fbpx

Out of the 998 projects financed by foreign direct investment (FDI) in Africa last year, Egypt, South Africa, and Morocco were responsible for the greatest share, according to a recent report by fDi Intelligence.

Egypt replaced South Africa as the top ranked destination by projects in the region, experiencing a 60% increase from 85 to 136 projects in 2019, the report said.

Along with a $12bn IMF-mandated reform programme, the government has embarked on massive infrastructure spending in sectors ranging from energy to construction.

South Africa follows Egypt at 123 projects, though it easily outdoes all other African countries in terms of the number of projects it financed outside its own territory last year.

fDi Intelligence, a product of the Financial Times, found that South Africa invested in 81 projects outside the rainbow nation in 2019 compared to just 29 in Morocco, the second most out of any African country.

Morocco had 102 projects financed by FDI last year, making it the third largest on the continent. Other countries with large numbers of externally financed projects include Kenya (87), Nigeria (73), and Ghana (42).

In fact, Nigeria and Ghana each attracted more FDI by capital investment than South Africa, but the investments were spread among fewer projects. Egypt topped the list both in terms of the number of projects and amount invested.Ghana entered the top 10 destinations by the number of FDI projects in the Middle East and Africa.

It saw a 56% increase on 2018 figures, equivalent to 15 additional projects.Ghana also saw capital investment growth of 479%, an increase to $4.8bn.

This was driven by projects such as a $2.8bn production facility being developed by Sweden-based Greenland Resources as part of a public-private partnership with the government of Ghana.

Other large projects in Africa last year included the establishment of a $2bn phosphate fertiliser plant in Togo by the Dangote Group.

The Egyptian government also established a $848m phosphoric acid plant in the New Valley Governorate as part of a joint venture with several Chinese companies and the Egypt-based Phosphate Misr.

source: africanbusinessmagazine

The GCC cities dominated the global Financial Attractiveness Index list with Bahrain’s capital Manama being named the world's most financially attractive city in AIRINC’s latest Global 150 Cities index. Riyadh is in 4th place, Kuwait City in 6th, Abu Dhabi in 7th, and Dubai in 12th on the list. 

The index https://www.air-inc.com/global-150/ ranks 150 of the top global locations according to financial attractiveness and lifestyle attractiveness. It combines local salary levels, tax rates, living costs, and living conditions to assess how appealing each location is to live in.

Every single GCC member was represented in the top 20 most financially attractive cities in the world, according to AIRINC’s latest Global 150 Cities Index. 

The data is collected by AIRINC’s own in-house survey team, who continuously research the costs and living conditions of many cities around the world to evaluate international mobility.

GCC economies have invested considerable sums in making themselves more attractive to international businesses in line with ambitious region-wide economic diversification efforts, it stated. 

As the first GCC member to begin diversification, Bahrain offers one of the easiest and most cost-effective environments to set up and operate a business in the world. 

Businesses operating in the Kingdom enjoy 0% tax and 100% foreign ownership allowed.

Thanks to its comprehensive programme of reforms, increasingly digital Bahrain was recently named the fourth most improved economy in the world by the World Bank’s latest Ease of Doing Business report. 

As well as ranking first in the world for financial attractiveness in the AIRINC index, Manama also jumped 15 places for overall attractiveness, to 48th.

source: tradearabia

With a long commercial history ever since Trade caravans used it as a crossroad for over 3000 years, The Kingdom of Bahrain is familiar with trade concept and Small Business opportunities.

According to the World Bank’s report on the easiness of starting and doing business in Bahrain in 2019, the island kingdom came in the 62nd rank out of 190 indexed countries.

And ever since the Kingdom’s economy started expanding and depending on non-oil sectors more than ancient times, this diversification encouraged many investors to consider Bahrain as the investment hub in the region. Also, Bahrain was ranked as the fastest-growing economy in the GCC region in 2017.

All of which made the Kingdom more capable of creating various small business opportunities for investors from all over the world.

If you live in Bahrain, then here are the best 7 small business opportunities you should definitely consider starting in the Kingdom.

 

1. Construction Company

Known for being a resilient market, the real estate industry in Bahrain is growing each year, unlike it’s neighboring countries.

Ever since the Kingdom started counting on the non-oil sectors, and its economy has witnessed unmatched stability that kept the Kingdom going despite the oil slump.

Any investor interested in the market will make a fortune out of it.

The under-construction market in the Kingdom of Bahrain is an ever-growing market, which is why going for establishing a construction company will reap the rewards.

 

2. Restaurants

Food is the ultimate pleasure factor, which is why opening a restaurant in the Kingdom is a great business idea. The most recognized destinations of such investments are Block 338 in the district of Adliya, also known as the fine dining district of Bahrain.

With many nationalities living and working in the country, the culinary scene has expanded offering new flavors and introducing new cuisines.

Just make sure when going for the restaurant plan to introduce something that stands out from the rest whether the theme of the venue, it’s eclectic menu or toothsome eats.

 

3. Interior Designing Company

With many real estate developments being sold off-plan and many more upcoming projects in all real estate sectors, thinking of opening an interior designing company will pay off.

Whether you are going to work with major real estate developers or individuals, invading this field in the Kingdom will make you one of the wealthy investors.

 

4. Events Planning

Starting from a small birthday party to organizing a real estate exhibition, for instance, opening an event planning business in Bahrain is considered one of the winning business ideas.

With many international companies based in Bahrain in all fields, hosting an exhibition or a conference or even a small party is something that requires real planning and great expertise.

Which is why an event planning business in the Kingdom is considered one smart choice.

 

5. Cleaning Services

Many homeowners, hotels, restaurants, and companies are in desperate need of cleaning services.

Establishing a business that provides professional cleaning services in Bahrain will require a thorough search for qualified and well-trained individuals, however, it’s one business that is bound to get you more profit than you planned.

 

6. Financial Consultancy Company

One of the most thriving sectors in the Kingdom of Bahrain is its banking sector.

And whether you decided to start your own financial consultancy service agency or even better, you decided to start your own bank, starting financial consultancy business in the Kingdom of Bahrain these days – if you have the relevant experience- is definitely a profitable business idea.

 

7. Real Estate Brokerage Company

As we mentioned earlier, the real estate market in Bahrain has proved to be a stable market over the past couple of years despite the circumstances.

This is why, if you are thinking of working as a freelance real estate agent or starting your own real estate brokerage company, your business will be a successful one.

With many real estate projects currently in the process of construction and others are in the process of planning, Bahrain is considered an attraction when it comes to real estate investment.

source: weetas

 

Exclusive Interview for SA Entrepreneurs

Dr. Steen Ehlern, Managing Partner

Ferguson Partners Family Office

 

Nestled in the Arabian Gulf comprising a total of 33 islands, Bahrain is the smallest member of the Gulf Cooperation Council with a population of just 1.5 million. Despite being the smallest economy in the Arabian Gulf, the Kingdom has for years been able to attract a steady and growing flow of investment both from outside the region and from within.

Over the last year alone, foreign investment levels into the country increased dramatically off the back of new corporate legislation and favorable business environment. Bahrain Economic Development Board reported a record $810 million of foreign direct investment during the first nine months of the year. That compared to $733 million in all of 2017 and was over five times the amount of FDI in 2015.

In 2018 foreign direct investment more than doubled in the first nine months, with manufacturing and logistics accounting for the most part. The EDB attributes this growth to greater focus on marketing Bahrain as the gateway for companies looking to access the Gulf region, especially Saudi Arabia. Neighboring KSA has been introducing a sweeping wave of reforms – both economic, social and political – aimed at transforming the economy and turning it into a world-class hub for business, trade, mining, light manufacturing and tourism. Some companies have used the opportunity to set up operations in Bahrain and take advantage of the momentum.

“Setting up a business in Bahrain is extremely easy and cost-efficient, especially when you compare it with neighboring GCC countries,” says Dr. Steen Ehlern, Managing Partner/CEO of Ferguson Partners, Al Dana Partners and Co-Founder of Al Dana Ferguson.

“Investment into the country is also becoming more and more attractive, as there is so much being developed, with the new additional causeway parallel to the existing one [linking Saudi Arabia and Bahrain], the LNG shipping terminal, Bahrain metro and lots of infrastructure and hospitality projects but also many private investments and shared PPP (Public Private Partnerships) in the areas of renewable energy, sustainability, smart cities and mobility.”

Dr. Ehlern draws upon years of valuable experience derived from working in the region. British-Danish citizen who grew up and graduated from Switzerland, he lives between London, Zurich and Bahrain. He is quick to point out to the kingdom’s high ambitions of becoming a FinTech hub, and “being the banking and financial center with the longest track record and experience in the region,” Dr. Ehlern thinks it has a bright future ahead. Last year Bahrain created a “regulatory sandbox” allowing companies in the field to experiment without facing normal regulatory constraints.

Indeed, Bahrain’s rise to prominence as a key regional financial center dates back to the 1970s when the kingdom was the first GCC state to diversify its economy away from dependence on oil. Today, the financial sector accounts for as much as 17% of overall GDP, while reliance on oil dropped significantly from 43.6% of GDP in 2000 to about 19% currently. Still, oil and gas revenues continue to contribute a significant share of government revenues estimated at 75.7% in 2016.

 

Country of “firsts”

To spur growth and attract more investment into the country, the government allowed 100% foreign business ownership in various sectors, including residency, food, administrative services, arts, entertainment and leisure, health and social work, information and communications, manufacturing, mining and quarrying, water supplying and professional, scientific, technical and real estate activities.

As Dr. Ehlern highlights, Bahrain was the first GCC country to allow 100% foreign ownership to investors: “Bahrain is very often (if not always) the pioneer. For example, it built the first hospital in the region, first schools; it was the first to allow and support education for women, women to found and own businesses, first to discover oil, and then first to diversify the economy away from oil and gas into e.g. aluminum, banking and finance, etc.”

As a result, “a large number of foreign companies are opening up businesses in Bahrain,” says Dr. Ehlern. “It is geographically a great hub and remains a gateway to the region, and certainly also to Saudi Arabia as well as other GCC countries. It is cost-efficient, has considerably lower labor costs, utility costs and you have an abundance of well-trained, experienced local staff. You don’t have to rely on, sometimes expensive, expats.”

 

Empowering female entrepreneurs

Its focus on innovation, capability building, and youth has stimulated a vibrant entrepreneurial environment, with women being at the helm of new business start-ups and incubators. Entrepreneurship is most certainly on the rise, and women entrepreneurship is very much promoted in Bahrain, with women present in all sectors and jobs, up to the highest ranks and executive levels, as well as politics, says Dr. Ehlern.

“I see a much larger private sector and especially young entrepreneurs, start-ups and businesses founded and owned by women. I see many more women still in key business areas and businesses and Bahrain leading the FinTech arena in the Gulf. Some very smart minds are coming out of the region, studying locally or overseas and coming back. The pace of development and momentum are incredible.”

This year Bahrain established a $100 million fund to support technology start-ups across the region, which it hopes will attract venture capital firms to Bahrain. ‘Al Waha Fund of Funds’ will help start-ups in Bahrain and across the region get access to capital and expertise.

“The government also has a designated Labor Fund (Tamkeen) to support local businesses and start-ups, where also BDB (Bahrain Development Bank) steps in and supports SMEs,” Dr. Ehlern explains.

“There are several Bahraini Family Business and SME societies and organizations. Also worth mentioning are all the women in business, the universities especially designated for women, besides the usual universities and the Supreme Council for Women, initiated by Shaikha Sabekha, the wife of H.M. King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa,” he added.

 

Trust is key

For all the benefits it offers, Bahrain remains a popular destination for foreign investors from the East, Far East and the West. But doing business in the region is not always as straightforward as you might think. It’s about trust, relationships and even “chemistry” – things without which even the most astute businessman would struggle to succeed.

“People from the West are often too impatient and immediately want to ‘get down to business’, which – frankly speaking – is not going to get you very far. In the region of the Arabian Gulf, it is all about relationships, patience and timing, word of mouth, reputation, referrals, trust and respect,” Dr. Ehlern said.

“People want to get to know you, understand you, and see whether business with would be possible, regardless of the opportunity. It really is also about personal chemistry, whether a business has the potential to happen or not,” he added.

As the managing partner of a private partnership firm specialized in providing wealth and family office/business services to investors, over the years Dr. Steen Ehlern has helped many people succeed in business, finance and investment. On our final but nevertheless important question – what are some of the key things to keep in mind if you are looking to set up a business in Bahrain? Dr. Ehlern replied simply: “Like everywhere else in the world, be professional, respectful, tolerant, openhearted and open minded. Bahrain is a fabulous example of an open society, combining the best of two worlds, in fact many worlds.”


Investment Opportunities in Bahrain

1.  Financial services:
Central Bank of Bahrain(CBB) is the regulatory authority for all financial institutions in Bahrain.  CBB ensure the application of rules and regulations by all institutions that fall under its authority, and it also pressures these institutions to comply by policies and laws.

Core Financial Services
- Islamic Financing, and Islamic banking services.
- Insurance and re-insurance
- Solidarity services
- Command assets programs
- Assets management programs

2. Industrial and specialized services
· Easy access to the region
· Financial sector’s high demand for  professional services.
· The low operational costs
· The availability of skilled manpower
· The preferred legal environment

Professional services and industrial firms include:
AT Kearny, CB Richard Ellis, Deloitte, Ernst and Young, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer, and the international advertising agency JWT, KPMG, McKinsey & Company, Norton Rose, Agility Logistics, and Roland Berger.

3. Logistics Services
Bahrain is consideredas an ideal platform in the Middle East in the field of providing logistics services for companies.  A number of well-known companies have chosen Bahrain as a hub for its services.

Logistic Privileges:
- Accessibility to the economies of neighboring countries.
- The availability of a variety of advanced transport networks (land, sea, and air transport networks), with minimum travel time between sea ports, airports, and logistics zones of the Gulf region.
- Superior free business environment in the region.

Logistics companies in Bahrain include:
Agility, Agunsa, APM Terminals, Aramex, DHL, Expeditors, FedEx, GAC, Kuehne+Nagel, Panalpina, TNT, UPS and others.

4. Education and Training
Bahrain is a regional leader in education, hosting conferences that attract leading educational academics from around the world.
We have a thriving education sector, including an expanding public education and training sector, and private schools offering curricula from around the world
The Quality Assurance Authority for Education and Training safeguards standards
 A significant portion of the budget assigned to Tamkeen, the national labour fund, is available for private sector education and training

5. Manufacturing
At the heart of the GCC’s trillion dollar market, Bahrain is the ideal base for meeting the Gulf’s growing appetite for manufactured goods.
Bahrain offers manufacturing companies the following benefits:
- Central location reduces freight costs
- Excellent road, sea and air links – one hour’s drive from 50% of Saudi Arabia’s economy (with the Kingdom’s Riyadh business hub only four hours away), home to Bahrain’s national carrier, Gulf Air, which has the largest regional network and connects to over 50 destinations worldwide, and home to one of the Gulf’s largest trans-shipment hubs
- Membership of the GCC common market guarantees duty-free trade
- Bilateral trade and economic agreements with over 60 countries, including  China, France, India, and Singapore, as well as a Free Trade Agreement with the United States and a Double Taxation Agreement with the UK.
- Plentiful supply of specialist, skilled and semi-skilled workers
- Supportive labour fund.
- Competitive costs for labour, industrial land and energy .

6. Information, Communication & Technology
Bahrain’s position as the Middle East’s most liberal information, communications and technology (ICT) market, along with excellent infrastructure, has encouraged many ICT companies to base their regional headquarters here.

ICT companies already in Bahrain include:
Batelco, Cisco, Hewlett Packard, Huawei, Kalaam Telecom, Lightspeed, Menatelecom, Microsoft, 2Connect, Viva (Saudi Telecom), Software AG, Tech Mahindra, TATA Consultancy Services, WIPRO and Zain.

7. Ownership
100% foreign ownership of business is allowed. Sector-specific and/or company type restrictions may apply.

8. Taxation
Bahrain has the most attractive tax environment in the Gulf, with the same low- or no-tax regime across the entire jurisdiction – not just in designated free-zones. There are no personal income taxes*, no corporation taxes, no wealth taxes or tax on capital gains, no inheritance tax, no restriction on repatriation of capital, profits or dividends and few indirect taxes.

Bahrain was ranked the 12th in regards of economic freedom according to the economic freedom world indicator 2013 published by Wall Street Journal.

9. Workforce
Our workforce is the most educated and skilled in the Gulf. This means you can minimize spending on expatriate packages and build a long-term, sustainable local workforce.  For example, Bahrainis comprise two thirds (66%) of the financial services workforce, according to the Central Bank of Bahrain (2010).
 
10. Low Cost
Our low costs are another important advantage. Basic costs such as rents for offices and industrial land are lower than elsewhere in the region. The combination of subsidies and privatization in the utilities sectors, mean that electricity, gas and water costs are highly competitive. And with low living costs, wages are also highly competitive.

Investing Opportunities in Bahrain
* Logistics
* Education & Training
* Manufacturing
* Information Communications & Technology
* Financials
* Real Estate
* Healthcare
* Construction
* Consultancy
* Engineering
* Chemicals & Plastics
* Packaging
* Financial Services
* Professional & Industrial Services
* Fast Moving Consumer Goods (FMCG)

(source: website of Bahrain Chamber of Commerce and Industry)

About Us

Enjoy the power of entrepreneurs' platform offering comprehensive economic information on the Arab world and Switzerland, with databases on various economic issues, mainly Swiss-Arab trade statistics, a platform linking international entrepreneurs and decision makers. Become member and be part of international entrepreneurs' network, where business and pleasure meet.

 

 

Contact Us

Please contact us : 

Cogestra Laser SA

144, route du Mandement 

1242 Satigny - Geneva

Switzerland

We use cookies on our website. Some of them are essential for the operation of the site, while others help us to improve this site and the user experience (tracking cookies). You can decide for yourself whether you want to allow cookies or not. Please note that if you reject them, you may not be able to use all the functionalities of the site.