Showing posts with label business environment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label business environment. Show all posts

Sunday, January 30, 2011

Business partners support competition reform

Business partners support competition reform

A partnership agreement called, “Corporate Alliance on Administrative
Procedures Reform and Competitiveness” was signed in Hanoi on October
12 by Vietnam Chamber of Commerce and Industry (VCCI) and the European
Chamber of Commerce in Vietnam (EuroCham).


In
announcing the agreement, the two organisations said they share a common
interest in promoting the business environment in Vietnam to
benefit businesses and stimulate economic growth.


The launch of the Corporate Alliance is a key step in providing a
platform to engage the private sector in building a strong network of
partners, mobilising resources to improve advocacy and support for
government-initiated administrative procedures reform, and improving
Vietnam ’s competitiveness at large.


“EuroCham
firmly believes in the power of partnerships and collaborative efforts
for a more competitive Vietnam and is fully committed to working
together with both government agencies and the corporate sector through
this initiative,” said Alain Cany, EuroCham Chairman.


VCCI and EuroCham will be the lead organisations in the alliance, and
other technical and corporate partners to provide business expertise,
financial resources and communications, he added.


Meanwhile, VCCI’s Vice Chairman Pham Gia Tuc said VCCI will work closely
with multinational corporations and national companies to identify,
design and implement alliance activities that leverage the strengths of
the corporate sector and improve Vietnam ’s business environment, and
especially its competitiveness.


Within the
framework of cooperation, EuroCham will provide professional knowledge,
resources and networks of members and partners at both national and
European Union levels.


The chamber will also
support government-initiated administrative reforms as a member of the
consultative council for administrative reforms, creating conditions for
cooperation between the alliance and EuroCham’s member businesses,
partners and European government institutions.


To
date, several EuroCham member companies have already committed to
supporting the alliance, including Holcim ( Vietnam ) Ltd., HSBC Bank (
Vietnam ) Ltd., FrieslandCampina Vietnam , GlaxoSmithKline Pte. Ltd.,
Mercedes-Benz Vietnam Ltd., Metro Cash & Carry Vietnam ,
Prudential Vietnam , Schneider Electronic Overseas Asia Pte. Ldt.,
Siemens Ltd. Vietnam , Standard Chartered Bank, Unilever Vietnam
and Sanofi-Aventies./.

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Thursday, November 18, 2010

Lack of credit hampers SMEs

Workers make footwear at Thuong Dinh Footwear Company in Ha Noi. A recently-published survey revealed that many small and medium-sized enterprises say securing access to credit is one of their biggest problems. — VNA/VNS Photo Ngoc Ha

Workers make footwear at Thuong Dinh Footwear Company in Ha Noi. A recently-published survey revealed that many small and medium-sized enterprises say securing access to credit is one of their biggest problems. — VNA/VNS Photo Ngoc Ha

HA NOI — Access to credit remains the most serious obstacle to the success of Viet Nam's small-to-medium enterprises, a newly-published survey shows.

Falls in demand are also cited for the first time as a serious constraint to business which "might be a result of the general slowdown experienced in economic activity."

The survey of more than 2,500 SMEs in 10 cities and provinces last year found that almost 40 per cent of enterprises were credit constrained with the majority in rural Viet Nam.

The Central Institute for Economic Management; the Institute of Labour Science and Social Affairs; the University of Copenhagen and the Danish embassy organised the survey to research the country's business environment.

The survey investigated the interaction of SMEs with domestic and international business with the focus on growth, employment, production, technology and efficiency, diversification, innovation, survival and closure.

Questions about their role in the informal sector; informal payments as well as their bureaucratic and administrative burden were also asked.

Although almost 70 per cent of respondents said the international financial crisis had harmed business, 12 per cent – mostly larger enterprises – reported they had actually benefited from it, University of Copenhagen economist Dr John Rand told a conference to reveal the results of the survey in Ha Noi yesterday.

The benefits included cheaper inputs, weaker competition and more and better government support, he said.

The researchers say the survey found that the business environment appears to have deteriorated because the number of unconstrained enterprises fell between 2007 and last year.

The yearly survival rate of surveyed SMEs had declined to 91.6 per cent between 2007 and 2009 from 94 per cent between 2005 and 2007.

The survey shows temporary closure as a relatively common SME response to coping with the financial crisis.

"Closing temporarily to weather the storm appears to have been a widely used coping mechanism and illustrates why official bankrupt statistics may not give a fully accurate picture of the crisis impact," says the report.

Almost one-fifth of enterprises temporarily closed between 2007 and 2009 against the very few of 2005, 2007 surveys.

The survey results suggest that although Viet Nam's enterprises are becoming less specialised, the diversification may be at the cost of lower short-term revenue growth.

The diversification rate last year was 14.5 per cent compared with 8.2 per cent in 2007.

But researcher Finn Tarp warned that already tardy innovation among SMEs was in decline, especially among the smallest.

Just 2.7 per cent of surveyed enterprises introduced new products against 5 per cent in 2007 with 41 per cent having improved existing products against 44.5 per cent in 2007.

The researcher suggested the decline may reflect higher uncertainty as a result of the financial crisis which has limited demand for new technology.

The survey shows new production technologies improve an enterprise's chances of survival and he recommended the creation of incentives to innovate and invest in research and development.

"Market failures – the result of a tepid response to investment in R&D without incentives – must be addressed," he said.

The survey shows that although more SMEs are entering the formal sector, the incidence of informal payments is rising.

More and more SMEs recognised the benefits of formalisation, even households and micro firms, although high costs to enter the formal sector, high regulatory compliance costs, and punitive tax rates can force enterprises to operate informally and forego legal recognition, explained economist Dr Rand.

The benefits included better access to credit and investment and better employment conditions.

Thirty-five per cent of SMEs surveyed were designated as part of the informal sector; in 2007 the figure was 41 per cent.

More than 60 per cent of workers did not have formal contracts although the number increased markedly with enterprise size.

Researcher Tarp argued that the "bribe to hide" hypothesis that suggests informal-sector enterprises tend to pay more bribes than those of the formal sector had not been confirmed.

Domestic data shows that formal enterprises are the primary bribe payers.

The survey shows that registered enterprises are 24 per cent more likely to pay bribes than those of the formal sector.

It also shows the larger enterprises are more likely to pay bribes than their micro rivals and those in Ha Noi are more likely to pay bribes than similar enterprises in HCM City.

The researchers concede that regulation and corruption are "fundamental topics" in any discussion of private-sector development and the business environment in developing countries. — VNS

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Monday, November 1, 2010

Forbes downgrades Vietnam’s business environment

car
The US magazine ranks Vietnam 118 out of 128 countries, five spots down, based on factors like trade and monetary freedoms.
Photo: AFP

US business magazine Forbes has ranked Vietnam 118 out of 128 countries in terms of business environment, five spots lower than last year.

The ranking is calculated based on a variety of factors like trade freedom, monetary freedom, investor protection, personal freedom, tax burden, and corruption, in which Vietnam ranked 105th, 125th, 120th, 103rd, and 95th out of 128 countries and territories.

But it does well in some categories like innovation and technology, ranking 52nd and 69th.

Vietnam has a public debt to GDP ratio of 53.7 percent, according to the study.

Forbes said that its WTO membership has provided Vietnam an anchor to the global market and reinforced the domestic economic reform process.

But the global recession hurt Vietnam's export-oriented economy, with GDP growing at less than the 7 percent per annum average achieved during the last decade.

Vietnam ranks only ahead of countries like Chad, Zimbabwe, Bolivia, Cameroon, Burundi, and Venezuela, which is in last place. It lags behind all the Asean members who find a place in the rankings – Singapore is in fifth spot, Malaysia in 31st, Thailand in 56th, Indonesia in 74th, and Cambodia in 115th.

Denmark tops the list, ranking No 1 in personal freedom, second in corruption, and fourth in science and technology.

While Hong Kong ranks second, mainland China is in 90th spot, 27 spots lower than last year. China’s trade freedom ranks only 89th, monetary freedom 81st, and personal freedom 124th.

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