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Vietnam Economy Forum

Vietnam can't even build road properly. I see Vietnam economy progress are in a stage of instance noodles (instance success) no long term plans and help from government. I see more of foreign companies than local companies in Vietnam. Viet nam weren't prepare to joint WTO.

Many Vietnamese in the US say the corrupt government only wants to help themselves so it's no surprise Vietnam doesn't get much government support. Still, it's difficult for Vietnam to achieve many goals with a GDP per capital (nominal) of 1,500. They need to get to $5,000 before they can start to be self sufficient and start their own investments.
 
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Many Vietnamese in the US say the corrupt government only wants to help themselves so it's no surprise Vietnam doesn't get much government support. Still, it's difficult for Vietnam to achieve many goals with a GDP per capital (nominal) of 1,500. They need to get to $5,000 before they can start to be self sufficient and start their own investments.
Vietnam can do a lot with $1,500.00 GPD per person if all of the GPD income are all 100% own by Vietnamese.
Corruption and mis management of the state funding will definitely will not help poor country like VIETNAM, Vietnam needed every ounce of it energy push toward it next goal.
also Vietnam government needed more action toward united the Vietnamese aboard to come back and help Vietnam in all areas.
 
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HO CHI MINH CITY - Vietnam's economic growth accelerated in the second quarter after the central bank cut interest rates to revive lending to businesses and rising foreign investment boosted the nations exports.


Motorcyclists ride near residential buildings under construction in a newly developed area of Hanoi. Rapid urbanisation since the communist nation switched to a market economy in the 1990s has left the country's biggest cities like Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City heavily congested due to the lack of adequate infrastructure. (AFP file photo)

Gross domestic product grew 5% in the second quarter from a year earlier, according to figures released on Thursday by the General Statistics Office in Hanoi. The economy expanded 4.9% in the first half from a year earlier, the data showed, compared with a median estimate of 5% in a Bloomberg News survey of seven economists.
Vietnam's central bank has cut its refinancing rate eight times since the beginning of 2012 to spur lending, and the government is setting up an asset management company to clear bad debt. The legislature last week voted to lower the corporate income tax rate to help businesses, while disbursed foreign investment rose 5.6% in the first half of the year to US$5.7 billion, according to the Ministry of Planning and Investment.
``This isn't going to be a strong growth year, but the economy is stabilising,'' said Gaurav Gupta, the Hanoi-based managing director at General Motors Co's Vietnam unit, citing lower interest rates and inflation than in previous years. This year should set the base for the government to take actions to drive growth faster in the future.
The dong has slipped about 0.4% this quarter, a smaller decline compared to other regional currencies including the Philippine peso and the baht. The benchmark VN index has gained almost 16% this year.
The economy expanded a revised 4.76% in the first quarter from a year earlier, and is set for a third straight year of sub-6% growth for the first time since 1988. The government targets 5.5% for this year after a 5.03% pace last year, the slowest since 1999.
Vietnam's GDP may rise 6% in 2014, according to a directive by Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung posted on the government website this week. It also urged implementing monetary policy with the aim of stabilising the currency in order to efficiently supply capital in the economy.
Exports in the first half rose 16.1% to $62.05 billion from the same period a year earlier, while imports climbed 17.4% to $63.5 billion for a trade deficit of $1.4 billion, the Statistics Office said on Thursday.
``Most of the growth is coming from the foreign-invested sector, ``said Dominic Mellor, a Hanoi-based economist at the Asian Development Bank. ``That's how Vietnam has been able to sustain its exports and, to some degree, its growth.''
 
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I think now Vietnam is bad at every aspect a country should be. Concerning education, bachelor degree is easy to get therefore there are not enough work for the huge amount of low quality worker. In the society, the gap betwwen the rich and the poor is huge. Inside the country itself, it has a lots of problem like the hatred between communist party and Vietnamese people abroad, between the rich and the poor, the media is censored, ....
Vietnam can be good now but it is not stable!
 
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Vietnam's first billionaire, Pham Nhat Vuong

ImageHandler.ashx
 
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I think now Vietnam is bad at every aspect a country should be. Concerning education, bachelor degree is easy to get therefore there are not enough work for the huge amount of low quality worker. In the society, the gap betwwen the rich and the poor is huge. Inside the country itself, it has a lots of problem like the hatred between communist party and Vietnamese people abroad, between the rich and the poor, the media is censored, ....
Vietnam can be good now but it is not stable!
That´s true, Vietnam is facing many challenges, but it is still very stable. So Vietnam is nearly free of terrorism and political violence. The Risk consulting firm Aon sees Vietnam as stable and safe as West Europe.

Aon Crisis Management
 
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Fresh Technology to 10 years
Japan has been transferred to Vietnam agricultural preservation technology, food ( CAS ) is now the most modern. Farm Fresh seafood is delicious to 99.7 % compared to last time during harvest up to 10 years

Fresh Technology to 10 years
10 years is still as fresh as this is a modern technology, can cost up to millions of dollars. Coming up if successful, believe that not only watermelon, other agricultural products can be stored for several months, next few years could the Minister of Science and Technology Nguyen Quan many years, farmers are falling into.

The agricultural commodities, especially fruit, frequent Chinese traders price pressure. Watermelon, lychee more time to sell off, dumped as dull amThong through international cooperation, ABI Corporation (Japan ) has transferred technology to Vietnam CAS ( Cells Alive System). This is a very modern technology, can cost up to millions of dollars. Coming up if successful, believe that not only watermelon, other agricultural products can be stored for several months, able to a few years, Minister of Science and Technology Nguyen Quan Tran Ngoc Lan noiTheo, Vice Director of the Institute of Development Studies ( Ministry of Science and Technology ), person in charge of the project, CAS is a technology that works on the principle of combining rapid freezing at temperatures of 45 ° C with magnetic, object is frozen seafood, agricultural, food Japanese scientists have proven in practice, after 1 to 2 years, even 10 years depending on the product, preservation of food after fresh quality was 99.7 % compared to the harvested.

That was today put on a fish, crawfish, litchi, tangerine, mushrooms, 1 year later, 2 years later still as new. While in Vietnam, over fruit preservatives to be at best only 2 months. 2 Rice after 1 year of acne. And in Japan, fruit up to 5 years, Rice has 10 years of natural health, Vietnam Lan for his own bietViec CAS technology can be seen as an incredible event because this is very new technology in the field of preservation of agricultural technology, seafood, food but not all countries have access to. Mr. Norio Owada, ABI Chairman (Japan ), at the same time as the patent for technology that I look forward to CAS CAS technology transfer in Vietnam will help agricultural workers, fishermen, or livestock who have a better life.

Fruit exports, without preservation techniques will quickly damage, Meanwhile the price will be lower. Vietnam When using our technology, you can put the ingredients or products to the neighboring countries and other countries in the world with a higher price. That is why the Japanese chose Vietnam is the 8th of this technology transfer \. Farmers will not have to worry about depreciation harvest scene Jade Picture Winners difficult problem for farmers nghiepTheo Tran Ngoc Lan, Vietnam's agricultural products have a very high competitive advantage for food tropical flavor, quality, delicious colors consumers in developed countries favored. In addition to the major export products , catfish, tuna, shrimp, More than 50 kinds of specialty fruits , logan, dragon, mango, mangosteen, duaQua transfer and cooperation will be divided into 3 phases.

The first step ( 2013 2014 ), construction of technology centers CAS, 3 products were selected as test litchi, shrimp and tuna. Stage 2 ( 2015 2016 ) to CAS technology transfer in some seafood business, agricultural products in Vietnam, Phase 3 will transfer equipment manufacture CAS in Vietnam, and establish joint venture production and export of agricultural products, seafood, Vietnam food with CAS technology ( with Japan and other countries ) CAS Laboratories went into operation in late June. Mr. Lan share our desire CAS technology will contribute to the technological innovation in the field of post-harvest technology to solve a difficult problem in the development of commercial agriculture , which is preserved seafood and tropical agricultural products and export to Vietnam to serve people is sinhHien season so we choose fabrics are first tested products. Immediate goal, will be preserved in 6 months.

Then, towards litchi can store over 1 year. That is coming, not only consumers can buy lychee specialty food year round that can make exporting to the U.S. and European countries, Mr. Lan says. CAS 33 countries, territory recognized CAS technology is patented in Japan and is applied in many seafood businesses, meat and poultry, agricultural, Food in Japan. Worldwide, patents of CAS technology is recognized in 22 countries, territories and the EU ( 11 countries ). Today, CAS is applied in the U.S. ( tuna ), Canada ( fruit blueberries ), Mexico ( avocado and mango ), Ireland and the UK ( seafood, tuna ), Korea
Fresh Technology to 10 years | DBV | VietNam News
vai%20thieu%20luc%20ngan.jpg


From now,people can eat VN sweet litchi every day
 
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First the good side


Vietnam Sees Massive Foreign Investment Over Past Decade, Replacing China As Asia's New Manufacturing Hot Spot


By Sophie Song
on June 12 2013 2:13 PM
International Business Times


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Laborers work at a garment factory owned by Singaporeans outside Hanoi. Reuters/Kham


Vietnam has replaced China and Taiwan as the newest favorite location of companies setting up overseas manufacturing operations, owing to its open economic policies, geographical position, political and economic stability, and, most importantly, abundant and cheap labor resources.

Samsung (KRX:005935), the South Korean electronics giant, plans to raise its investment in the northern Vietnamese province of Bac Ninh by two thirds, to $2.5 billion, according to Quartz. It is also building a $2 billion-plus factory in Thai Nguyen province to manufacture mobile phones, cameras and laptops -- the first of two plants that will eventually make up a $3.2 billion manufacturing complex.

Previously, China, Hong Kong and Taiwan were known for their cheap labor, and many foreign companies chose to manufacture their products in these regions. The most well-known is Foxconn (TPE:2354), a Taiwanese company with productions in mainland China that makes the iPhone for Apple (Nasdaq:AAPL).

Now, however, the cost of labor is on the rise in China, and the country is thus not as competitive as before in low-cost electronics, according to Quartz. Further, Foxconn is planning to invest in researching its own products instead of just manufacturing for Apple, as the profit margin for a manufacturer is very small.

Vietnam, on the other hand, is offering foreign companies many incentives to invest, not just low-cost labor. Samsung is given huge tax breaks -- 10 percent corporate income tax versus a standard 25 percent. The country is also stable politically and has a young and increasingly well-educated workforce. In 2012, Samsung invested $11.3 billion in Vietnam and exported $12.5 billion worth of goods.

Vietnam is offering such incentives for good reason -- Samsung’s plants already provide work for 24,000 people and have created an ecosystem of suppliers and subcontractors who employ another 50,000, Quartz reports.

Investment in Vietnam has grown tremendously. Foreign investment was virtually nonexistent a decade ago, according to a report by the U.S. Department of State on the 2013 Investment Climate Statement on Vietnam, but, over the last five years, it has been around $10 billion to $11 billion a year.

In 2011, 208 Japanese companies set up operations in Vietnam, investing more than $1.8 billion. In 2010, 114 Japanese companies came to Vietnam and invested $2 billion, according to the Financial Times.

Cheap wages are attractive to export-focused manufacturers like Bridgestone Corp (TYO:5108), the world’s largest tire maker, and Panasonic Corporation (TYO:6752), the electronics group. Whereas unskilled workers in China now make $300 per month, Vietnamese workers receive half to a third of that amount. In addition, China’s yuan has been on a steady rise, making investment less attractive there.

While Vietnam offers an attractive environment for investment, the country is not without its drawbacks, from the point of the view of foreign investors. In addition to widespread corruption, red tape and high inflation, Vietnam’s infrastructure is still underdeveloped, the Financial Times reports.




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Sophie Song
Sophie writes about emerging markets in Asia, and is particularly interested in foreign investment in the Southeast Asian economies.
 
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Now the bad side...interesting, many economics articles about Vietnamese economy are writen by Chinese.



Vietnam's Economy: Stimulus A 'Sugar High' That Won't Last Or Fix The Banking Problem


By Moran Zhang
on June 28 2013 6:11 AM
International Business Times


vietnam-june-2013-2_0.JPG

Fruits are displayed for sale at the Hom market in Hanoi June 27, 2013. Vietnam will strive for annual growth of 6 percent in 2014, accelerating from 5.5 percent projected for this year, and aims to boost investment and reduce bad debts, the government said on Thursday. Reuters


Vietnam, the Southeast Asian country viewed by many foreign investors as the mini-China, reported stronger growth for the second quarter on Thursday. But there’s nothing worth celebrating.

Fruits are displayed for sale at the Hom market in Hanoi June 27, 2013. Vietnam will strive for annual growth of 6 percent in 2014, accelerating from 5.5 percent projected for this year, and aims to boost investment and reduce bad debts, the government said on Thursday. Reuters


Vietnam’s statistical office said gross domestic product grew by 5 percent between April and June, up from 4.9 percent in the first quarter. However, the pick-up in growth from the first quarter does not mean that underlying conditions are improving.

Even taking the data at face value, they show that Vietnam is on track to grow by about 5 percent this year, which would be unchanged from last year. This compares with average growth over the past two decades of around 7.5 percent a year. The government has targeted economic growth of 5.5 percent for 2013.

Moreover, the uptick in the growth rate is more or less the product of a looser monetary-policy stance.

Vietnam’s central bank has cut its lending rate eight times (by a cumulative 800 basis points) in little more than a year as it has looked to spur bank lending and boost consumption after economic growth had fallen to a 13-year low of 5.03 percent in 2012. The refinancing rate is now at 7 percent and analysts at Standard Chartered are looking for another rate cut of 50 basis points -- to 6.5 percent -- next quarter if policymakers remain comfortable with the inflation outlook.

Vietnam is struggling with a host of economic woes, including sluggish domestic demand, a banking sector weighed down with high levels of toxic debt and record numbers of bankruptcies. But rate cuts alone will not rescue the economy. By pursuing a stimulus strategy, Vietnam aggravates long-term problems. It's akin to giving the country, and the markets, a sugar high. It may cause a jolt of activity, but that will be replaced by the reality that the underlying problems aren't being addressed.

Vietnam's inflation hit 6.69 percent year-on-year in June, official figures showed Tuesday, marking the first increase in eight months after the government cut interest rates. That’s up from 6.35 percent in May. The government has an official inflation target of about 8 percent this year but it has hoped to keep it between 6 percent and 6.5 percent.

The main cause of the slowdown has been problems in the banking sector. As Capital Economics pointed out in a note, nonperforming loans have risen sharply, and the country is now experiencing a severe credit crunch. Credit is now growing in single figures for the year-ago period, and below the pace of nominal GDP growth.

The authorities are trying to clean-up the banking system. Earlier this year, the government announced it would be setting up a debt asset management company to take over bad loans from indebted banks. The “bad bank,” or the Vietnam Asset Management Company, will be a 100 percent state-owned company whose aim, according to the central bank, is to “solve the bad debts and promote reasonable credit growth in the economy.”

But key questions remain about where the money will come from, whether a company with 500 billion dong ($24 million) will be able to unravel bad debts of hundreds of trillions of dong in the banking system, and how to implement it.

The central bank said the VAMC would buy bad debts with its own capital or through the issue of “special bonds,” which will pay no interest and may be used to obtain refinancing loans from the central bank. Economists, however, remain skeptical about the plan. The trick that makes all books look beautiful is attractive for now, but is just a very short-term solution.

“Until the banking sector is fixed and credit starts to flow more freely, growth is likely to remain subdued,” Gareth Leather, an economist with Capital Economics, said in a note.

Recently, the IMF cut its 2013 GDP growth forecast for Vietnam to 5.2 percent from 5.8 percent and highlighted the need for the government to follow through on reforms. Earlier this month, HSBC also slashed Vietnam’s GDP growth forecast for this year from 5.5 percent to 5.1 percent.

While problems in the banking sector will continue to weigh on the economy, there are some encouraging signs. The export sector is continuing to perform well. Exports in the first half rose 16.1 percent to $62.05 billion from the same period a year earlier, while imports climbed 17.4 percent to $63.5 billion for a trade deficit of $1.4 billion, the Statistics Office said Thursday.

“Increasingly, this is not only in low-end goods such as textiles, but also in higher value-added sectors, such as in the assembly of electronic consumer items,” Leather said, adding that exports should continue to grow at a decent pace over the next couple of years despite the likelihood that global demand will remain weak.


Moran Zhang
moran_zhang_1.jpg

Moran Zhang is a finance and economics reporter at The International Business Times. Her work has appeared in the Wall Street Journal Digital Network’s MarketWatch.
 
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I just read on the news today, Vinamilk has received approval from FDA for export to the U.S. This is fantastic:usflag::victory:
 
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US to establish global health security center in Vietnam


Last Updated: Tuesday, June 18, 2013 12:15:00
Thanh Nien

US.jpg


Vietnam's Health Minister Nguyen Thi Kim Tien (L) and the US Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius at June 17 signing ceremony for the countries' new expanded agreement to cooperate on healthcare.

Vietnam will host one of two global health security centers the US plans to establish to combat new epidemics, under an agreement signed by the two countries on Monday.

Vietnamese Health Minister Nguyen Thi Kim Tien made the announcement at a ceremony where she signed the agreement with the US Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, Vietnam News Agency reported.

Sebelius signed the agreement on the first day of her two-day visit to Vietnam.

According to Tien, Vietnam was chosen for its healthcare system, which the US deems to be “quite good.”
Moreover, the country successfully curbed the SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome) epidemic in 2003, while its influenza A/H5N1 (bird flu) fatality rate is lower than other countries in the Southeast Asia, she said.

The new agreement, which expands upon the one the two countries signed more than five years ago, also prioritizes preventive medicine and combating HIV/AIDS, the minister was quoted as saying.

Since June 2004, Vietnam has been one of the 15 countries to receive aid from the US.’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, the report said.

Approximately US$93 million in funds from the program has been sent to local government agencies in Vietnam, according to the news report, adding that the funding accounted for a majority of Vietnam’s budget dedicated to fighting and preventing HIV/AIDS.

The US has also supported Vietnam in preventive health field, including helping the latter produce flu vaccines in preparation for epidemics.
 
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Japan helps Vietnam produce rubella vaccine


01/07/2013 | 21:29:03
Vietnam Plus
rubella-vaccine-13104_0.jpg

rubella vaccine (source: internet)


The Japanese Government will provide Vietnam with rubella–measles combined vaccine production technology as part of its Strategy on Global Health Diplomacy issued by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in May.

Accordingly, an official development assistance (ODA)-funded vaccine production system will be built in Vietnam by 2018, using technology from Japan’s Kitasato Daiichi Sankyo Vaccine.

Kitasato Daiichi Sankyo Vaccine will also assign its researchers and technicians to Vietnam’s Centre for Research and Production of Vaccines (POLYVAC) for joint vaccine production and research on the mass production of this vaccine.

According to Japanese experts, Vietnam needs 2.5 million doses of the vaccine every year to inoculate children.

Rubella cases in Southeast Asia have been on the increase in recent years. Most regional countries however, are unable to produce their own vaccine against the disease.

Under the strategy, Japan will coordinate with countries to improve maternal and child health as well as adopt policies to cope with infectious diseases in developing countries.-VNA
 
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MHI plans Hanoi plane parts plant
KYODO
JUL 5, 2013 ARTICLE HISTORY PRINT SHARE
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd. plans to build a second aircraft parts plant in Vietnam by next summer, company officials said Friday.

The new plant will be adjacent to its existing facility in Hanoi and produce components for the Boeing 777 jumbo jet that are currently being made at Nagoya Aerospace Systems Works.

The Nagoya facility will focus on producing components for Boeing Co.’s 787 because the U.S. aircraft giant plans to expand B-787 production.

The plant in Hanoi produces components for the smaller Boeing 737 using 200 Vietnamese employees. The addition of the second plant will boost its Vietnamese payroll to about 300.MHI plans Hanoi plane parts plant | The Japan Times

When flying on boeing 777,pls dont forget that VN also make some parts of it:partay:
 
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MHI plans Hanoi plane parts plant
KYODO
JUL 5, 2013 ARTICLE HISTORY PRINT SHARE
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd. plans to build a second aircraft parts plant in Vietnam by next summer, company officials said Friday.

The new plant will be adjacent to its existing facility in Hanoi and produce components for the Boeing 777 jumbo jet that are currently being made at Nagoya Aerospace Systems Works.

The Nagoya facility will focus on producing components for Boeing Co.’s 787 because the U.S. aircraft giant plans to expand B-787 production.

The plant in Hanoi produces components for the smaller Boeing 737 using 200 Vietnamese employees. The addition of the second plant will boost its Vietnamese payroll to about 300.MHI plans Hanoi plane parts plant | The Japan Times

When flying on boeing 777,pls dont forget that VN also make some parts of it:partay:
The Mitsubishi plant in Hai Phong only assembles wing flaps shipped from Japan; they do not fabricate the parts in Viet Nam. Japan again does not play ball.
 
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Japan helps Vietnam produce rubella vaccine


01/07/2013 | 21:29:03
Vietnam Plus
rubella-vaccine-13104_0.jpg

rubella vaccine (source: internet)


The Japanese Government will provide Vietnam with rubella–measles combined vaccine production technology as part of its Strategy on Global Health Diplomacy issued by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in May.

Accordingly, an official development assistance (ODA)-funded vaccine production system will be built in Vietnam by 2018, using technology from Japan’s Kitasato Daiichi Sankyo Vaccine.

Kitasato Daiichi Sankyo Vaccine will also assign its researchers and technicians to Vietnam’s Centre for Research and Production of Vaccines (POLYVAC) for joint vaccine production and research on the mass production of this vaccine.

According to Japanese experts, Vietnam needs 2.5 million doses of the vaccine every year to inoculate children.

Rubella cases in Southeast Asia have been on the increase in recent years. Most regional countries however, are unable to produce their own vaccine against the disease.

Under the strategy, Japan will coordinate with countries to improve maternal and child health as well as adopt policies to cope with infectious diseases in developing countries.-VNA

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