Thursday, September 30, 2010

Vietnam's lending rates to drop

bank
Photo: Tuoi Tre

HANOI - Short-term lending rates in Vietnam are expected to come down, thanks partly to funds the central bank has extended to banks, State Bank of Vietnam governor Nguyen Van Giau was quoted on Wednesday as saying.

Lending rates were not falling quickly at present because banks were cutting deposit rates slowly, Giau said in an interview published by the Finance Ministry-run Vietnam Financial Times newspaper.

"But credit institutions are actively raising funds in coordination with funding support from the State Bank to meet credit demand for the economy," Giau said in the interview.

"So, short-term lending rates will fall significantly, while the reduction of medium- and long-term lending rates requires time because long-term deposits often rise very slowly and account for a low proportion of overall deposits," Giau said.

The central bank injects funds into banks via open market operations.

Bank deposits in Vietnam as of Aug. 17 had risen 17.44 percent from the end of 2009, while credit expanded 14.15 percent, Giau said without giving any values.

Credit demand is expected to rise as usual in the last months of the year, Giau said, pledging further steps to keep annual inflation at around 8 percent, economic growth of 6.5 percent and an annual credit growth at 25 percent, as targeted.

The average rate for one-month interbank loans dropped to 8.56 percent during the week ending Sunday, from 8.67 percent a week ago, and the rate on three-month loans also eased to 9.74 percent from 9.99 percent, central bank reports said.

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Domestic air market becomes more competitive

air cargo
Photo: AFP

The arrival of two new Vietnamese carriers Air Mekong and Blue Sky Air is expected to stir up competition in the domestic market, which is currently overloaded.

Air Mekong, Vietnam's third private air carrier, is scheduled to launch its maiden flight on October 10.

The airline has received delivery of four Canadian Bombardier CRJ 900 aircraft, owned by the US company Skywest Leasing. Each aircraft has 90 business and economy-class seats.

Truong Thanh Vu, Air Mekong’s Commercial Director, said that his airline is currently waiting for its Air Operator’s Certificate (AOC) from Vietnam’s Civil Aviation Administration.

Air Mekong is scheduled to provide passenger and cargo services on routes from Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City to Danang, Nha Trang, Dalat, Phu Quoc, Con Dao, Ban Me Thuot, Hai Phong and Vinh.

Meanwhile, Blue Sky Air, Vietnam’s first joint private airline, will focus on services for industry, the agricultural and fisheries sector and the construction industry. It has been allowed to use helicopters, seaplanes and other kinds of airplanes.

Blue Sky already operates two airplanes and will gradually increase its fleet to meet the market’s demand. The carrier is registered to provide services on 20 routes to well-known Vietnamese commercial and tourist areas such as Vung Tau, Ninh Thuan, Dak Lak, Con Dao, Can Tho, Ca Mau and Phu Quoc.

Around 26.2 million passengers and 445,800 tonnes of cargo were transported by air in 2009, four times the number in 2000.

In the first seven months of this year, the country saw a 33 percent increase in air travel over the same period last year.

This number indicates that Vietnam’s air market has grown rapidly.

Vietnam has to date granted licences to nine operational airlines, including Vietnam Airlines, Jetstar Pacific Airlines, Vasco, Viet Air, Indochina Airlines, Mekong Air, VietJet Air, Blue Sky Air and Trai Thien Air.

Of these airlines, Vasco and Viet Air are both subsidiaries of Vietnam Airlines and Trai Thien Air only provides cargo services.

The national flag carrier Vietnam Airlines holds more than 80 percent of all domestic services

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FDI flow turns to processing, manufacturing

STEEL

Foreign direct investment (FDI) in the first eight months of this year has seen changes with about 57 percent of the total registered capital of US$11.5 billion focused on processing and manufacturing technology and production.

The processing and manufacturing technology sectors are magnets for foreign investors, with total registered capital of about $3.7 billion for 265 newly-licensed projects and 102 expanded others in the first eight months of 2010, after a standstill during the 2006-2009 period.

Noteworthy are large-scale projects such as the Hai Duong thermal electricity plant with registered capital of $1.6 billion by Malaysia’s Jacks Resources, the Quang Ninh thermal electricity plant capitalised at $2.1 billion by the AES-TKV Mong Duong Electricity Co. Ltd, the $1 billion Vietnam Kobelco Steel Company in Nghe An province, and the $360 million Posco SS-Vina Company in Ba Ria-Vung Tau province.

The positive change is the biggest difference in FDI structure compared with the same period last year. According to the Ministry of Planning and Investment’s Foreign Investment Agency (FIA), FDI in accommodation services accounted for nearly 45 percent of the total registered capital of $13 billion in the first eight months of 2009, and the proportion was reduced to 23 percent in the comparable period of 2010.

The change of FDI flow in Vietnam is attributed to global and domestic economic recovery and the government’s macro-economic management policy, experts said.

However, the change has not helped reduce the country’s trade deficit, excluding exports of crude oil.

According to FIA statistics, although January-August exports from the FDI area rose, its trade deficit reached $1.7 billion, accounting for 19.7 percent of the country’s total trade deficit.

The country’s FDI attraction policy needs to consider both the target for development of for-export production and the competitiveness of domestic investment flow, according to James Riedels, economist of the USAID/STAR-Vietnam Technical Assistance Project.

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Experts discuss economic restructuring

With tariffs cut in line with Viet Nam's WTO commitments and lack of techical barriers, a huge volume of imports have entered the country. — VNA/VNS Photo Kim Phuong

With tariffs cut in line with Viet Nam's WTO commitments and lack of techical barriers, a huge volume of imports have entered the country. — VNA/VNS Photo Kim Phuong

HCM CITY — The importance of restructuring the economy from primarily agrarian to one centred on industry and services was highlighted at a meeting held in HCM City yesterday.

Viet Nam's accession to the World Trade Organisation (WTO) has been positive for the economy but it also poses big challenges, Tran Dinh Thien, director of the Viet Nam Economics Institute, said.

After joining the global trade body in 2007, foreign direct investment into the country rose dramatically as did exports, he said.

But the WTO accession has also revealed the weaknesses of the economy, including low quality of growth, poor infrastructure, high inflation, poor human resources, and low competitiveness, he said.

The quality of human-resources has yet to meet the need of development and co-ordination between businesses to achieve a combined strength remains poor, he added.

Nguyen Dinh Cung, deputy director of the Central Institute of Economic Management, said: "We need to restructure our economic mechanism."

Economic growth in recent years has been mainly due to the transformation from agriculture to industry-services, while productivity has barely increased, he explained.

With its weak economic structure, the country will find it very hard to become a modern economy by 2020, he added.

Tran Du Lich, deputy head of the HCM City National Assembly delegation, said the problem faced by the Vietnamese economy was not a shortage of capital but how to effectively absorb it.

"Our economy rests on three weak pillars – weak economic institutions, poor human resources, and poor infrastructure – that do not ensure stability for absorbing capital in the most effective way and developing in a sustainable manner," he said.

The country needs measures to strengthen these pillars, he said.

A programme to support economic restructuring in HCM City has yielded results in the last three years but progress remained slow, he said.

In restructuring the economy, the city should focus on improving its quality and urban infrastructure, he said.

It should create a level playing field for all business sectors, continue with administrative reform, improve human-resource training, and develop infrastructure, he said.

The Government should stabilise the macro economy to retain the people's and market's trust and improve the effectiveness of public investment and the role of State-owned groups, he said.

But the country had yet to assess the impact of Viet Nam's accession to the WTO, a task that required great skill, he said.

With tariffs cut in line with Viet Nam's WTO commitments and a lack of technical barriers, a huge volume of imports have entered the country, causing difficulties for local producers.

The country should therefore adopt measures to safeguard local producers from imports, Lich added. — VNS

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Vietnam seeks more German tourists

tourist

The Vietnamese government has invested VND4 trillion in building infrastructure for the tourism industry, a Vietnamese tourism senior official said at a talk to promote Vietnam's image in Germany.

Nguyen Manh Cuong, Deputy Chief of the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism, met with representatives of travel companies owned by Germans and Vietnamese expats in Germany on August 29 and 30.

Introducing the country’s tourism potential, sightseeing wonders, and prominent tangible and intangible cultural heritages, Cuong also presented special programmes that the tourism industry launched on Hanoi’s 1,000 th founding anniversary.

He expressed his hope that tourism cooperation between German and Vietnamese travel companies would be boosted so Germany can eclipse France in terms of the number of tourists coming to Vietnam .

Present at the talks, Vietnamese Ambassador to Germany Do Hoa Binh noted that the growing ties between the two countries have provided conditions for the development of bilateral cooperation in a wide range of fields, including tourism.

He pledged to create improved conditions for German travel companies to do business with Vietnam .

For their part, many participants urged the Vietnamese tourism industry to equip more tour guides with the German language, along with professional skills and rich cultural knowledge, in order to lure more German visitors.

In 2009, the Vietnamese tourism industry contributed US$5 billion to the State budget, generating jobs for 1.3 million people and helping to eradicate poverty.

 

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Industries ignore local content

A worker operates equipment for the Tan Mai Paper Group. Most of the equipment in the paper industry is imported because it's cheaper than the locally-made alternatives. — VNA/VNS Photo Ngoc Ha

A worker operates equipment for the Tan Mai Paper Group. Most of the equipment in the paper industry is imported because it's cheaper than the locally-made alternatives. — VNA/VNS Photo Ngoc Ha

HCM CITY — Key national projects in several sectors are being implemented with little or no input from the domestic sector in the supply of equipment or materials, and this could have long-term consequences for local industries, experts have warned.

Local enterprises are unable to win equipment and material supply contracts for projects despite having the capacity because they are hampered by high taxation, poor marketing and inadequate legal support from the Government.

When the Government launched a campaign last year to promote the consumption of Vietnamese goods and services, hopes were raised that it would boost the prestige of Vietnamese brands and open up fresh opportunities for production and trade in the domestic market.

While the campaign has been successful in boosting the image and consumption of consumer goods, other sectors like mechanical engineering, construction and materials supplies have not benefited, especially in terms of participating in major national projects.

Nguyen Van Thu, chairman of the Viet Nam Association of Mechanical Engineering (VAMI), said Vietnamese enterprises had enough experience to implement big projects, however most of them lost their bids.

For instance, he noted, 10 thermal power plants each with a capacity of 300MW were being built by Chinese contractors, because Vietnamese firms were denied a level playing field.

Pham Thi Loan, member of the National Assembly's Finance and Budget Committee, noted that 30 Chinese companies were participating in 42 key projects at present.

The Chinese contractors did not use Vietnamese materials, equipment or labour, Loan said.

Many enterprises in the petroleum and gas industry were capable of building drilling platforms. They have won contracts to build such platforms in Malaysia and other countries, but could not win contracts to do the same at home, said Pham Thi Thu Ha, deputy general director of the Viet Nam National Oil and Gas Group (PetroVietnam).

She blamed improper taxation policies for preventing domestic companies from supplying materials and equipment for big projects.

At present, Vietnamese companies have to pay a corporate income tax of 10 per cent as opposed to 5 per cent for foreign contractors.

Therefore, local equipment and machinery were more expensive than those imported from abroad, Ha said.

Recently, PetroVietnam paid US$182 million to purchase an old oil rig from Singapore. This was cheaper than the money needed to build a new rig in Viet Nam because tax payments alone amounted to $40 million, Ha said.

Nguyen Viet Duc, deputy general director of the Viet Nam Paper Corporation, said domestic enterprises did not pay attention to marketing activities so their products were not known widely.

"When the paper industry planned to develop major projects, many foreign companies came to us and introduced their products while we did not receive any Vietnamese companies," Duc said.

Agreeing with Duc, Ha said domestic enterprises' marketing activities were so weak that both project investors and equipment suppliers did not know each other well. This result was that the country had many kinds of materials that were manufactured domestically with high quality and cheap prices but project owners were not aware of them.

The chairman of the Sai Gon Beer Company, Nguyen Van Thi, attributed domestic enterprises' failure in equipment and materials supply bids to poor after-sales services.

His company each year spent about VND3 trillion ($153.8 million) on renewing equipment and machinery. The company's bids were mostly won by foreign companies because of good after-sales services, Thi said.

Foreign enterprises also won material supply contracts because their bids for major projects were prepared by experienced and skilled foreign consulting companies, said Bui Kien Thanh, a senior financial expert. The bids were thus more professional, clear and confidence-inspiring for project owners than amateurish efforts by Vietnamese firms.

Consequently, Vietnamese enterprises could only become sub-contractors, Thanh said.

He also said that very high kickbacks was another reason that made it difficult for domestic enterprises to win equipment supply contracts for big projects.

While the Government has issued many regulations and policies to encourage the use of home-made materials and equipment for domestic projects, the lack of detailed guidelines have rendered them ineffective, experts said.

They said the Government has to take urgent action to address all the inhibiting factors, failing which, domestic equipment and materials industries will continue to be a non-player in their own backyard. — VNS

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Farmers lack sound market analysis

HA NOI — Farmers need more analysis and forecasting on local and world markets but the nation doesn't have the high quality research centre necessary to track production trends with confidence.

This was the assessment of two experts in the field of agriculture market policies and analysis who said the 61 million people living in rural areas were being short-changed by the absence of high quality market research and forecasting of domestic and global farm produce trends.

Pham Quang Dieu, chief economist of the Agricultural Market Analysis and Forecast Joint Stock Company (Agrominitor), said that what financial, economic and business analysis was available at present was being provided to enterprises in urban areas.

Farmers, meanwhile, were being left to glean what limited information they could find from the media and they were missing out on opportunities and suffering unnecessary losses.

However, this was about to change, Dieu suggested, and farmers would soon become the main customers of information and analysis on production and marketing of farm produce.

But there wasn't many company or Government department providing the high level of research, analysis and forecasting required, he said, created a potential market opportunity for private companies to fill the vacuum.

However, Dieu said, the State had a role to play and should increase its human resources and level of expertise in this field to make such information widely available to farmers and enterprises.

Dang Kim Son, director of the Institute of Policy and Strategy for Agriculture and Rural Development concurred.

Son's institute, which comes under the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, has submitted to the ministry a plan to provide better market information for farmers and traders. — VNS

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Feasibility studies begin on inter-city express rail links

HA NOI —The Ministry of Transport yesterday asked the Japan International Co-operation Agency (JICA) to start conducting feasibility studies on two portions of an express-railway linking Ha Noi with Vinh City (the capital of central Nghe An Province) and HCM City-Nha Trang.

Nguyen Huu Bang, director general of the Viet Nam Railway Corporation, was expected to have an official meeting with JICA to discuss the issue today.

In an interview with VnExpress, Nguyen Minh Thuyet, vice chairman of the National Assembly Committee for Culture, Education, Youth and Children, said the decision to start a feasibility study for the Ha Noi-HCM City express railway did not contradict an earlier National Assembly decision to block the national high-speed rail network. The plan's implementation will still face a National Assembly vote prior to being enacted.

During discussions at the National Assembly's June session, a majority of legislators rejected the rail plan due to the prohibitive costs involved and perceived lack of social benefits.

The project would cost about US$56 billion. Japan has agreed to grant Viet Nam Official Development Assistance to undertake the feasibility study.

According to Do Van Hat, director general of the Railways Investment and Construction Consultancy Company, the study would start sometime in November 2010. It is due for completion by the end of the first quarter of 2012.

In addition, the Viet Nam Railway Corporation has asked JICA to help develop a feasibility study for the construction of a 25km express railway from Ngoc Hoi station (south of Ha Noi) to Noi Bai International Airport, Hat said. — VNS

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PM commits to reaching year's economic goals

Workers align a rotor for the Son La hydroelectric facility. Development of electrical resources is one of the key targets in the Government's socio-econmic plan. — VNA/VNS Photo Ngoc Ha

Workers align a rotor for the Son La hydroelectric facility. Development of electrical resources is one of the key targets in the Government's socio-econmic plan. — VNA/VNS Photo Ngoc Ha

HA NOI — Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung yesterday urged the Government to do its utmost to achieve the year's socio-economic goals.

Despite positive progress in its economic development plan, the country's economy was still facing challenges on its way to reaching the targeted socio-economic aim, PM Dung said yesterday at the Government's monthly meeting.

Government officials gather every month to review the socio-economic development of the month and discuss measures to stabilise the macro-economics, restrain inflation and ensure the social security for the rest of the year.

The Ministry of Planning and Investment reported that the first eight months of the year.

The industrial production continued to grow,increasing by 15.2 per cent compared to the same period last year, and the trade gap slightly decreased, the ministry said in its report.

Meanwhile, the month's consumer price index grew by 0.23 per cent over the previous month.

Good co-ordination among sectors and localities had helped agriculture improve and kept pandemics under control despite the negative impact of floods and storms, the Ministry of Planning and Investment reported.

Social security had been ensured and people's living standards had been lifted, the ministry reported.

Nevertheless, the Government pointed out shortcomings of the economy, which needed to be made good.

The domestic economy was facing the negative impact of the global market's increasing prices, especially in the last quarter of the year, Government officials said.

Firms and enterprises were still ineffective in mobilising capital sources as bank loan interest rates remained high. Epidemic diseases were at a critical point and still threatened to seriously affect production and people's lives.

The officials also discussed ways to effectively implement the socio-economic development plan next year and in the coming five years.

One of the most discussed issues was how to develop the electricity industry.

The officials agreed on a plan to introduce an open and favourable mechanism to boost electricity production. The Government would favour the socialisation of the industry, calling on the involvement and investment of all economic sectors.

Together with implementing hydro-power projects, the Government would boost the development of natural-energy generated power programmes.

Dung asked the Ministry of Industry and Trade to focus on producing electricity to avoid shortages of power, with Government playing the key role in the field with the support of all sectors. He asked the Government to set the economic growth for the next year at 7.5 per cent.

While the Government was expecting to see its GDP grow at 6.5-7 per cent this year, the consumer price index should be maintained at 7 per cent to make sure the macro-economy stabilised, he said, and the excess of imports over exports was to be kept below 18 per cent.

Dung said policies to support the nation's key programmes would be introduced and the new rural development plan would be on the next five years' economic plan.

In discussion of the 2011-15 economic plan, Government officials said the guarantee of social security should be the key factor. They asked that ministries and sectors review their own targets to set out the single goal for the country.

Special attention needed to be paid to environment protection work and sustainable development, the officials said, adding that the tasks of addressing climate change would also need great effort. Government confirmed its commitment to administrative reform and equitisation in State-run enterprises. — VNS

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Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Funds allocated for nuclear energy training

HA NOI — A fund of VND3 trillion (US$154 million) is to be put aside to train staff for nation's first nuclear power plant in central Ninh Thuan Province, due to be built between 2014 and 2020.

Vuong Huu Tan, chairman of the Viet Nam Atomic Energy Institute, one of the agencies that took part in compiling the training proposal, said the manpower was to be ready when the plant was completed.

"The important thing is we have a clear human resources plan to follow and, under the proposal, a National Standing Committee, chaired by a deputy minister, will be set up to ensure everything runs on track."

It required six academic institutions to educate 240 engineers and 35 graduates with master or PhD degrees specialising in nuclear power each year.

As many as 20 of these 240 engineers and 15 of the 35 masters or PhD students would acquire their degrees abroad.

In the areas of atomic energy research and application, nuclear security and safety it was anticipated that 65 engineers and 35 master or PhD degree holders would be trained in this field. Half of them would be sent abroad for study.

For the next five years, about two-thirds of the VND2 trillion (US$102 million) would be spent on a number of objectives including establishing preferential policies for students and people working in the atomic energy field, international exchanges of experiences in human resources training, investment in improving educational infrastructure, building international standards curriculums and running capacity enhancing programmes for teaching staff.

The remaining fund would be spent during the period 2015-20 to strengthen the education framework and review performances during the first five years.

During the first phase, five universities would provide training, including Ha Noi National University's College of Science, HCM City National University's College of Science, Ha Noi University of Science and Technology and Viet Nam Atomic Energy Institute's Training Centre.

Tan said the proposal would set out the arching framework and each university would customise to suit its own circumstance.

He said the motivation of this proposal was the severe manpower shortage in the atomic energy field.

Ministry of Education and Training statistics in 2008 showed there were only 505 graduates from universities with atomic energy-related majors.

Among them, the number of experts with PhD degrees was 65, with an average age of 50. This underscored the need to create a generation of experts by the time the nuclear power plant came into operation.

Tran Kim Tuan, director of Ha Noi University of Science and Technology's Institute of Nuclear Engineering and Environmental Physics, said the financial support would help to address several issues that were hindering training quality.

One of them was the need to purchase modern scientific equipment for laboratories, given the great importance of experiments in the training process.

"Unlike in other fields, which can allow new engineers to have on-the-job training to a large extent, nuclear engineers are required to have a higher readiness before entering the workplace," Tuan said.

As of now, machines used in the laboratories mainly came from donations from Russia and the International Atomic Energy Agency during the 1980s.

"After long use, the degradation of machines is unavoidable. We had a project supported by the agency in 2006 and used a $300,000 loan from the World Bank to purchase more equipment but its just a small proportion of what's really needed."

Tuan was also concerned about the quality of lecturers, half of whom were young and didn't have much experience in nuclear power.

"We hope that with the increasing number of new funds, young lecturers can receive advanced training from highly developed countries," he said.

The institute was also trying to persuade its alumni, who had already finished their doctoral programmes abroad, to return home.

"We (the alumni) alone can't do it, we need the support of a solid system of preferential incentives that are attractive enough for them to consider."

Tuan said the backbone of the teaching curriculum was based on Russian textbooks and was updated with curriculums taught in universities in the US and the UK and other countries with highly developed nuclear technology.

For this academic year, the institute has enrolled 40 students and is co-operating with the Programme for Excellent Engineers in Viet Nam to train 15 high quality engineers in this field. — VNS

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Vietnam provides electricity to Cambodia

power
Retail electricity prices could rise by up to 60 percent if a recommendation by the Vietnam Energy Association is accepted by the government

Vietnam’s National Power Transmission Corporation (NPT) and the Electricity of Cambodia (EDC) Tuesday held a conference in Ho Chi Minh City on the Chau Doc-Takeo 220kV power line from Vietnam to Cambodia.

At the conference, the two sides discussed issues including power transmission between the two countries, developing power networks, as well as technical problems and maintenance work.

Nguyen Van Bay, head of the technology department of Power Transmission Company No 4, said that after 16 months of operation, the Chau Doc-Takeo power line has provided Cambodia with over 912 million of kWh of electricity, contributing to dealing with the shortages of electricity in Cambodia.

The project is part of an agreement between the two governments and a contract between EVN and EDC signed in July, 2000. Its maximum transmitting capacity is 200MW with an average output from 900 million kWh to 1.4 billion kWh.

 

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EPZ, IP firms to fall short of 23,000 workers

HCMC – Companies at HCMC’s export processing zones (EPZ) and industrial parks (IP) will fall short of a combined 23,000 workers, said a job placement official.

Nguyen Thanh Tung, head of the Job Center of the HCMC Export Processing and Industrial Zones Authority (Hepza), told the Daily on Monday that the enterprises would need 49,000 new workers this year for their new export orders and production expansion plans.

However, Tung added, his center and others around the city would be able to supply only 26,000 workers, leading to a shortage of 23,000.

“Given a recovery of production, producers are in need of more workers, especially unskilled ones,” he said. “But it’s hard for them to employ.”

The sectors where labor demand is the strongest include packaging, garment, electronics, mechanical engineering and foodstuff production. Garment makers alone want 6,000 new workers, electronics enterprises about 2,500 and mechanical engineering firms around 2,500.

“From now to the year-end, our job center could find only 5,000 more workers,” said Tung of the Hepza job center. The center, he noted, will intensify recruitments from vocational schools around the city and from other provinces.  

Tung said almost all enterprises at the EPZs and IPs had raised wages too attract more workers. The average monthly wage is some VND2.5 million, VND500,000 higher than before.

Hepza began last year to give priority to new projects that use modern production technologies, particularly those in the mechanical engineering and electronics sectors, to reduce the heavy reliance on unskilled labor and thus avoid shortages of such labor.

But the city is developing seven new IPs and expanding some operational IPs with a total area of about 3,000 hectares, so the labor shortage is seen intenser in the coming time.

The city now has three EPZs and 10 IPs, which are home to 1,200 enterprises employing 252,000 workers.

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EPZ, IP firms to fall short of 23,000 workers

HCMC – Companies at HCMC’s export processing zones (EPZ) and industrial parks (IP) will fall short of a combined 23,000 workers, said a job placement official.

Nguyen Thanh Tung, head of the Job Center of the HCMC Export Processing and Industrial Zones Authority (Hepza), told the Daily on Monday that the enterprises would need 49,000 new workers this year for their new export orders and production expansion plans.

However, Tung added, his center and others around the city would be able to supply only 26,000 workers, leading to a shortage of 23,000.

“Given a recovery of production, producers are in need of more workers, especially unskilled ones,” he said. “But it’s hard for them to employ.”

The sectors where labor demand is the strongest include packaging, garment, electronics, mechanical engineering and foodstuff production. Garment makers alone want 6,000 new workers, electronics enterprises about 2,500 and mechanical engineering firms around 2,500.

“From now to the year-end, our job center could find only 5,000 more workers,” said Tung of the Hepza job center. The center, he noted, will intensify recruitments from vocational schools around the city and from other provinces.  

Tung said almost all enterprises at the EPZs and IPs had raised wages too attract more workers. The average monthly wage is some VND2.5 million, VND500,000 higher than before.

Hepza began last year to give priority to new projects that use modern production technologies, particularly those in the mechanical engineering and electronics sectors, to reduce the heavy reliance on unskilled labor and thus avoid shortages of such labor.

But the city is developing seven new IPs and expanding some operational IPs with a total area of about 3,000 hectares, so the labor shortage is seen intenser in the coming time.

The city now has three EPZs and 10 IPs, which are home to 1,200 enterprises employing 252,000 workers.

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Vietnam has good conditions for int’l yacht racing

HCMC – Vietnam with a long coastline enjoys a strong advantage and suitable conditions to become a regional yachting center, a profession yacht race organizer said.

Yap Kai Keng, chief representative for Indochina of the World Match Racing Tour (WMRT) as an international yachting event, told the Daily that WMRT would take place in the coastal city of Nha Trang next year. He said that apart from Nha Trang, other places in Vietnam like Quang Ninh, Danang, Phu Quoc and Phan Thiet also have good conditions for organizing the race as an attractive event of sport and tourism.

Nha Trang has been chosen by a task force of WMRT from London as the top place for the race because it met strict requirements in terms of infrastructure, transportation arrangement, sea conditions and the wind.

“These conditions make Nha Trang an attractive place for the race. Furthermore, the race venue is in close proximity with Cam Ranh Airport, making transport arrangement for participants easier,” Yap said.

Vietnam, he said, is endowed with a long coastline and beautiful beaches, and thus can develop into a regional sailing center with sea sport activities and sea tourism.

Regarding the forthcoming race in Nha Trang, WMRT and Vietnam’s Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism have inked an agreement on organizing the event in Vietnam, Yap said. The two sides are on the process of setting up a task force to organize the international race.

“Vietnam will host the event, while we will support the host country’s effort in organization as well as in funding aspects such as advising the event organizer on the sponsorship,” he said.

Yap said the country’s tourism would stand to benefit greatly. The event with all its activities would be broadcasted for not less than 20,000 minutes on TV channels including Star Sports to 180 countries and territories, he said, projecting the number of viewers at no less than one billion.

“It will help Vietnam to capture the attention of the world and bring the world to Vietnam in terms of sports, tourism, and economy,” he said.

The World Match Racing Tour is the professional sailing series, featuring 10 World Championship events across the globe. The race takes place every year in nine countries.

This year race started in France and is currently taking place in Switzerland. Malaysia is the final venue for the race this year.

Yap said that world-class sportsmen from countries such as Germany, Canada, the U.S. and Australia would participate in the race in Vietnam along with a local team.

“We will help train the Vietnamese sailing team to participate in the race and they could also join other races in the world in the coming time,” he said.

In related news, Saigontourist Holding Company will combine with foreign partners to organize an international yacht race from Hong Kong to Nha Trang in October, which is the fourth international race to Nha Trang City.

Meanwhile, the coastal province of Binh Thuan will also organize an international sailing festival with yacht performances.

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Tuesday’s conference to discuss city’s economic restructuring

HCMC – The impacts of Vietnam’s joining WTO and HCMC’s economic restructuring for the next five years are due to be discussed by economic experts at a conference on Tuesday. 

The “Assessments of the Impacts of Vietnam’s WTO Accession and HCMC Economic Restructuring” conference will delve into issues involving the city’s economic and social development, and proposed appropriate shifts in the economic structure to ensure continued growth.

The roles of government, business and market will also be defined to facilitate the development process.  

The conference is organized by the HCMC Institute for Development Studies, and HCMC WTO Affairs Consultation Center (HCC-WTO), and supported by Beyond WTO Program under a project financed by the Australian Aid Program (AusAID) and UK Department for International Development (DFID).  

The conference takes place at a time when the country is working toward an economic restructuring strategy for the next 10 years and an economic development plan for the next five years.

In addition to Vietnam’s Social Economic Development Strategy (2011 - 2020) and Socio-Economic Development Plan (2011 - 2015), the Ministry of Planning and Investment has drafted a project to boost the country’s economic restructuring to enhance its productivity and competitiveness.

There is a need to make clear Vietnam’s arguments on facts and theories about national economic restructuring, according to a statement of HCMC.  

In the city, a program with different components is being implemented to support the city’s economic restructuring in the five years ending 2010. The city is shifting its economy towards services, industry and agriculture.  

Tu Minh Thien, director of the Investment and Trade Promotion Center of HCMC, said at a recent meeting that the city was focusing on industries such as IT, electronics, mechanical engineering and food processing.

But there is a paradox that labor-intensive industries, including garment and textiles, are making big contributions to the city’s GDP, instead of the key sectors, he said.

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Tuesday’s conference to discuss city’s economic restructuring

HCMC – The impacts of Vietnam’s joining WTO and HCMC’s economic restructuring for the next five years are due to be discussed by economic experts at a conference on Tuesday. 

The “Assessments of the Impacts of Vietnam’s WTO Accession and HCMC Economic Restructuring” conference will delve into issues involving the city’s economic and social development, and proposed appropriate shifts in the economic structure to ensure continued growth.

The roles of government, business and market will also be defined to facilitate the development process.  

The conference is organized by the HCMC Institute for Development Studies, and HCMC WTO Affairs Consultation Center (HCC-WTO), and supported by Beyond WTO Program under a project financed by the Australian Aid Program (AusAID) and UK Department for International Development (DFID).  

The conference takes place at a time when the country is working toward an economic restructuring strategy for the next 10 years and an economic development plan for the next five years.

In addition to Vietnam’s Social Economic Development Strategy (2011 - 2020) and Socio-Economic Development Plan (2011 - 2015), the Ministry of Planning and Investment has drafted a project to boost the country’s economic restructuring to enhance its productivity and competitiveness.

There is a need to make clear Vietnam’s arguments on facts and theories about national economic restructuring, according to a statement of HCMC.  

In the city, a program with different components is being implemented to support the city’s economic restructuring in the five years ending 2010. The city is shifting its economy towards services, industry and agriculture.  

Tu Minh Thien, director of the Investment and Trade Promotion Center of HCMC, said at a recent meeting that the city was focusing on industries such as IT, electronics, mechanical engineering and food processing.

But there is a paradox that labor-intensive industries, including garment and textiles, are making big contributions to the city’s GDP, instead of the key sectors, he said.

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Bond backing sought for HCMC-Dong Nai connecting road

HCMC – The Ministry of Planning and Investment is seeking Government bonds funding for a road construction project linking HCMC’s District 9 with Dong Nai Province’s Nhon Trach District during the 2011-2015 period.

The ministry in a report to the Government said the 2.2 km road costing VND8 trillion would play an important role in regional transport.

The Ministry of Transport is the investor of the project while HCMC and Dong Nai Province authorities would take charge of site clearance and compensation. The transport ministry also suggested calling for investment in a river bridge, as part of the road project, under BOT (build-operate-transfer) form.

The connecting road is part of the Government’s plan to expand Nhon Trach new urban area from 6,000 to 11,000 hectares to become a key industrial, commercial and service center in the southern region. The plan also includes road and bridge projects such as HCMC-Long Thanh-Dau Giay, Bien Hoa-Ba Ria-Vung Tau expressways and the connecting road.

In addition, the ministries have suggested Dong Nai Province’s government to complete investment procedures for an inter-port road project with the total investment of VND2.25 trillion. The province will also suggest the project be funded by government bonds for the 2011-2015 period.

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Office and villa projects half-done

Sacomreal’s office building under construction on Pho Duc Chinh Street in HCMC - Photo: Hong Duyen
HCMC - Two property developers have announced the completion of the first phase of an office building project in HCMC and a villa project in the central coast city of Danang.

VinaLiving, a housing brand of VinaCapital Real Estate, says it has finished phase one of the Ocean Villas at Danang Beach Resort, and handed over the first 30 villas to owners.

The Ocean Villas comprises a beachfront residential component with 115 luxury beach villas as part of VinaCapital’s 260-hectare complex near the newly opened The Dunes Golf Course.

The developer says almost 80% of the phase-one villas were booked by buyers shortly after the two soft launch events held last year – one in Hanoi and one in HCMC.

In another project, Saigon Thuong Tin Real Estate JSC (Sacomreal) and its partner Ganeralimex Company last week held a topping-out ceremony for their  office building on Pho Duc Chinh Street in downtown HCMC.

The VND73 billion project is being developed on a 3,850-square-meter site with 10 floors for offices. It is scheduled for completion late this year.

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Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Office and villa projects half-done

Sacomreal’s office building under construction on Pho Duc Chinh Street in HCMC - Photo: Hong Duyen
HCMC - Two property developers have announced the completion of the first phase of an office building project in HCMC and a villa project in the central coast city of Danang.

VinaLiving, a housing brand of VinaCapital Real Estate, says it has finished phase one of the Ocean Villas at Danang Beach Resort, and handed over the first 30 villas to owners.

The Ocean Villas comprises a beachfront residential component with 115 luxury beach villas as part of VinaCapital’s 260-hectare complex near the newly opened The Dunes Golf Course.

The developer says almost 80% of the phase-one villas were booked by buyers shortly after the two soft launch events held last year – one in Hanoi and one in HCMC.

In another project, Saigon Thuong Tin Real Estate JSC (Sacomreal) and its partner Ganeralimex Company last week held a topping-out ceremony for their  office building on Pho Duc Chinh Street in downtown HCMC.

The VND73 billion project is being developed on a 3,850-square-meter site with 10 floors for offices. It is scheduled for completion late this year.

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Land reserve will help douse property fevers: experts

HANOI – Experts and officials at a seminar on urban development in Hanoi on Saturday called for a new approach to urbanization management in the capital city by increasing land reserves to choke off property fevers there.

Pham Sy Liem, director of the Urban Research and Infrastructure Development Institute, remarked that land fevers often took place soon after any urban planning schemes were announced. Recent fevers in new urban areas of Duong Noi, An Khanh, and even in the farming area of Ba Vi indicated that current urban land management has failed, he said.

“Therefore, to fight land manipulators and to make the most from land for development, urban administrators need to build up land reserves right at the time they make any urban planning scheme,” Liem told the seminar.

He asserted that land reserves would provide a strong vehicle for the urban administrator to manage the property market in urban areas, adding “it is high time the country formulate a complete institutional mechanism on land reserves.”

The new mechanism, according to Liem, will help prevent the situation of land prices being chased up year after year while people affected by development projects are still unhappy with the rising compensations.

Duong Duc Tuan, deputy director of Hanoi City’s Department of Planning and Architecture, agreed to Liem’s viewpoint, saying land reserves were the basic resource for urban development in the capital city.

Those areas with ample land reserves would have better conditions for infrastructure development, especially for projects under the forms of Build-Transfer and Build-Operate-Transfer forms, he said.

Dang Hung Vo, former Deputy Minister of Natural Resources and Environment, stressed the need to improve land management to avoid corruption in the sector.

“We must look for strong methods to manage land under planning schemes, otherwise some people will gain hefty profits from land manipulation while others will suffer when their land is revoked for development projects,” Vo said.

He added that urban land must be seen as capital resources, so a right approach to urban planning would be the decisive factor to determine urban development.

Liem of the Urban Research and Infrastructure Development Institute said that the development of land reserves would also help collect most benefits from land for the State budget.

Under the master plan on urban development between now and 2025 with a vision to 2050 that was approved by the Prime Minister last year, there should have some 910 urban towns and cities in the country by 2020. The population in cities should reach 44 million, or 45% of the country’s population by then.

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More incentives for cable undergrounding projects

A worker removes telecom cables from what looks much like a cobweb in downtown HCMC - Photo: Kinh Luan
HCMC – The HCMC government will offer more incentives for investors involved in projects to underground overhead power and telecom cables as some pilot projects will be completed in the middle of next month.

City vice chairman Nguyen Trung Tin on Monday threw support behind a proposal by the HCMC Power Corporation to invite more investors to participate in power and telecom cable undergrounding projects in the downtown area to restore the cityscape.

Such projects require huge amounts of capital. According to the corporation, the city will need up to VND3.36 trillion to build ditches for nine kilometers of high-tension cable lines, 300 kilometers of medium-tension lines, and 400 kilometers of low-tension lines in the city center between now and 2015.

In the following five years, the city will have to spend another VND383 billion expanding the plan to outlying districts.

Vice chairman Tin said the city would provide concenssional loans for investors to participate in the plan.

The city will finish work on September 15 on the pilot projects that are ongoing along a 1.3-km stretch of Tran Hung Dao Street in districts 1 and 5, Le Thanh Ton Street in District 1 and six streets in District 3, and in Ben Thanh Market area in District 1, among others.

The cityscape has long been marred by the intricate overhead power and telecom lines. There are around 20 telecom entities using the power transmission lines for their cable systems.

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More incentives for cable undergrounding projects

A worker removes telecom cables from what looks much like a cobweb in downtown HCMC - Photo: Kinh Luan
HCMC – The HCMC government will offer more incentives for investors involved in projects to underground overhead power and telecom cables as some pilot projects will be completed in the middle of next month.

City vice chairman Nguyen Trung Tin on Monday threw support behind a proposal by the HCMC Power Corporation to invite more investors to participate in power and telecom cable undergrounding projects in the downtown area to restore the cityscape.

Such projects require huge amounts of capital. According to the corporation, the city will need up to VND3.36 trillion to build ditches for nine kilometers of high-tension cable lines, 300 kilometers of medium-tension lines, and 400 kilometers of low-tension lines in the city center between now and 2015.

In the following five years, the city will have to spend another VND383 billion expanding the plan to outlying districts.

Vice chairman Tin said the city would provide concenssional loans for investors to participate in the plan.

The city will finish work on September 15 on the pilot projects that are ongoing along a 1.3-km stretch of Tran Hung Dao Street in districts 1 and 5, Le Thanh Ton Street in District 1 and six streets in District 3, and in Ben Thanh Market area in District 1, among others.

The cityscape has long been marred by the intricate overhead power and telecom lines. There are around 20 telecom entities using the power transmission lines for their cable systems.

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VND16 bil. for automatic wastewater monitors

HCMC – The HCMC Department of Natural Resources and Environment has asked the city government for approval to spend some VND16 billion installing automatic industrial wastewater monitors in concentrated industrial zones.

Tran Nguyen Hien, head of the department’s Environment Management Office, said the facilities would help the department control the quality of industrial wastewater discharged from one high-tech park, three export processing zones and 10 industrial parks in the city.

Sensors will be placed at the outlet of the wastewater treatment facility of each park to record and transfer data about the discharged industrial wastewater, such as pH, DO, COD and TSS (total suspended solids) to a control center at the department 24 hours.

Based on the certified indexes, the environment authority will impose penalties on any industrial park that fails to meet the requirements for wastewater disposal.

The city’s industrial parks and export processing zones have nearly 1,000 operational enterprises that dispose of some 32,000 cubic meters of industrial wastewater a day.

The environment department is considering placing orders for automatic monitoring devices from the German firm WTW because these German devices are reportedly suitable for Vietnam’s existing telecommunications infrastructure.

Early this year, the environment department reported that in the next few years it would install automatic monitors at companies discharging much wastewater outside the industrial parks.

The budget for this wastewater monitoring scheme is VND100 billion.

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F&B expo to attract some 190 companies

Bui Duy Duc, chairman of the HCMC Food and Foodstuff Association, answers questions at the press briefing to announce the international exhibition Foods and Beverages 2010 - Photo: Uyen Vien
HCMC – The international exhibition Foods and Beverages 2010, scheduled for September 8-11 at Tan Binh International Exhibition and Convention Center, will have up to 186 exhibitors from around the world, the organizer said on Monday.

Bui Duy Duc, chairman of the HCMC Food and Foodstuff Association, told a press briefing on Monday that the four-day event will feature 252 booths, one-third of which belong to Vietnamese exhibitors.  Other exhibitors are from the United States, South Korea, Japan, Singapore, Thailand, Germany and Australia to name but a few.

Key items on display will be farm produce and fisheries, canned food, frozen food, spices, food additives, drinks and vegetables among others. Manufacturers of packaging products as well as suppliers of F&B machinery and technology will also join the event, Duc said.

The exhibition will also incorporate the Vietnam Beer and Drinks Festival to highlight the country’s soft-drink industry, which has been growing by some 300% a year over the past couple of years, according to the association chairman.

The exhibition organizers are the association and the HCMC Department of Industry and Trade.

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F&B expo to attract some 190 companies

Bui Duy Duc, chairman of the HCMC Food and Foodstuff Association, answers questions at the press briefing to announce the international exhibition Foods and Beverages 2010 - Photo: Uyen Vien
HCMC – The international exhibition Foods and Beverages 2010, scheduled for September 8-11 at Tan Binh International Exhibition and Convention Center, will have up to 186 exhibitors from around the world, the organizer said on Monday.

Bui Duy Duc, chairman of the HCMC Food and Foodstuff Association, told a press briefing on Monday that the four-day event will feature 252 booths, one-third of which belong to Vietnamese exhibitors.  Other exhibitors are from the United States, South Korea, Japan, Singapore, Thailand, Germany and Australia to name but a few.

Key items on display will be farm produce and fisheries, canned food, frozen food, spices, food additives, drinks and vegetables among others. Manufacturers of packaging products as well as suppliers of F&B machinery and technology will also join the event, Duc said.

The exhibition will also incorporate the Vietnam Beer and Drinks Festival to highlight the country’s soft-drink industry, which has been growing by some 300% a year over the past couple of years, according to the association chairman.

The exhibition organizers are the association and the HCMC Department of Industry and Trade.

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Boeing supports Vietnam Air’s aircraft interior upgrade

A Boeing 777-200ER of Vietnam Airlines sits at Frankfurt Airport in Germany. Boeing aids the carrier in the interior upgrade of the aircraft of this type - Photo: Mong Binh
HCMC - The U.S. airplane maker Boeing has partnered with Vietnam Airlines in a program to modernize the interior of the airline’s four 777-200ER aircraft in a bid to provide improved services for passengers.

Boeing said on its website that it supported the flagship carrier’s goal to improve its passenger service by increasing the overall passenger experience and comfort while continuing to expand the network.

As part of the partnership, Boeing Commercial Aviation Services developed a cabin layout for the discerning needs of the SkyTeam member airline and its passengers.

The interior upgrade program also covers relocation of business class seats, installation of new deluxe economy and economy class seats, and changes to the in-flight entertainment system and cabin cooling systems among other.

Vietnam Airlines has just put into service the first 777-200ER aircraft with the latest cabin interior modernization in line with the upgrade program. The carrier often uses the aircraft of this type for international flights to Germany’s Frankfurt and other long-haul destinations.

Nguyen Van Hung, executive vice president of technical at Vietnam Airlines, said the program offered passengers improved serviced and backed the airline on the way to higher rankings in the region.

“Our interior modernization program is a key part of our efforts to provide market leading services and passenger comfort, further affirming Vietnam Airlines’ position as a major carrier in Southeast Asia, especially after we joined SkyTeam,” Hung said.

Vietnam Airlines now operates more than 290 daily flights on 75 routes to 20 domestic and 26 international destinations. The Hanoi-headquartered airline is expanding its flight network as well as its aircraft fleet, from nearly 70 to 115 by 2015.

Dennis Floyd, vice president of fleet services for Boeing Commercial Airplanes, noted the program aided competitiveness enhancement for Vietnam Airlines.

“This interior upgrade will support Vietnam Airlines’ aggressive plan to continue to compete among the world’s leading carriers,” he said.

Both Boeing and Vietnam Airlines do not mention the cost of the interior upgrade program.

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Gov’t yet to plan investment for express railway

The Government has neither developed an investment plan nor taken any
action to implement the Hanoi-Ho Chi Minh City express
railway project, said Minister of Transport Ho Nghia Dung.


At the Government’s regular press briefing on August 31, he said the
Government plans to continue studying the project to determine its size,
technology to be used, sources of investment, as well as environmental
and social impacts which have not been included in the project
feasibility study presented to the National Assembly recently.


Dung said relevant agencies are studying the project before making an investment plan using ODA funding, not State money.


Spokesman
for the Government, Minister and Director of the Government Office
Nguyen Xuan Phuc reported that the Prime Minister agreed in principle to
the reception of technical assistance in the form of non-refundable ODA
from the Japanese Government for making investment plans for the
construction of the Hanoi-Vinh and Ho Chi Minh City-Nha Trang sections
of the Hanoi-Ho Chi Minh City express railway project and a project to
upgrade the Hanoi-Noi Bai railway route.


Regarding the
restructuring of the country’s debt-hit shipbuilder, Vinashin, Deputy
Finance Minister Nguyen Cong Nghiep and a representative of the State
Bank of Vietnam said the Finance Ministry is working on a plan to
reschedule debts for Vinashin and define the group’s chartered capital.


The
State Bank of Vietnam is screening the group’s debts with each
credit institutions as its debts totalled 86 trillion VND while its
total assets are valued at 104 trillion VND.


The restructuring
project of Vinashin will give priority to paying salaries and insurance
for its workers, Minister Phuc said, adding that Vinashin will get new
projects once it gains access to capital./.

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Monday, September 27, 2010

Vietnam seeks more German tourists

The Vietnamese government has invested 4 trillion VND in building
infrastructure for the tourism industry, a Vietnamese tourism senior
official said at a talk to promote Vietnam ’s image in Germany .


Nguyen Manh Cuong, Deputy Chief of the Vietnam National Administration
of Tourism, met with representatives of travel companies owned by
Germans and Vietnamese expats in Germany on August 29 and 30.


Introducing
the country’s tourism potential, sightseeing wonders, and prominent
tangible and intangible cultural heritages, Cuong also presented special
programmes that the tourism industry launched on Hanoi ’s 1,000 th
founding anniversary.


He expressed his hope that tourism
cooperation between German and Vietnamese travel companies would be
boosted so Germany can eclipse France in terms of the number of
tourists coming to Vietnam .


Present at the talks, Vietnamese
Ambassador to Germany Do Hoa Binh noted that the growing ties between
the two countries have provided conditions for the development of
bilateral cooperation in a wide range of fields, including tourism.


He pledged to create improved conditions for German travel companies to do business with Vietnam .


For
their part, many participants urged the Vietnamese tourism industry to
equip more tour guides with the German language, along with professional
skills and rich cultural knowledge, in order to lure more German
visitors.


In 2009, the Vietnamese tourism industry contributed 5
billion USD to the State budget, generating jobs for 1.3 million people
and helping to eradicate poverty./.

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Government keen to grow electricity industry

Government keen to grow electricity industry

The Government will speed up programmes to generate electricity from
renewable energies and soon adopt a clear and favourable mechanism for
the electricity industry to grow as it is crucial for national
development.


The question of how to spur the development of the electricity industry
caught the special interest of cabinet members at their regular monthly
meeting in Hanoi on August 30-31 under the chair of Prime Minister
Nguyen Tan Dung.


The government’s plan for the issue is to
encourage all economic sectors to join hands with the State in investing
and boosting the growth of this important industry.


The PM asked the Ministry of Industry and Trade to focus investments on raising power output to prevent shortages in the future.


Discussing
the socio-economic development plan for 2011, which is the first year
in the next five-year development plan, and the 2011-2020 development
strategy, PM Dung said the general goal of 2011 is to strengthen
macro-economic stability to achieve a growth rate higher than that of
2010 and step up the economic restructuring.


The other goals are
to ensure social security and social welfare to further improve people’s
living conditions while assuring political security, social order and
safety, he said.


The PM proposed the Government target a GDP
growth rate of 7.5 percent, CPI year-on-year rise of 7 percent, and
trade deficit below 18 percent for 2011.


He underscored the need
to pay special attention to vocational training and considered it an
important index to serve the country’s economic shift in 2011.


PM
Dung also requested formulation of mechanisms and policies to support
national target programmes, and listed the rural development programme
as Government target for the 2011-2015 period.


At the meeting,
cabinet members heard about good performance of the national economy in
the last eight months with industrial production growing 15.2 percent
year-on-year.


CPI rose slightly - 0.23 percent in August against July - the Ministry of Planning and Investment reported.


Also
at this meeting, cabinet members heard reports on inspections, the
settlement of petitions and denunciations, the fight against corruption,
and administrative reform.


They debated a draft decree guiding
the implementation of several articles of the Enterprise Law, the draft
ordnance on management, and use of weapons, explosive materials and
supportive tools, and a bill amending the Cooperatives Law./.

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