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I think you dont konw your pic show that made by Beijing tiantan Biological Produets Co.Ltd.:omghaha:

rubella vaccine (source: internet), don't understand you what does this photo means ? we can produce vaccine by yourself with help of Japan Govt, not depend from importing from China,

you are really low IQ chinese. :omghaha:
 
rubella vaccine (source: internet), don't understand you what does this photo means ? we can produce vaccine by yourself with help of Japan Govt, not depend from importing from China,

you are really low IQ chinese. :omghaha:

:omghaha:I think realy low IQ are peoples of a Country cant develop so easy vaccine by themself
 
:omghaha:I think realy low IQ are peoples of a Country cant develop so easy vaccine by themself
We were busy to liberated the south and kicked Chinese out of Laos-camb, just didnt have time to make those vaccines.

anyway, making more vacine cant help low IQ and coward like you guys to take back Taiwan and with just tiny littoral water (coz China deep water is under US occupation) ur poor navy will remain suck forever :P
 
I think you dont konw your pic show that made by Beijing tiantan Biological Produets Co.Ltd.:omghaha:
You are right. The pic was taken from the website, just illustrating the vaccine. The article was shown without picture.
 
:omghaha:I think realy low IQ are peoples of a Country cant develop so easy vaccine by themself

Don't lie kid, China copied and produce only, same as Vietnam. Vaccine developed by white men, not chinese.

You are too low IQ liar.:omghaha:

The MMR vaccine is an immunization vaccine against measles, mumps, and rubella (also called German measles). It is a mixture of live attenuated viruses of the three diseases, administered via injection. It was first developed by Maurice Hilleman while at Merck.[1]
 
In history, vaccination method was first developed in either China or India, then spread to Turkey before reaching Europe.

I think you have wasted too much time here to insult each other. Please come back to topic.
 
Vietnam Mazda exports cars to Laos


Updated : 7/2/2013 5:23:42 PM
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(VOV) -The first batch of Mazda 2, Mazda 3, and CX-5 automobile products assembled in Vietnam will be shipped to Laos on July 14 as per a contract signed by the parties involved last week.

Mazda Vietnam is interested in broadening their exports to other left-hand drive Southeast Asian countries like Cambodia and Myanmar.

Mazda Vietnam is planning to export 300 vehicles in 2013, growing to 3,000 by 2014 and hitting 15,000 in 2020.

The Mazda 2 is the first of its kind assembled by Vina Mazda, a plant based in Quang Nam province’s Chu Lai Open Economic Zone.

Japan’s Mazda Group has 15 international manufacturing and assembling plants around the world. Vina Mazda was established two years ago as a member of the Truong Hai Auto Joint Stock Company (THACO).

THACO CEO Tran Ba Duong says Mazda’s Vietnamese output has consistently risen since its beginnings, reaching 3,000 this year. It now claims 5.4% of total market share and ranks fifth among members of the Vietnam Automobile Manufacturers’ Association (VAMA).
 
Just a small step for some, but a huge improvement of life for others.



NGO builds 25 houses in flood-prone Mekong province

MINH PHAT
UPDATED : 07/04/2013 16:22 GMT + 7

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Non-governmental organization Habitat for Humanity (HFH) Vietnam has kicked off its Mekong Big Builds to build 25 houses for disadvantaged families in flood-prone areas of Tien Giang Province by the middle of next month.

The Mekong Big Builds is hosted by HFH Vietnam and its local government partners with the participation of 200 volunteers from New Zealand, the US, Japan, China, the UK, Australia, Singapore and Vietnam. They will build up to 25 houses during the week of August 4-10, 2013.

The houses are estimated to cost around VND50 million (US$2,400) each. Habitat for Humanity Vietnam will finance VND40 million of the cost of each home while the local government partners and future homeowners together will contribute the remaining VND10 million.

The future homeowners will be building their own homes side-by-side the international volunteers who will live and work for a week amidst the quaint and sparsely populated Mekong Delta farming community.

The Mekong Big Builds is part of the regional Habitat for Humanity initiative and will take place again in Cambodia in November this year.

An opening ceremony to kick start the program was held in Tien Giang on July 1. Ms. Vo Thi Tuyet -- the Secretary General of Tien Giang Union of Friendship Organizations -- announced that pre-building preparations and budgets are completed and the families and volunteers are ready to start building.

Kelly Koch, Habitat for Humanity Vietnam’s Country Director extended a heartfelt thank you to the Habitat’s local and home partners.

“I would like to thank Habitat for Humanity Vietnam and its local government partners for supporting the building of decent homes for 25 families so that we can all settle down and live better lives,” said Huynh Nhi Ha, a 37-year-old single mother and future home owner.

Huynh Nhi Ha, who suffers from heart disease, lives with her 3 children in a 32-square-meter house made of untreated wood, corrugated metal walls and thatched roof. Out of her US$105 monthly income, she pays US$24 in rent and US$48 for her daughters’ school fees. The remaining money is spent on food, electricity and water, leaving barely enough to buy medicine for her heart disease.

Habitat for Humanity Vietnam began operations in 2001 in the central Da Nang City to provide low cost housing, water and sanitation solutions to marginalized households. HFH Vietnam has implemented projects in more than ten provinces across Vietnam to date.
 
Don't lie kid, China copied and produce only, same as Vietnam. Vaccine developed by white men, not chinese.

You are too low IQ liar.:omghaha:

The MMR vaccine is an immunization vaccine against measles, mumps, and rubella (also called German measles). It is a mixture of live attenuated viruses of the three diseases, administered via injection. It was first developed by Maurice Hilleman while at Merck.[1]

The vaccine was developed by a group of multicultural people. That's everyone involved.
 
WB forecasts 5.3% growth for Vietnam

Updated : 7/12/2013 5:31:51 PM
Voice of Vietnam


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(VOV) - Weighing domestic and global trends, the World Bank has predicted that Vietnam’s economy is likely to grow at a moderate rate of around 5.3% in 2013 and edge up 5.4% in 2014.

In its economic outlook update released on July 12, the bank said Vietnam’s macroeconomic conditions continue to improve as its economy enters the third year of relative stability.

Slow growth

Vietnam’s moderate inflation, stable exchange rates, increased reserves, and limited risks are attempting to end the recurring episodes of macroeconomic instability that began in 2007.

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Inflation has fallen from a peak of 23% in August 2011 to 6.7% in June 2013, and is predicted to amount to approximately 8.2% by the year’s end.

The bank was careful to warn that macroeconomic stability, in the absence of broad structural reforms, has not been sufficient to rebound from the lingering spell of slow economic growth.

Policymakers have devoted almost the entirety of their efforts to stabilising the economy, implicitly hoping the success of that endeavour would automatically jumpstart growth. The growth slump defies their hope.

Growth has failed to breach the 6% benchmark for the sixth consecutive year and 2013’s economic growth estimates are the second slowest since the early 1990s. Efforts to stimulate the economy through tax breaks and accommodative monetary policy have suffered diminishing returns that do not justify widening fiscal deficits and new contingent liabilities.

The World Bank warned that without accelerating structural reforms, especially in the banking and State-owned business sectors, Vietnam faces the risk of a prolonged period of slow growth.

FDI attraction


The WB confirmed that while foreign direct investment remains high, its percentage share of the economy is progressively declining.

Disbursed FDI has hovered between US$10.5-11.5 billion over the past five years, indicating foreign investors’ continued commitment to Vietnam, undeterred by problems of macroeconomic instability or slowdown in structural reforms.

Disbursed FDI as a share of GDP, however, has steadily fallen from a peak of 12% of GDP in 2008 to 7% in 2012.

Despite a falling FDI/GDP ratio, and continued macroeconomic problems, Vietnam is still considered one of East Asia’s most attractive destinations for foreign investors, largely on account of its low wages, demographical potential, ideal location, and political stability.

According to the 2012/13 ASEAN Business Outlook Survey conducted by AmCham Singapore and the US Chamber of Commerce, Vietnam comfortably remains the most popular location for Southeast Asian expansion ahead of second-placed Thailand, Singapore, and the Philippines.

Similarly, the Singapore Business Federation’s 2012/13 National Business Survey showed that Vietnam is its members’ second most favoured overseas investment destination, after Myanmar. Traditional powerhouses like China and India have seen their popularity ebb.

Indonesia and Thailand are close on Vietnam’s heels in the race for federation members’ investment.

Impressive exports

Vietnam’s exports show no sign of weakening, demonstrating their resilience to domestic problems. Exports grew at a rate of 16% during the first four months of 2013, consolidating the 34.2% and 18.2% rates in 2011 and 2012 respectively.

While commodity exports are declining due to falling prices, Vietnam’s traditional labour-intensive manufacturing exports—such as garments, footwear, and furniture—continue to sustain rapid growth.

Of particular note is the boom enjoyed by hi-tech and high value product exports. Cell phones and parts, computers, electronics and accessories, and automobile parts emerged as 2012’s largest and fastest growing export commodities.

Vietnam’s cell phone and accessories exports were worth US$12.7 billion in 2012, compared to rice’s US$3.7 billion, seafood’s US$6.1 billion, and footwear’s US$7.3 billion.

Cell phone and accessories exports are expected to exceed US$18 billion this year, overtaking garments as the country’s most lucrative export items.

The WB study revealed the quiet but significant ten-year transformation of Vietnam’s export orientations. Crude oil and agriculture including rice, which accounted for 44% of Vietnam’s total export value in 2002, saw their share plummet to 19% by 2012.

The share of low-value manufacturing exports (garments and footwear) also fell from 27% to 20% during the same period. High-value export items, negligible in 2002, now account for more than a fifth of Vietnam’s exports.

Challenges

WB Lead Economist Deepak K. Mishra reiterated slow structural reform could undermine investors’ trust and hamper Vietnam’s growth prospects.

Slower growth may intensify demand for loosening monetary and fiscal policies further, a response that risks stoking inflationary pressure and reversing the recent gains in macroeconomic stability.

The banking system’s tenuous health constrains the effectiveness of monetary easing. The private sector has yet to see the effects of recent interest rate cuts on lending and capital flow. Small and medium-sized enterprises continue to complain about their limited access to bank loans.

Credit activity is subdued. Banks’ reluctance to lend in the face of increased risks has combined with dwindling credit demand arising from weaker business prospects. Under such circumstances, the impact of further monetary easing on growth is likely to be limited, but could compound credit quality concerns and foster macroeconomic instability.

Vietnam’s economy remains susceptible to global economic fluctuations. Its declining revenue performance and rising public debt leaves little room for significant counter-cyclical policies.
 
World Bank Says Vietnam’s Forex Reserves at 2.8 Months of Import

Vietnam’s foreign currency reserve has climbed to the equivalent 2.8 months of imports in the first quarter of 2013, according to the World Bank.

Vietnam’s foreign currency reserve has climbed to the equivalent 2.8 months of imports in the first quarter of 2013, versus 2.2 months in Q1/2012 and 1.6 months two years earlier, the local newswire Danviet.vn reported, citing the latest report by the World Bank.

The WB says the country’s foreign reserves improved in the first months of the year thanks to balance of payments surplus of about 9.3 percent of its GDP (current account surplus of 5.9 percent GDP and capital account surplus of 5.8 percent GDP).

On May 11, Vietnam’s prime minister said forex reserve has increased to $30 billion at the beginning of 2013 from $20 billion a year back. The volume was sufficient to cover 12 weeks of imports, the PM then said.

Earlier, the National Finance Supervisory Commission (NFSC) estimated that the country’s forex reserve rose to the equivalent 13-14 weeks of imports. According to the NFSC, the central bank bought large volume of dollars from most credit institutions at VND20,850 per US dollar ahead of the Lunar New Year holiday, raising the country’s foreign exchange reserve to the record high level.

Vietnam’s forex reserve has surged after falling off from $20.7 billion in 2008. The Southeast Asian country was estimated to have bought $10 billion for forex reserve in 2012.

Intellasia East Asia News - World Bank Says Vietnam's Forex Reserves at 2.8 Months of Import

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My take:. 2012 was the turning point for Viet Nam's trade balance. Often, Viet Nam would incur a trade deficit of $10 billion/year. In 2012, Vietnam incur a trade surplus ( less than 1 billion) for the first time in 20 years. My prediction is that if Viet Nam continue to at least have a trade deficit of less than $4 billion/year, Viet Nam will add $5 billion/year to her FOREX. For the first 6 months of 2013, Vietnam has incurred a trade deficit of $1.4 billions so keeping the trade deficit to less than $4 billion in 2013 is doable.:smokin:
 
McDonald’s to bring Big Mac to Vietnam
By Jeremy Grant in Singapore


Vietnam is finally set to get its first taste of the Big Mac after US burger chain McDonald’s said it would open its first outlet in the communist-run country early next year.
The Illinois-based company said it had appointed a Vietnamese businessman, Henry Nguyen, an overseas Vietnamese who returned to the country a decade ago, as “developmental licensee” to “build the [McDonald’s] brand”


The first outlet would be in Ho Chi Minh City, the commercial hub. McDonald’s said the menu would include the Big Mac sandwich, cheeseburgers and fries.
The move, which makes Vietnam the 38th Asian country in which McDonald’s operates, highlights how the country is fast becoming one of the most attractive consumer markets in southeast Asia, even as its economy is among the worst performing.
In February, Starbucks, the US coffee chain, opened its first outlet, also in Ho Chi Minh City, increasing its presence across Asia to 12 countries.
Other US chains already in Vietnam include Subway and Yum! Brands’ KFC and Pizza Hut. Jollibee, the largest fast food group in the Philippines, is expanding in Vietnam through a joint venture with the owner of Highlands Coffee, Vietnam’s leading upmarket coffee shop chain.


The entry of McDonald's also marks the arrival of arguably the most iconic of US food brands decades after the end of the Vietnam war.
US food and drinks products were popular in the former South Vietnam until the war ended with communist victory in 1975, forcing companies like Coca-Cola to abandon the market.
Coca-Cola and rival Pepsi re-established themselves in the mid 1990s. McDonald’s never had a presence in South Vietnam.
The company first looked at Vietnam over a decade ago, but lack of a domestic source of beef cattle and poor supply chain infrastructure meant the market was not suitable.

The company’s strong association with US culture also caused problems. In the mid-1990s, the people’s committee of the city of Hanoi, the Vietnamese capital, briefly banned McDonald’s from the city.
The contract with Mr Nguyen, who once flipped burgers at a McDonald’s while a student in the US, was the result of a “rigorous” selection process that began years ago, the company said.McDonald’s to bring Big Mac to Vietnam - FT.com
 
not easy to master German language, but it is worth learning.



Teaching German in Vietnamese schools

Updated : 7/17/2013 6:24:30 PM Voice of Vietnam
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(VOV) -German Ambassador to Vietnam, Jutta Frasch and Vietnamese Minister of Education and Training, Pham Vu Luan on July 17 signed a cooperative agreement on teaching German as a first or second language in selected Vietnamese schools.

Under the agreement, students in these schools will be equipped with sufficient knowledge about German language, literature and culture to attend preparatory universities or directly apply for universities in Germany.

The signing is part of the "Schools: Partners for the Future" initiative (PASCH) launched by the German Embassy in Vietnam in coordination with the Central Agency for Schools Abroad (ZfA), Goethe Institute (GI), the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) and the Educational Exchange Service of the Standing Conference of the Ministers of Education and Cultural Affairs of the Länder in the Federal Republic of Germany (PAD).

PASCH is a global network of some 1,500 schools that place a high value on German and over 1,400 Vietnamese students in schools in Hanoi, Haiphong and Ho Chi Minh City are learning German within the network.

Earlier, in May, 2007 the Vietnamese Ministry of Education and Training and the German Embassy in Vietnam had agreed upon a pilot project to teach German as a second language in several secondary and high schools in Vietnam.
 

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