Guinea-Bissau: Doing business & staying in touch

Doing business in Guinea-Bissau

Lightweight suits are advised. A knowledge of Portuguese is useful as only a few executives speak English. Visits during Ramadan should be avoided.

Office hours

Mon-Fri 0730-1400.

Economy

Rice is the staple food in this poor, largely subsistence economy. The main cash crops are groundnuts, cashew nuts and palm kernels. Timber is the only significant industry. An attempt to revive cotton production has received EU assistance; sugar refining and fishing have also undergone major development. Planned developments of oil and bauxite deposits have not progressed as far as had been hoped.

Guinea-Bissau is a member of the West African Economic Community (ECOWAS) and joined the CFA Franc Zone in May 1997. Since then, the country has been recovering from internal conflicts which cut economic output by up to one-third and damaged much of the country's already limited infrastructure. In the short term, Guinea-Bissau will continue to rely on large quantities of foreign aid, of which it is among the highest per capita recipients in the world.

GDP

US$329 million (2006).

Main exports

Cashew nuts, shrimp, peanuts, palm kernals and sawn lumber.

Main imports

Food, machinery and transport equipment and petroleum products.

Main trading partners

India, China, EU, Uruguay and Senegal.

Keeping in Touch in Guinea-Bissau

Telephone

Outgoing international calls must go through the operator. It is difficult to find public telephones or to receive international calls. Telephone services are also expensive.

Mobile phone

Some networks operate. No roaming agreements have been announced yet.

Internet

Very limited Internet access is available in Bissau.

Post

There is a limited postal service.

Media

Since the overthrow of Kumba Yala in 2003, the media scene has been less repressive. The lack of a reliable power supply is still a problem. Private radio stations operate alongside the state-run broadcaster. There are few private newspapers, essentially due to financial constraints rather than to Government interference.

Press

• There are no English-language papers.
• Journal Nô Pintcha is a state-run newspaper published daily.
Banobero, Correio-Bissau and Fraskera are private weekly publications.

Television

• Radio Televisao de Guinea-Bissau (RTGB) is state run.
• RTP Africa, operated by Portuguese public broadcaster RTP, is run by local management, its studios and infrastructure are funded by Portugal.

Radio

Radio Nacional is a state-run station.
Radio Pindjiguiti, Bombolom FM and Voice of Quelele are private stations.

Visa and passport information is updated regularly and is correct at the time of publishing. You should verify critical travel information independently with the relevant embassy before you travel.