Mikama - December 20, 2016

Felana dans Madagascar Matin
Les recettes totales recouvrées en 9 mois représentent une valeur totale de 2 655,49 milliards d’Ariary, soit 72,59% de la prévision annuelle qui est de 3 658,10 milliards d’Ariary, définie suite à la Loi de finances rectificative d’après la direction générale du budget. (..) Pour le marché public,  la fourniture représente 1387 marchés de 47,06 milliards d’Ariary soit 41,17% du montant total. Les travaux ne représentent que  319 marchés de 57,20 milliards d’Ariary soit 50,04% du montant total. 229 des marchés, se chiffrant à 8,20 milliards d’Ariary soit 7,18% du montant total, sont alloués aux services et 96 marchés de 1,84 milliard d’Ariary soit 1,61% du montant total aux prestations intellectuelles. Concernant le mode de passation des marchés, ceux d’appel d’offres ouvert n’en représentent que 33%.

Dans ENCA
With more that 800 companies now on the island, China has rapidly established itself as Madagascar's largest trading partner. In a country where 90 percent of the population lives below the poverty line, such investment has given an unexpected boost to infrastructure development. But, as elsewhere on the African continent, the mass arrival of Chinese investors has created tensions. In 2011, police stepped in to prevent riots in the Chinatown section of the capital Antananarivo after an Asian trader beat up his two Madagascan employees. Three years later, clashes over wage demands left six people dead at a "Chinese" sugar factory in western Morondava town. The Chinese embassy has warned the authorities in Madagascar against tarnishing its image as an investment destination. The government is concerned at the growing hostilities towards its powerful partner. "It is essential to prevent this from degenerating into xenophobia," said the ruling HVM party leader Rivo Rakotovao. Officially launching a Chinese-built road recently, President Hery Rajaonarimampianina praised Beijing's "helping hand". Chinese ambassador Yang Xiaorong promised to strengthen the "win-win cooperation" between the two countries. "Chinese companies are well integrated into the local community," said the embassy, adding that 90 percent of the 17,000 jobs created so far are occupied by locals. Hit by the bitter competition from Chinese outfits, many Madagascans remain sceptical. "We only pick up the crumbs," Daniel Rafanomezantsoa, a craftsman, told AFP.

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