logoBC
Yaoundé - 26 April 2024 -
Cooperation

A Cocoa-Cotton Trade Relation could soon be set between Cameroon and Indonesia

A Cocoa-Cotton Trade Relation could soon be set between Cameroon and Indonesia
  • Comments   -   Friday, 17 August 2018 13:13

(Business in Cameroon) - The Lagos-based Indonesian Trade Promotion Center (ITPC) organized Aug 14 an economic forum in Douala, the economic capital of Cameroon, focusing on partnership opportunities for local economic operators with Indonesian businessmen.

We need your cotton and cocoa,” said Simon Tumanggor, ITCP deputy director in Lagos, calling Cameroonian economic operators to attend the 33rd Trade Expo Indonesia (TEI) in Jakarta next October 24-28.

Simon said this could be an opportunity to tie wealth - creating partnerships, to boost trade which so far is almost nil between both countries.

BRM

afdb-reports-cfa3tn-in-financing-for-cameroon-over-60-years
The African Development Bank has approved CFA10,950 billion in financing for countries in Central Africa over the past 60 years since its inception in...
cameroon-spends-nearly-cfa71bn-on-public-debt-interest-in-q1-2024
In the first quarter of 2024, the Cameroonian central administration made debt repayments totaling CFA312.4 billion, excluding outstanding payments....
cameroon-s-domestic-debt-rose-by-cfa169bn-in-q1-2024-driven-by-public-securities
Cameroon's domestic debt, excluding payables over three months, has increased by CFA169 billion between March 2023 and March 2024. According to the latest...
infrastructure-projects-receive-over-56-of-afdb-funding-in-cameroon
The African Development Bank (AfDB) reports that 56.5% of its portfolio in Cameroon is dedicated to financing transportation infrastructure. Among the...

Mags frontpage


Business in Cameroon n110: April 2022

Covid-19, war in Europe: Some Cameroonian firms will suffer


Albert Zeufack: “Today, the most important market is in Asia”


Investir au Cameroun n120: Avril 2022

Covid-19, guerre en Europe : des entreprises camerounaises vont souffrir


Albert Zeufack: « Le marché le plus important aujourd’hui, c’est l’Asie »