.  In response, UNICEF has started an adult 
literacy program for women greater than fifteen years 
old.  But, Wijeyesekera added, the government needs a 
catch-up program as well.  She said there seems to be 
very little child labor, although domestic child labor 
seems to be increasing.  She noted that this is a 
symptom of urbanization and that, as more women are 
working, they are enlisting the help of fifteen and 
sixteen year olds to serve as nannies. 
 
30.  (SBU)  Renata Dessallien, Representative for the 
UN Development Program (UNDP) in Bhutan, said that 
UNDP's role had been to support good governance and 
provide international experience quietly and 
informally.  Dessallien said that Bhutan has done an 
excellent job balancing good protection of the 
environment with local and rural sustenance and 
subsistence issues--especially in protected areas. 
According to Dessallien, UNDP is also supporting 
Information Technology and Communciations (ICT) efforts 
to help harmonize equipment and make some processes 
web-based.  She noted that the current bureaucractic 
constraints are staggering.  A permit request from a 
rural resident often requires a two day walk to an 
urban center, to be filed in person.  She added that 
UNDP is backing the RGOB's decentralization strategy 
and also providing professional audits.  On employment, 
Dessallien echoed the sentiment that opportunities 
currently are scarce.  She noted that the production 
sector is still largely government-run and certainly 
not autonomous.  The UNDP wants to promote small to 
medium enterprises (SMEs) to generate income 
opportunities for new graduates.  Currently, according 
to Dessallien, there is little or no entry space. 
Educated Indian civil servants, who were filling the 
gap, have mostly been replaced and neither civil 
service nor private sector jobs are now available. 
 
------------------------------------ 
LABOR PAINS 
------------------------------------ 
 
31.  (SBU)  To wrap up the discussion on employment 
issues, Econoff met with Ministry of Labor and Human 
Resources (MLHR) Chief Officer Tenzin Lekphell. 
Lekphell confirmed that, five to seven years ago, 
unemployment was not a problem.  However, he added, now 
it is a big enough concern that a special board has 
been created to examine the issue.  Lekphell said that 
MLHR's mission is to improve working conditions, 
generate employment opportunities and help the private 
sector grow.  He noted that the MLHR is only eighteen 
months old itself and that it is divided into four 
Departments:  Labor, Employment, Standards, and Human 
Resources.  Lekphell stated that the Labor and 
Employment Act, which was drafted before there was even 
an MLHR, should be passed in the next NA.  He said that 
the legislation was widely cleared in the public review 
process and that recruitment is already underway to 
find inspectors to help implement the Act once it has 
passed.  Lekphell stated that standards are currently 
under development, including occupational safety and 
health standards.  The MLHR's Department of Labor 
administrates foreign worker recruitment, according to 
Lekphell.  The MLHR's HR Department handles vocational 
training primarily.  Finally, Lekphell noted that the 
Employment Department acts as clearinghouse, provides 
job center services, promotes employment and encourages 
private sector investment and growth. 
 
32.  (SBU)  Lekphell said that MLHR is also involved in 
the RGOB's current efforts to classify private and 
public sector occupations.  He is personally helping to 
develop a policy that addresses the problems of foreign 
workers and rising unemployment levels.  Lehphell added 
that, according to his official numbers, 37,411 foreign 
workers are currently in Bhutan with work permits.  Of 
those, he said, 34,329 work in the private sector-- 
mostly in construction.  The remaining eight percent 
are divided evenly between government, semi-government 
and armed forces personnel.  The total does not include 
Indian workers in border areas who can enter, work and 
exit freely.  According to Lekphell, Indians are 
willing to work for less money than the Bhutanese and, 
furthermore, the Bhutanese are not skilled in many 
professions--nor do they care to relocate for long 
periods.  Most of the construction done in Bhutan is 
through a labor-cost agreement between a Bhutanese 
developer and an Indian contractor.  The Indian 
contractor, according to Lekphell, will hire for an 
average of Rs 80 per day.  A Bhutanese, he said, will 
never take less than Rs 100, but he noted that most 
Bhutanese are still not as desperate as the Indians 
working in Bhutan.  Lekphell stated that there has been 
no minimum wage established in Bhutan yet, but that a 
wage study is in draft form and a minimum wage standard 
is being developed.  The RGOB is proposing Nu 125 per 
hour, to cover the basic standard of living.  A social 
security study has been conducted for the private 
sector as well, Lekphell added.  The RGOB is trying to 
recommend to the private sector the current civil 
service model for social security and is hoping that 
this will improve the employment standard.  When 
Econoff asked what impact increasing numbers of foreign 
workers is having in urban centers like Thimphu, 
Lekphell acknowledged that the amount of pollution and 
sewerage has increased.  He was surprised by Econoff's 
suggestion that MLHR should include in its labor-cost 
agreements a provision for trash receptacles, shower 
tents and portable toilets for the foreign workers. 
Lekphell admitted that the MLHR had never considered 
such an idea previously, and said he would consider 
creating such provisions in future agreements. 
------------------------------------ 
ON TRADE AND INDUSTRY 
------------------------------------ 
 
33.  (SBU)  Ministry of Trade and Industry Director of 
Planning and Policy Sonam Wangdi, who was rushing to 
meet the RGOB deadline for completing a follow-up WTO 
accession package for Bhutan's upcoming second working 
party meeting, took time out of his busy schedule to 
meet Econoff.  Wangdi explained that the Ministry of 
Trade and Industry is comprised six primary sectors: 
trade, industry, tourism, energy, geology and mines, 
and intellectual property rights.  Wangdi stated that 
Bhutan's arrangement with India is nearly borderless, 
as the FTA with India has existed since 1971. 
According to Wangdi, 95 percent of Bhutan's imports are 
from India and 90 percent of the country's exports are 
to India.  He mentioned that GOI officials are coming 
to Bhutan in September to finalize a new ten-year FTA. 
Wangdi added that Bangladesh has a 74-item Preferential 
Trade Agreement (PTA), but that Bhutan had no formal 
agreement with Nepal for trade.  He did say, however, 
that Sri Lanka enjoys some duty-free exchanges.  Wangdi 
added that six meetings had taken place to develop a 
free trade area for BIMST-EC.  According to Wangdi, 
trade accounts for sixty percent of GDP, including 
tourism.  Wangdi said that the date for the next WTO 
working party meeting on Bhutan's accession was set for 
October 6.  He added that Bhutan is currently doing 
outreach for WTO accession with the Bhutanese.  Wangdi 
said Bhutan is serious about joining the global family 
and does not want to stand on the sidelines. 
 
34.  (SBU)  Wangdi said that, although there is free 
circulation of currency between India and Bhutan, hard 
currency exchange only accounts for five percent of all 
transactions.  He also noted that, while the rural, 
manufacturing and services sector each account for one 
third of GDP, seventy-nine percent of Bhutanese are 
still employed in the rural sector.  Thus, rural reform 
is key to Bhutan's economic future. 
 
35.  (SBU)  Wangdi noted that hydropower is Bhutan's 
ace in the hole.  He said that, while the sector will 
eventually be privatized, it is currently not eligible 
for FDI.  Wangdi stated that Bhutan had only exploited 
some 1550 megawatts of its hydropower since the mid- 
eighties, which is only around five percent of 
potential production.  Of the power produced, he added, 
only fifteen percent is used internally.  The rest is 
exported.  Wangdi admitted that forty percent of the 
government revenue comes from hydropower.  Rather than 
reducing that figure in the future, Wangdi said that 
the RGOB plans to have hydropower contribute seventy 
percent of its revenue.  He noted that the Tala plant 
will produce 1020 megawatts once it comes online. 
Wangdi noted that hydropower and tourism link up very 
well with RGOB's environmental ethic (NOTE:  There were 
10,000 tourists last year.  END NOTE).  Wangdi said 
that the NA is committed to a minimum of sixty-five 
percent forest cover, which is further linked to the 
country's Buddhist influence.  Wangdi added that mining 
accounts for about two to three percent of GDP, and 
that a geological survey is forty percent complete. 
The survey, according to Wangdi, is focusing on soil 
stability and hazard analysis. 
 
36.  (SBU)  Wangdi said that Bhutan welcomed any 
possible technical assistance and capacity building for 
IPR legislation and enforcement.  He had several 
candidates in mind for potential training, if it became 
available.  Post has informed the US Patent and 
Trademark Office, which has conducted IPR training for 
Bhutan previously, of the Director's request for 
additional training. 
 
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COMMENT 
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37.  (SBU)  If conditions in Thimphu are any example, 
the economy in urban Bhutan is undergoing change and 
inevitable growing pains.  None of the Bhutanese 
interviewed seemed to be holding back information. 
Questions about education problems and other sensitive 
issues were generally answered directly and responses 
appeared sincere and consistent.  The journey back to 
Paro from Thimphu was undertaken on foot, over three 
days, through the mountains.  Though the rural 
Bhutanese are generally quite poor, there seems to be a 
basic economy at work in the remote areas of the 
Himalayan Kingdom as well.  Farmers and their errant 
cattle herds dotted several meadows between peak and 
valley.  The monks from the many monasteries between 
Thimphu and Paro were going and coming from various 
markets with oil jugs and other shopping paraphernalia 
in hand.  All of the children encountered were, like 
most other children, slightly dirty, very happy, and 
busy playing with sticks or balls. 
 
38.  (SBU)  Images of some of these encounters will be 
made available at Embassy New Delhi's SIPRnet site: 
http://www.state.sgov.gov/p/sa/newdelhi/, along with 
this and other related cables in text format. 
 
MULFORD