Showing posts with label Australia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Australia. Show all posts

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Vietnam seen becoming full negotiator for TPP

Michael Mugliston (L) from Australia’s Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, and Stephen Payton (C) from New Zealand’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade at the Q-and-A session of the business event in HCMC last Friday - Photo: Mong Binh
HCMC – Vietnam is expected to get further involved in the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) and soon become a full negotiating partner for this new regional trade agreement, said Stephen Payton, APEC senior official at New Zealand’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade.

“At the moment, Vietnam is an observer but has engaged in the process. And by the end of this year, we hope that Vietnam will have decided to become a full negotiating partner,” Payton told representatives of business groups and companies at a business luncheon in HCMC last Friday.

Payton and Michael Mugliston, special negotiator at the Free Trade Agreement Division of Australia’s Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, spoke on the ASEAN-Australia-New Zealand Free Trade Agreement (AANZFTA) and regional economic integration at the event held by the Australian Chamber of Commerce in Vietnam (AusCham) in collaboration with partners.

The intention of the TPP is to establish a comprehensive regional trade agreement in consistency with principles of the global trade club WTO and the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC), and to serve as a building block towards the latter’s ambitious reach of an Asia-Pacific Free Trade Area.

Payton said that one of the most exciting things about the TPP was that Vietnam was involved in the new trade agreement, which is hoped to be concluded by November next year when the APEC forum takes places in Honolulu of the U.S. “That’s what we are trying to do.”

“If the eight parties including Australia, New Zealand and Vietnam can conclude a high quality agreement, that will send another very strong signal to the region about what can be achieved collectively, even among countries which have different levels of economic development,” Payton said.

Brunei, Chile, Peru, Singapore and the U.S. are the other countries engaging in the TPP, which is recently being negotiated. The idea of this TPP was sowed early on a small agreement between New Zealand, Singapore, Brunei and Chile for a broader Trans-Pacific agreement covering East Asia and America.

Agreeing on a common set of rules for a diverse group of countries with different governmental and economic structures to follow is the hard job to finish to translate the TPP into a reality. “Can we draft the rules for a free and open trade, investment and economic environment in the region? That’s the goal that we have set ourselves,” Payton said.

ASEAN, Australia and New Zealand have created a high quality model that shows what can be done in the region through the ASEAN-Australia-New Zealand Free Trade Agreement (AANZFTA), Payton said.

In an interview with the Daily after the business luncheon, both Payton and Mugliston of Australia’s Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade agreed the effect of AANZFTA since January 1, 2010 was fueling trade between Vietnam and Australia and New Zealand.

Mugliston said in his presentation that Australia’s trade with Vietnam was A$3 billion in 2000 and stood at A$5.9 billion last year despite the impact of global downturn, accounting for 8% of that country’s total trade with ASEAN.

The proportion grew from the 7% in 2000, but this was not a worry. “I think it is important that we don’t just look at the share because my preference would be having a bigger cake. I’m happy to have even a smaller share of a big cake rather than a larger share of a smaller cake,” Mugliston explained to the Daily after the event.

Actually, the Australia-Vietnam trade recorded an annual average of 22% over the last five years to around AU$8 billion in 2007-2008 before the impact of the global financial crisis pulled the two-way merchandize value to A$5.9 billion last year.

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Thursday, September 9, 2010

Australia wants stronger cooperation to vocational education

Nguyen Thanh Minh (R), president of Saigon Entrepreneur Club, chats with Colin Walters (C) and another member of the Australian delegation at a reception in HCMC last week - Photo: Mong Binh
HCMC - Australia is looking to step up its cooperation with Vietnam in vocational education and training (VET) and to build a bridge between schools of the two countries, said an executive of Australia’s Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations.

“We are looking at the way for better collaboration and how Australian colleges can work for the benefit of students at Vietnamese colleges,” Colin Walters, group manager for international at the department, told the Daily before leaving Vietnam over the weekend.

Walters led a delegation to Vietnam for a week-long trip, with an emphasis on enhancing the collaboration on VET. He said his delegation had reached some important agreements with Government agencies during this first mission of its kind to this country.

“We have established good links between universities. We want to do the same with vocation training to have much better collaboration and interchange students,” Walters said.

Vietnam wanted VET cooperation with Australia to cover forestry, aquaculture and agriculture. But, Walters saw the opportunity beyond these industries and in the sectors where Australia had a strong advantage.

“I think across the whole economy areas like tourism where Vietnam must meet world standards if it wants people from America, Europe and Australia to come back a second time for their holidays in Vietnam, they need to have good experience in the first time,” Walters said. “I mean the hotels and restaurants here have to be of top standard. We can give top standard training and so that is a kind of thing we can collaborate on.”

According to Vietnam’s General Statistics Office, the country attracted more than 218,000 Australian visitors last year and nearly 167,000 in the first seven months of in 2010. The January-July figure recorded a strong increase of 28.6% over the same period last year.

Walters said Australian colleges were able to help develop curricula and teaching methods as well as provide advice on teachers and development of the Australian system to meet the requirements of employers and teach the students what they need to succeed in their work.

Walters noted both vocational and university education was important because people got decrees from universities and better skills to work from VET colleges. As a growing economy like Vietnam needs people at all levels and all social skills, it is very important to make sure that people can get proper education and training in and throughout their life.

The Australian consul general in HCMC, Graeme Swift, told a reception held for the Australian delegation last week that vocation was a very important part of Vietnam’s education and that more skilled workers should be trained for different industries in Vietnam.

Australia was one of the leaders in vocational education and would help Vietnam in this area, Swift said. He emphasized that skilled employees were those who had the skills to do jobs rather than having a decree and no skills.

Australia has attracted 25,000 Vietnamese students to its both vocational and university courses. Every year, roughly 6,000 fresh Vietnamese students go to that country for further education.

“We are certainly looking at the opportunity for more Vietnamese students to study in Australia. We hope to see many more people from Vietnam to come to Australia to study, run businesses as well as for tourism,” Walters said.

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