Showing posts with label Vietnam trade. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vietnam trade. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Vietnam 2010 trade gap seen at $13.5 bln

HANOI - Vietnam on Wednesday projected a stubbornly wide US$13.5 billion trade deficit this year despite a rise in exports of 19.1 percent, three times the initial target, adding to pressure on the authorities to devalue the dong again.

Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung, reading a report to the opening session of the National Assembly, also forecast economic growth of 7.2 percent in the fourth quarter from a year before, after 7.16 percent in the third quarter.

The government report seen by Reuters forecast gross domestic product would rise next year by between 7 percent and 7.5 percent, following a projected 6.7 percent this year.

This year's projected trade deficit would be up 9.8 percent from the $12.3 billion gap in 2009. A Reuters poll of 12 economists this month had forecast $12.2 billion for this year.

Vietnam's large trade and budget deficits, plus low foreign exchange reserves, make it vulnerable to another devaluation in the dong, which is pegged to the US dollar.

The central bank devalued the currency on Aug. 17 for the third time since November, cutting the reference rate by 2 percent in what it said was a bid to control the trade deficit.

Speculation of another devaluation has been putting pressure on the currency, making businesses reluctant to sell dollars.

State Bank of Vietnam Governor Nguyen Van Giau was quoted on Tuesday as saying the central bank had no plans to adjust the rate even though the dong has been dropping on the unofficial market, according to a state-run newspaper.

Inflation would be at around 7 percent in 2011, the government report said. The government is aiming for 8 percent this year.

With imports in 2010 seen climbing 16.5 percent, the trade deficit would stay below 20 percent of the country's export revenue, it said.

The government targets for 2011 need approval by parliament, which had approved a target for exports to grow 6 percent this year.

Dung said he expected foreign debt this year to rise to 42.2 percent of gross domestic product from 30 percent last year. Government debt would be 44.5 percent of GDP while public debt would hit 56.7 percent of GDP, he said in the report.

Vietnam's credit growth is expected to be 25 percent this year and money supply would grow 20 percent from 2009, fuelling economic growth of 6.7 percent for the whole year, Dung said.

He estimated the bad debt ratio for the whole of 2010 would be kept below 3 percent of loans, against 2.03 percent at the end of 2009.

The annual trade deficit for 2011 would be kept at less than 20 percent of exports, while the budget deficit would be 5.5 percent of GDP, Dung said in televised remarks.

Vietnam's investment for development is projected to be equivalent to 40 percent of GDP in 2011, slightly lower than this year when investment would jump 12.9 percent from last year and make up 41 percent of GDP.

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Friday, December 10, 2010

Vietnam's Sept trade deficit hits $1.05 bln

HANOI - A growing trade gap with China and rising raw material prices helped push Vietnam's trade deficit this month to an estimated US$1.05 billion, with imports of $7.15 billion and exports at $6.1 billion, a government report said on Monday.

A persistent trade deficit has prompted Vietnam to devalue its dong currency three times since November 2009, most recently in August.

January to September exports rose an estimated 20.5 percent from the same period last year to $51.5 billion, while imports jumped 22.7 percent to $60.08 billion, bringing the nine-month trade deficit at $8.58 billion, a Planning and Investment Ministry report said.

"The trade deficit from China is still growing strongly and it accounts for nearly 80 percent of the total trade deficit. Vietnam has been suffering from a trade deficit with Asia while it still enjoys a surplus with all other continents," it said.

Imports from China leapt 23.5 percent in the nine-month period, while imports from other Southeast Asian countries were up some 20 percent and from South Korea they were up 11 percent.

The report said commodity price increases over the past year also contributed "considerably" to the increase of total imports, and noted that prices for metals, oil products, plastics and yarn had risen sharply.

"The increases in prices of these goods alone pushed the total value of imports up by about $4.2 billion," it said.

The Southeast Asian country posted a trade deficit of $6.22 billion in the first nine months of 2009, based on the ministry's report, which did not give any comparative figures for last September.

Despite September's deficit, Monday's report said exports showed "positive signals", with the increase of 20.5 percent far exceeding an initial target for the year of 6 percent.

Imports grew strongly, too, and a state-run newspaper quoted the government statistics office on Monday as saying the trade deficit could come under pressure to rise in the coming months because of a cyclical year-end increase in imports and the weakening US dollar.

"It is necessary to maintain measures to check imports," the newspaper Dau Tu reported.

September's deficit was in line with numbers from the previous eight months, which ranged between $1.3 billion and $0.8 billion.

Earlier this month, the ministry said it expected the trade deficit for the whole of 2010 to be nearly $14 billion, with exports rising 18.2 percent and imports up 16.5 percent, after a gap of $12.25 billion in 2009.

It forecast Vietnam's trade deficit to edge up to $14.55 billion in 2011 as growth of exports and imports was projected to slow to around 10 percent.

The planning ministry also said Vietnam's gross domestic product grew 6.52 percent in the January to September period. It did not give a figure for the third quarter. A state run newspaper quoted the ministry's GDP figure last week.

"The economy is still moving in a positive direction," Monday's report said.

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