AndrewJin
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That viet has some sort of delusion that low-end pho eateries and nail shops are the centre of the economic universe.Now you are diverting the topic, my friend.
You are bringing up Vietnamese immigrants in the US. What they do in the US is not considered as a export to the US, right? Actually, if they invest in the US, it means a loss for you, because they will pay taxes to the US government, not to Hanoi.
There are so many Vietnamese in Taiwan province and other Mainland provinces near Vietnam and I am sure they also open up restaurants in those places. It is normal that there would be more Vietnamese (although I have no idea about this) in the US than in Greater China area, it is only normal because the US was the economic point of attraction for many decades when our region was very poor and undeveloped.
The current hard fact is that China dwarfs your two new-found allies, US and India, in terms of imports from Vietnam. China offers a much bigger and healthier market. The future lies not in the US market, but in the Chinese market in which services still accounts for a little above 50%. Imagine the potential for a ten million more restaurants!
I would not object Vietnam selling more to the US; but so far, you are not selling too much to them. China is buying more from you than the US is. If you sell more, that's all fine, like you say, a richer Vietnam is good for China because it means a richer market for premium Chinese goods.
@Götterdämmerung Remember the most successful immigrant rhetorics shining in pho and nail salons?