Showing posts with label FDI Bulgaria 2013. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FDI Bulgaria 2013. Show all posts

Wednesday, 27 March 2013



Sofia, March 27) - Four documentaries featuring the advantages of the investment environment in Bulgaria are being prepared by the Bulgarian Agency for Investments.

The documentaries are part of the largest advertising campaign in Bulgaria's recent history, aimed at promoting the conditions for doing business here.

This became clear at a conference in Sofia, where representatives of the largest economic media in the world presented their activities and the potential benefits from their cooperation with the Bulgarian government. The campaign costs 15.6 million levs and is financed under the Operational Program Competitiveness of the EU.

Each of the four documentaries will cover different topics ? human potential, industrial zones, successful investors (foreign and Bulgarian alike) and the priority economic sectors in the country.

They will be used in presentations and will be a virtual brochure about Bulgaria.

In addition, three short videos featuring the investment climate in Bulgaria will be continuously broadcast by Bloomberg, CNBC and CNN.

Finally, over 40 banners will be advertising Bulgaria on the websites of Bloomberg, Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, The Economist, CNBC and CNN. The printed editions of these media will publish 39 articles advertising Bulgaria as an investment destination.

"Strange as it may seem, many investors don't even know that Bulgaria is a full member of the EU with a ten-percent corporate tax," said Borislav Stefanov, head of the Bulgarian Agency for Investments.
Martin Lekov http://paper.standartnews.com

Thursday, 31 January 2013

Bulgaria could get up to 2.5B euro FDI in 2013 – official

 
Foreign direct investment (FDI) in the Bulgarian economy in 2013 was expected to reach between two billion euro and 2.5 billion euro, the head of InvestBulgaria Agency, Borislav Stefanov, told Bulgarian National Radio on January 2.

“I’m reluctant to give a definite number, simply because foreign direct investment depends not only on the country where the investment is carried out, but also the country of origin,” Stefanov was quoted as saying.

After years of ever-increasing inflows of investment funds during the economic boom, FDI bottomed out in 2010 at about one billion euro. Since then, the figures have risen steadily, to 1.7 billion euro in 2011 and the final amount for 2012 is expected to be about at two billion euro.
“I think it is very possible that total investment in 2013 will be in the range between two billion and 2.5 billion euro,” Stefanov said.

Although some sections of the updated Investment Promotion Act were vetoed in December by President Rossen Plevneliev, other incentives that the agency lobbied for – such as the partial reimbursements to investors for social security payments for new employees – were not affected by the veto and are slated to go into force later this year.

“The opportunity to get back, for two years, some of the expenditures on social security payments is an important one and many companies that we worked with in the past several months said that such an incentive could be a decisive factor to pick Bulgaria ahead of other countries that are competing against it,” Stefanov said.

http://sofiaglobe.com