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Nepali business leader sees Chinese dream as inspirational
Last Updated: 2013-06-09 07:39 | Xinhua
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Nepal's private sector leader Suraj Vaidya, who chairs the Federation of Nepalese Chambers of Commerce & Industry (FNCCI) has said the Chinese dream is appreciable as well as inspirational to Nepal.

In a recent exclusive interview with Xinhua about the Chinese dream, the head of the federal representative body of Nepali business community, said Nepal can follow the road to prosperity inspired by the Chinese dream.

He said the Chinese dream is vision of successful leadership in China and it is all about aspiration and guidance of the leadership to integrate the huge population, huge geographical differences and multiethnic culture of China into a single dream.

"The Chinese dream could take forward the prosperity of China to a step ahead and indeed the dream will benefit every fellow citizen in coming days," he said.

Nepal should appreciate the Chinese dream and the Chinese people who are working hard to fulfill the vision of the leader, said Vaidya. "The Chinese dream will also help China to transform itself into more open economy for the investors worldwide," he said.

Industrialist Vaidya who owns several commercial agricultural farms and largest tea estates in the eastern part of the country, believed that Nepal should focus on exporting agricultural products to China's Tibet to get better economic advantages from China.

As the cost of agricultural production is much expensive in Tibet due to the lack of enough agricultural ground on the average 3,000 meters high altitude, Nepal can export food and vegetables there, he said.

Nepal should develop its capacity to feed around 7 million tourists who visit Tibet every year and for this, the government of Nepal should work out policies to encourage private sector for commercial agro production, the chairperson of FNCCI suggested.

The private sector leader is of the view that Nepal's Ministry of Forest should lease fallow land to private sector for agricultural production in large scale.

Meanwhile, He urged the Chinese banks to expand their services in Nepal for the better optimization of trade and investment between the two countries. "Eventually only the bank defines investment and trade relations, thus Nepali entrepreneurs think the Chinese bank should come as soon as possible,'' he said.

Vaidya called on the government of Nepal to develop special strategy to welcome Chinese investment in Nepal, saying that a comprehensive study to locate and market the potential areas is much needed which can explore mutual benefits.

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