23.08.2011

Slovenia as an anchor of investors and business community

Times change, values don't

 

Solid virtues of Slovenians are well illustrated by a high share of gross savings rate in gross disposable income, right after the Swiss and the Germans, aversion to excessive risk and respect for time-tested values. These virtues have been attracting discerning foreign investors to Slovenia since late 1970s and have got it the invitation to the most prestigious European and global integrations: EU, NATO, eurozone, and OECD.  It is the membership of the OECD with its high-set criteria that set by Slovenia should hearten investors amid mixed signals sent daily by stock and commodity markets. Slovenia’s undisputable qualities that establish confidence  as the global crisis continues range from transparency in the adoption of new legislation, public debate on the changes, appeal procedures, public procurement procedures and non-discriminatory practice to the use of regulations that present the fewest possible obstacles to trade. In addition, Slovenia’s progress in the area of international coordination of national regulations, intellectual property and export loans is widely recognised and highly appreciated by investors and business partners with experience in dealing with the country’s businesses and institutions.

 

Proverbial Slovenian prudence has kept the country’s financial system from fuelling rapid expansion by financial integration. Consequently, a blow dealt by the global economic downturn has not been exacerbated by credit booms and over-borrowing during “fat years”. The country’s high economic growth and financial integration have been well balanced helping to mitigate the economic setback of Slovenia’s overreliance on exports and help create a more diverse industrial base.

 

Slovenia’s geostrategic position at the cross-roads of transport routes, well-developed ITC and physical infrastructure, technological networks and platforms, centres of excellence and clusters as evidence of a high-level innovation activity, make it a location of choice for many types of businesses. Strong commercial contacts across Eastern and South-eastern Europe, a deep-sea port and the extensive transport network give easy access to some 500 million consumers in Europe. Foreign investors can serve the Western Balkans at reasonable business costs thanks to Slovenia’s well-educated and internationally savvy workforce.

 

By helping workers to compete in the global market, Slovenian government is supporting employers so that they may retain jobs and increase productivity. The national strategic priorities are designed to support entrepreneurship, give impetus to business internationalisation, and encourage SME innovation and youth entrepreneurship.

 

They are already here: Bosch Siemens, Danfoss, Deloitte, Goodyear, GKN Driveline, Grammer Automotive, Grieshaber Logistik, Gruppo Bonazzi, Henkel, IBM, Intesa Sanpaolo, Johnson Controls, Microsoft, Mobilkom, Sandoz Group (Novartis), Oracle, Palfinger, Renault, S&T, Schefenacker, Société Générale, Wolford, Yaskawa…

 

 

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