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vietnam eu fta

DaiViet

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China economic influence in Vietnam is finished. Vietnam companies depends on trade with Vietnam will bankcrupt. China lost a market of 43.8 billion surplus. The islands rocks come with a cost. While you Chinese did not gain anything from the islands yet but starting to lose neighbors and potential allies. Expansionsm comes with a cost.




Vietnam has agreed to drastically change its economic structure, including the elimination of uncompetitive firms and the refinement of a new generation of businesses, when choosing to enter a free trade agreement (FTA) with the EU, a German expert has said.

Some people are concerned about the fate of Vietnam’s small- and medium-size enterprises as cheaper European goods may be imported into the Southeast Asian country in huge amounts after the Vietnam-EU trade pact takes effect, Erwin Schweisshelm, chief representative of Germany’s Friedrich Ebert Stiftung Institute in Vietnam, said at a seminar in Ho Chi Minh City last week.

As a side effect of the economic integration game, only firms with ample capital resources and quality products or services can survive, whereas incompetent companies will have to exit the market, Schweisshelm remarked at the seminar on the legal perspective of the Vietnam-EU FTA on August 27.

Meat imports from the EU into Vietnam will compete with the local livestock industry so enterprises operating in the sector must try to survive, or they will be forced to go bankrupt in trying to do so, leaving only the fittest to make it through, he said.

The Vietnam-EU pact is the first such agreement that the union has ever signed with any Asian countries, and it is seen as the benchmark for other FTAs the bloc will clinch with other trade partners in the future, according to Schweisshelm.

Vietnam and the EU on August 4 reached agreement in principle for a free trade pact after concluding many sessions of negotiations from June 2012 to August 2015, with a view to ensuring an effective environment for trade and investment relations.

The in-principle trade deal includes the elimination of nearly all tariffs, at over 99 percent, for the two sides, in which Vietnam will liberalize the tariffs over a 10-year period and the EU will do so over a 7-year period.

The agreement, which is expected to take effect from the end of next year, also covers non-tariff barriers to trade and other trade-related aspects such as public procurement, regulatory issues, competition, services, investment, intellectual property rights, and sustainable development.

Accordingly, 99 percent of import tariffs between Vietnam and the EU will be abolished and about 65 percent of Vietnamese goods exported to the union will be entitled to tax exemption rights after the agreement enters into force, Schweisshelm said.

Agricultural and aquatic products, garment-textile and footwear shipments from Vietnam will be the biggest beneficiaries, as their exporters will be exempt from all import taxes within the maximum time frame of seven years.

But what the EU really wants when giving such incentives to Vietnamese goods is the real improvement in the production of those products, the increment of Vietnamese firms’ capacity, and their higher position in the global supply chain, the German representative added.

One of the measures introduced via the FTA to accelerate the progress is the strict rule of origin, he said.

"For example, for garment and textile products, the rule of origin consists of two phases, including that the sewing process must be done in Vietnam,” he said.

“But this is easier to meet than the ‘yarn forward rule of origin’ that the U.S. requests in its FTA negotiations with Vietnam,” he said.

The textile and dyeing sector of Vietnam has not developed so the country has to import materials from other countries in the region such as China.

So as to get rid of the dependence on imports from China, Vietnamese firms must roll up sleeves and begin to engage in the making of those materials so that the final products will be entitled to tax cuts when entering the EU, Schweisshelm said.

Establishing joint ventures with foreign companies, like the way local textile companies are working with Chinese or Hong Kong investors on building material production areas in Vietnam, in order to meet the provisions of the FTA is a feasible solution, Dr. Truong Minh Huy Vu, director of the Center for International Studies under the Ho Chi Minh City University of Social Sciences and Humanities, said at the seminar.

In 2014, the EU constituted one of the most important overseas markets for Vietnam after the U.S., closely overtaken by the U.S. by only US$500 million.

With $27.9 billion, the EU purchased as much as 18.6 percent of Vietnam's global exports last year, according to official figures.

In particular, the continuous surplus of $19 billion that Vietnam enjoys in its bilateral commercial links with the EU has significantly helped offset the country's huge trade deficit with China, leading to an estimated global trade surplus of about $2 billion for the Southeast Asian natio
 
Read for the part where it said "RULE OF ORIGIONS" is similar to yarn forwrd tpp. China in vietnam is finished.
 
Read for the part where it said "RULE OF ORIGIONS" is similar to yarn forwrd tpp. China in vietnam is finished.
TPP is coming...China is history.....Chinese here will label you as NiceGuy, the VNese who can predict correctly the fall of CNY :laugh:
 
Can Vietnam produce cottons? A country who cannot produce cottons want to dominate textile industry? Without Chinese cottons, Vietnamese have nothing to work on in textile industry. TPP or FTA cannot bring cottons to your country. Vietnam is too small to find a place to grow cottons.

The power of China is not only in its manufacturing capability, but also its control of many critical materials.
 
Can Vietnam produce cottons? A country who cannot produce cottons want to dominate textile industry? Without Chinese cottons, Vietnamese have nothing to work on in textile industry. TPP or FTA cannot bring cottons to your country. Vietnam is too small to find a place to grow cottons.

The power of China is not only in its manufacturing capability, but also its control of many critical materials.
Without Chinese cotton in VN, then its CN's loss :)
The United States remains the number one cotton supplier to Vietnam, with a 43 percent share of total Vietnam cotton imports in the first three quarters of 2013. - See more at: USDA GAIN: Vietnam Cotton and Products Update 2013 - Market Reports - The Crop Site
Of course we are trying to make a own cotton
 
good news, we should not buy poor quality chinese goods, toxic chinese foods, while more and more other choices come from EU....
 
All thanks to China. We gotta give them props for Vietnam's independent and successful future.
 
United States only produce half of cottons as China. No way to grow cottons in Vietnam since cottons can only be grown in dry area such as Xinjiang.

China dominates materials, equipments, technology and even markets beyond United States and EU such as Latin America and Africa in textile industry. China can give the work to Cambodia, Indonesia, Africa, or even latin america. But China still gives tons of work to Vietnam simply because there are potential 90 million refugees in Vietnam. Just millions of refugees are painful to Europe, let alone tens of millions. Vietnam is a famous refugee origin during last half millennium. From Hong Kong to Thailand, from China to United States, you still can see clear track of Vietnam refugees.

No matter you like it or not, China is the industrial integration center for materials, equipment, technology and market for Asia. Anyone staying away from China are doomed. Japan is one good example. During last twenty years, all countries around China have a great time in economy except Japan.

Go to take a look at cotton growing in Xinjiang. Tens of acres of cottons are grown and collected by machines. Japan and EU have no such a luxury. Competing with China on textile industry, vietnam has not a single chance simply because it is a small country.
 
United States only produce half of cottons as China. No way to grow cottons in Vietnam since cottons can only be grown in dry area such as Xinjiang.

China dominates materials, equipments, technology and even markets beyond United States and EU such as Latin America and Africa in textile industry. China can give the work to Cambodia, Indonesia, Africa, or even latin america. But China still gives tons of work to Vietnam simply because there are potential 90 million refugees in Vietnam. Just millions of refugees are painful to Europe, let alone tens of millions. Vietnam is a famous refugee origin during last half millennium. From Hong Kong to Thailand, from China to United States, you still can see clear track of Vietnam refugees.

No matter you like it or not, China is the industrial integration center for materials, equipment, technology and market for Asia. Anyone staying away from China are doomed. Japan is one good example. During last twenty years, all countries around China have a great time in economy except Japan.

Go to take a look at cotton growing in Xinjiang. Tens of acres of cottons are grown and collected by machines. Japan and EU have no such a luxury. Competing with China on textile industry, vietnam has not a single chance simply because it is a small country.
CN is none TPP nation, so we wont buy cotton from you any more soon. VN may import from Mexico or from other TPP nations that can grow cottons as well as Xinjiang .
 
You idiot DaiViet. Aside from all other factors, such as China having the biggest economy in the world, having 1.3 billion people, about to double or even triple it's economy still, simple geography dictates that China has a lot of influence in Vietnam's economy. You pointy hat wearing peasant.
 
You idiot DaiViet. Aside from all other factors, such as China having the biggest economy in the world, having 1.3 billion people, about to double or even triple it's economy still, simple geography dictates that China has a lot of influence in Vietnam's economy. You pointy hat wearing peasant.
VN economy will raise higher in TPP deal, thats what our deputy PM Nguyen Thien Nhan analyze, all investors also agree with him.

And no one care about a jobless guy like you :)
 
VN economy will raise higher in TPP deal, thats what our deputy PM Nguyen Thien Nhan analyze, all investors also agree with him.

And no one care about a jobless guy like you :)

You're nuts, on all accounts. I'm not in the business of arguing with delusional people.
 
You idiot DaiViet. Aside from all other factors, such as China having the biggest economy in the world, having 1.3 billion people, about to double or even triple it's economy still, simple geography dictates that China has a lot of influence in Vietnam's economy. You pointy hat wearing peasant.

:lol:
 

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