Showing posts with label government. Show all posts
Showing posts with label government. Show all posts

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Government hails nation’s 1st oil refinery

Though the country’s first oil refinery was completed nine years behind schedule, its cost was eventually lower than estimated and it remains a breakthrough for the oil industry, a government report to the National Assembly said.

The Dung Quat Refinery only cost VND40 trillion (US$2.05 billion at current value) when it was built this year, VND10 trillion less than estimated, said the report.

But according to a report released by the House Committee of Science, Technology and Environment, the refinery’s cost was estimated at $1.5 billion in 1997, raised more than once, and finally ended at $3.05 billion (VND51.7 trillion) in 2009.

The government attributed the difference of around $1 billion between the two reports to the fact that the committee report included revenue expenses like salaries and taxes.

Regarding the criticism that the plant’s capacity is too low at 6.5 million tons a year compared to 10-12 million tons for other refineries worldwide, the government said the project was executed at a time when there were no strategy or planning for oil refineries making it difficult to make a decision on the capacity.

The report admitted that PetroVietnam, which built the refinery, did not have a long-term vision for refining and therefore had to amend the design two times to add two more workshops. Meanwhile, official agencies had been slow in issuing legal documents on quality.

The government said PetroVietnam is considering importing crude oil of better quality to replace the oil from its offshore Bach Ho field, and expanding the refinery to increase its capacity to 8-10 million tons.

Many legislators questioned the competitiveness of the plant’s products and the economic benefits to the country.

Vietnam’s first refinery - an overview

It took 13 years for the Dung Quat Refinery to be built. Work began in 1997 and the plant was initially expected to go on stream in 2001, but it took until January 2010 for it to be actually completed.

Around 75 percent of the work was carried out by Vietnamese sub-contractors.

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Tuesday, February 15, 2011

China must boost spending for growth-official

BEIJING - China must invest in welfare and housing so workers and farmers provide the spending for sustained growth, a top economic planner said in a report on Monday, while Communist Party chiefs drew up a long-term development blueprint.

The Chinese economy is set to grow by about 50 percent to $7.5 trillion by 2015, powering past Japan and moving closer to the biggest economy, the United States. But a meeting of the party's Central Committee, ending on Monday, has dwelt on domestic imbalances that could drag down that ascent.

Zhang Ping, head of the National Development and Reform Commission, which steers economic policy, said the key to surmounting those strains was expanding household spending, encouraged by stronger social welfare, cheaper housing, and resource price reforms.

"Expanding domestic demand is the guiding long-term strategy of our country's economic and social development," Zhang told a Communist Party newspaper, the Study Times.

"The focus of the next stage of economic work must be tapping the role of domestic demand, especially consumer demand, in generating economic growth," he told the paper, issued by the Central Party School, which trains rising officials.

Zhang's remarks appeared near the close of the meeting about the next five-year development plan starting in 2011.

President Hu Jintao has said the plan must promote more "inclusive growth", narrowing the gap between urban and rural incomes and boosting domestic demand.

State media will announce the results of the closed-door four-day meeting after it concludes.

The decisions may include promotions of Vice President Xi Jinping and other officials who are in line to succeed Hu and Premier Wen Jiabao after late 2012, analysts have suggested.

Tapping greater household spending while easing strains on resources and the environment presents Beijing with a daunting list of reforms that could hit the raw nerves of companies and government officials who have benefited from current policies.

Zhang said changes needed to secure growth included further freeing up resource prices, raising welfare spending to encourage citizens to spend more, increasing the incomes of ordinary workers, and providing cheaper housing.

Improving livelihoods

The government, Zhang said, must "continue making a priority of welfare and improving people's livelihoods, directing more public resources into that area.

"In price reforms, the focus will be on actively and steadily advancing resource and raw material price reforms," he said, noting the changes would cover oil, water, natural gas and power.

Such reforms are also likely to be signaled in the next five-year plan, and will be part of the legacy-building effort for President Hu and Premier Wen.

Hu and Wen came to power vowing to create a more balanced economy and equal society. Their record has been mixed, with growth still leaning heavily on injections of infrastructure spending, while household consumption has remained compressed and rural income growth still lags urban levels.

China's average per-capita income for the richest 10 percent was 65 times that of the poorest 10 percent, according to a Credit Suisse-sponsored study by Chinese economists. Even an official estimate of a 23-fold gap is a stark one for a government pledged to socialist equality.

Public ire has centred on the real estate market, where price rises have defied government efforts to cool the market, pushing prices in many cities beyond the grasp of many residents.

The government plans to build 5.8 million housing units for poorer citizens this year, which analysts have estimated will involve spending of up to 400 billion yuan ($60.2 billion).

That compares with total investment in real estate of 2.39 trillion yuan in the first seven months of the year.

Zhang said a more sustained effort was needed.

"We must increase government investment in publicly subsidised housing," he said.

The national parliament will formally approve the five-year plan early next year.

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Sunday, February 13, 2011

Let businesses take the lead

Let businesses take the leadThe government’s policy to prioritize certain industries and encourage businesses to invest in them should be abandoned, experts say.

They say that businesses should decide what they want to do based on their reading of the market, and the government should support them by creating favorable conditions for business development.

Nguyen Xuan Thanh, a lecturer with the Fulbright Economics Teaching Program, told the Thoi Bao Kinh Te Saigon magazine that the experience of other countries showed choosing a certain industry or industries and giving them priority treatment had failed, most of the time.

“With the development of technologies and the global restructuring of labor forces proceeding at a fast pace, such a policy is no longer suitable,” Thanh said.

Vietnam has focused on several industries based on “the government’s orientation,” he said, but this has not paid off.

The automobile and electronics industries, which have been priorities for many years, have made little progress with most companies still engaged in assembly work, he said. Other sectors like sericulture and shipbuilding had actually regressed despite being given very favorable conditions.

On the contrary, some sectors have grown well even though the government did not set any clear orientation for their development. The tra fish sector, for instance, was driven by farmers as they saw the export potential of the fish, which used to be underrated earlier because of their low value, Thanh said.

“It’s the farmers who decided to raise the fish, not because the government told them to do so,” he said.

Huynh The Du, also from the Fulbright Economics Teaching Program, said the growth of a certain sector of the economy is mainly determined by businesses.

For example, Ho Chi Minh City has a strong financial and banking sector because it is home to many banks and financial companies. “It’s all about costs and benefits. Businesses have flocked to the city not due to any policy but simply because they can find favorable conditions for their business and a better chance to earn profits.”

“Businesses have the best understanding of the market, but sometimes they make mistakes,” Thanh said. “So how come government officials who do not have firsthand business experience decide (what is good) for businesses?”

The success of the tra fish sector was possible because the government gave it the right kind of support – by facilitating research of new breeds and scouting export markets, Thanh said. “That’s the role of the government: to create favorable conditions. Once the business environment has been improved, if an industry fails to grow, it means it doesn’t have the potential.”

Economist Tran Du Lich said infrastructure is one of the bottlenecks that the government needs to remove to help businesses, along with improving the quality of human resources.

Taking logistics as an example, it would be difficult for the industry to grow if the road system to seaports is not improved, said Lich, who is also a National Assembly representative.

Thanh said the government should also review the policies that can have negative impacts on doing business.

For instance, the financial sector in HCMC can be affected by a regulation that bans high-rise buildings in the city center, he said.

The nature of financial services is that they concentrate on a small area, which can be seen in all financial centers like Singapore, Shanghai, Hong Kong and Tokyo. A ban on high buildings will increase rentals in the city downtown, discouraging investors, he said.

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Saturday, February 5, 2011

Vietnam steps up drive to tamp down inflation

HANOI - Vietnam is redoubling its efforts to tamp down inflation in the final months of 2010 amid concerns that rising prices will add to the downward pressure on the dong and get uncomfortably high ahead of a big political meeting.

A Reuters poll published on Thursday showed economists in Vietnam and outside expect consumer prices to rise 8.5 percent this year, exceeding a government target of 8 percent. They also saw the dong weakening into next year.

With end-of-year inflation pressures set to build, Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung issued a directive this week for government ministries and provincial authorities to strengthen measures to stabilize prices in the fourth quarter.

The finance ministry, meanwhile, took another step last week towards much-criticized price controls by naming 150 companies, including several foreign firms, that will be required to register new prices.

Annual inflation in September jumped to 8.92 percent from 8.18 percent in August, stoking fears of a return to high inflation, even though economists mostly attributed it to one-off factors.

"Obviously the action of the prime minister and the ministry of finance is reflecting at least partially the huge concern and the reaction of the population to the very high consumer price index in September, and expectations that it will continue to rise in October," said former government adviser Le Dang Doanh.

Dragon Capital, a Vietnam fund management firm, said in a report this week September's figure was "a bit unsettling", prompting it to raise its full-year CPI forecast to 8.9 percent from 7.8 percent.

"Inflation needs to be handled because it is a key driver of currency weakness -- the other one being the trade deficit, which is probably flatlining now, but is still big," it said.

Limited effect

The dong has slipped some 2.3 percent on unofficial markets since Aug. 18 when the central bank devalued the currency for the third time since last November.

The currency has come under renewed pressure, in part due to the meteoric rise in world and domestic gold prices, but confidence in the dong is anyway chronically weak in Vietnam.

With third-quarter gross domestic product growth at a comfortable 7.16 percent from a year earlier, on target to meet the government's goal of 6.5 percent for 2010, economists say the authorities have shifted their focus to inflation.

But Jonathan Pincus, head of the Fulbright Economics Teaching Program in Ho Chi Minh City and a former U.N. economist, said the government was taking the wrong approach.

"Reducing the fiscal deficit and tightening monetary policy are necessary now to take pressure off the currency in the short term and reduce expectations of inflation," he said.

"Administrative measures will not achieve these goals, since the problem is not, as the government often assumes, high levels of profit. Rather, profits are squeezed because input and financing costs are rising for domestic firms, while the scope for price increases is limited by the availability of cheap imports."

Still, Doanh said the government's efforts were understandable.

"It's very sensitive," he said. "We are approaching the Lunar New Year and approaching the Party Congress. If on the brink of the Party Congress the consumer price index is accelerating, I think it's a big problem."

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Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Coffee assoc wants huge stock to spur prices

HCMC – The Vietnam Coffee and Cocoa Association, or Vicofa, has asked the Government for permission to buy between 300,000 and 500,000 tons of coffee from the start of the upcoming harvest as a measure to support prices for farmers.

Luong Van Tu, chairman of Vicofa, told the Daily on Thursday that the amount under the retention scheme would vary depending on the fluctuation of prices during the 2010-2011 harvest lasting from later this month until early next year.

In the previous season, the Government assisted traders in stocking 200,000 tons by providing soft loans for them to buy coffee from farmers. However, the scheme did not work well as traders were able to buy only one quarter of the planned amount since the scheme was approved too late when farmers had almost sold out their crop.

“Given experiences from the previous season, we have proposed the Government to start the coffee retention scheme earlier, and therefore, it is expected that prices would be higher in the beginning of the harvest compared to last year,” he said.

However, the Government’s assistance to coffee traders this year would not be in the form of subsidized lending as in the previous year, said an official of the Department of Agro-Forestry, Fishery and Salt Processing under the agriculture ministry.

Rather, the Government will help traders access capital sources to buy coffee, said Le Xuan, head of the department. He added that coffee traders would have to buy the farm produce directly from farmers if they want to gain assistance.

The coffee amount planned for retention this year can be seen as substantial, as Vietnam produces around only one million tons of coffee a year.

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Saturday, January 15, 2011

Weak oversight leads to violations in essential sectors

Customers buy petrol at a station on Lang Street, Ha Noi's Dong Da District. A lack of strict management within the petrol and steel markets is said to be a primary cause for the violations taking place in these sectors. — VNA/VNS Photo Minh Dong


Customers buy petrol at a station on Lang Street, Ha Noi's Dong Da District. A lack of strict management within the petrol and steel markets is said to be a primary cause for the violations taking place in these sectors. — VNA/VNS Photo Minh Dong

HA NOI — A lack of strict management on the petrol and steel markets is said to be a primary cause of the violations taking place in these sectors, according to the Government Inspectorate.

Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung has approved the Government Inspectorate's recommendations for State management of imports and exports to achieve stabilisation in the petrol and steel markets.

Speaking at a press conference in Ha Noi on Tuesday, deputy chief of the Government Inspectorate Nguyen Van San said that the Ministry of Industry and Trade (MOIT) had not closely co-ordinated with provincial People's Committees and industrial park management boards, leading to ineffective investment.

San said the ministry had been slow to withdraw automatic import licences. He added that these have contributed to a high inventory level of steel, which, in turn, has affected business operations and caused banks to retract capital.

The Government Inspectorate said the ministry has not accurately reported the amount of imported steel and their control over market stabilisation on steel products for the Viet Nam Steel Corporation is limited.

The report showed that in 2008 alone, the corporation's profits reduced by VND600 billion (US$30.7 million), while profits at the Thai Nguyen Steel Company dropped by more than VND200 billion ($10.2 million).

The Government Inspectorate attributes this to the fact that the ministry had not taken strict measures to prevent the situation—it did not establish an inspection team on steel production and business activities.

Violations

The inspectors said the ministry did not carry out an inspection of petrol businesses, and thus did not follow the Inspection Law's Decree 55 on petrol business inspection.

MOIT granted business registration licences to 11 import firms but did not punish businesses that imported less petroleum than the stipulated minimum import quota.

In the 2008-09 period, six businesses violated the regulations with the lowest rate at 46 per cent.

The Government Inspectorate also discovered that the Transport Construction Company and the Truong Son Construction Company exported over 121 tonnes of petrol to Cambodia without permission from the ministry in 2009. The lack of investigation and punishment has led to increasing fraud in the sector. The Market Watch Department uncovered over 14,000 cases in 38 provinces and settled over 2,600 violations.

Inspectors added that the co-ordination between MOIT and the General Customs Department in controlling petrol export activities had not been effective, leading to exports of 100,000 tonnes of petrol without reports to the ministry.

They also pointed out the ministry's shortcomings in monitoring the operations of the Dung Quat Oil Refinery, which has resulted in a lack of transparency in business and State budget's receipts.

MOIT was asked to review and evaluate distribution systems to map out a complete development plan for the import of construction steel.

Banks' wrongdoings

Ngo Van Khanh, director of the Government Inspection's general affairs inspection department said that in the third quarter of the year, Government inspectors checked the interest rate-subsidised lending of five commercial banks: Military Bank (MB), Viet Nam International Commercial Joint Stock Bank (VIB), Asia Commercial Bank (ACB), Sai Gon Thuong Tin Commercial Joint Stock Bank (Sacombank) and Technological and Commercial Joint Stock Bank (Techcombank).

All the five banks had violated Decision No 131/2009/QD-TTg regulating procedures for granting short-term loans, Khanh said.

The lending period was restricted to the second quarter of 2009, but some banks expanded the period and other banks lent to those who were unqualified to received the subsidy, Khanh said.

State Bank Governor Nguyen van Giau said that banks had to correct their faults by recalling loans provided to unqualified customers. Khanh said that the MB was reclaiming money from 22 wrong customers from the 26 to whom they lent. — VNS

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Tuesday, January 4, 2011

State-owned sector fails as economic spearhead

Many SOEs hiding bankruptcy-threatening losses



A representative from Electricity of Vietnam collects the monthly payment from a household in Ho Chi Minh City. Experts have questioned the government’s strategy that gives state-owned enterprises the leading role in the economy.

The government should rethink its strategy of having state-owned enterprises (SOEs) lead the economy since they are not making contributions proportionate to resources invested in them, economists say.

Economist Pham Chi Lan said it has been wrong for the government to give SOEs the leading role in implementing its social and economic goals.

Lan said the government has indulged the sector with incentive policies in land, capital and monopolistic control in important industries like electricity and national resource exploration, but it has shown to be ineffective.

She said surveys had shown that the sector has created less jobs and benefits for the state budget than the non-state sector, and instead inflicted major losses through corruption and state asset appropriation by SOE leaders. The sector has also failed to make competitive products for the country.

The number of SOEs has reduced from 12,000 to 1,500 units over the last 20 years, and the main state-run enterprises are now key corporations like PetroVietnam, Vietnam Airlines, Vinashin, Electricity of Vietnam, Vietnam National Coal and Mineral Industries Group, and Vietnam Posts and Telecommunications Group.

Nguyen Dinh Cung, head of Central Institute for Economic Management, said SOEs have been assigned to use almost all the national resources but contributed less than 20 percent to the country’s annual exports, 20 percent to the state budget and accounted for just one third of the national gross domestic product.

Cung said the sector has suffered major losses for years and Vinashin, the shipbuilder that piled up VND86 trillion (US$4.4 billion) in debts compared to its total assets of over VND104 trillion, was an example. Five senior leaders of the shipbuilding corporation, including chairman Pham Thanh Binh, have been arrested.

Other economists said many SOEs have “hidden” big losses that threaten them with bankruptcy, like Vinashin.

Former Minister of Trade Truong Dinh Tuyen said many SOEs have expanded to other fields besides their core businesses, but weak management and strategies led to unsuccessful results.

Tuyen said leaders of the corporation and government officials had such “close” relationships that they were able to “distort” regulations and rules in an attempt to benefit them and cause losses to their competitors.

Economist Le Dang Doanh said SOE leaders are promoted unfairly, while talented but nonparty members are disqualified for promotions in the enterprises. Supervision was also ineffective because boards were set up by the leaders themselves, he said.

No exceptions

While the economists conceded that the state sector is an essential part of the national economy that helps the government achieve its social and economic goals, they said its inefficiencies are dragging the economy down.

They said the government has to change its policies toward the state-owned sector because it was threatening sustainable growth of the country.

Private and foreign sectors have contributed a major part to the country’s economic growth of 6 to 7 percent for years through yearly increases in exports, they said, adding that in contrast, SOEs have contributed to a bigger trade deficit by importing machinery.

Economist Nguyen Quang A said the ownership of SOEs, which accounts for half of the country’s total investments, should be restructured.

He said the government should retain state ownership of businesses involved in national security and public services while others undergo equitization.

Doanh said the national economy needed new mechanisms in governance which ensures a level playing field for state and non-state firms. The government should also allocate national resources and give support like allowing other businesses, not just SOEs, to issue bonds abroad.

The non-state sector should also benefit from foreign aid. No exception should be given to any business, said Doanh.

Vo Dai Luoc, director of Vietnam Asia-Pacific Economic Center said SOEs have been part of national development in developed and developing countries, but generally, governments supported businesses irrespective of their ownership.

Keiko Kubota, senior economist with the World Bank, said SOEs should be supervised through regular reports that they are required to put out. They also have to improve corporate governance.

Kubota said the government should constrain economic groups and large SOEs to areas that require technological upgrading and skills development in order to avoid sectoral losses.

Nguyen Quang A said the government has erred in introducing policies to develop SOEs without effective strategies to make them a strong pillar of the economy. Economists have for several years predicted and warned the government of the consequences of this approach.

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State-owned sector fails as economic spearhead

Many SOEs hiding bankruptcy-threatening losses



A representative from Electricity of Vietnam collects the monthly payment from a household in Ho Chi Minh City. Experts have questioned the government’s strategy that gives state-owned enterprises the leading role in the economy.

The government should rethink its strategy of having state-owned enterprises (SOEs) lead the economy since they are not making contributions proportionate to resources invested in them, economists say.

Economist Pham Chi Lan said it has been wrong for the government to give SOEs the leading role in implementing its social and economic goals.

Lan said the government has indulged the sector with incentive policies in land, capital and monopolistic control in important industries like electricity and national resource exploration, but it has shown to be ineffective.

She said surveys had shown that the sector has created less jobs and benefits for the state budget than the non-state sector, and instead inflicted major losses through corruption and state asset appropriation by SOE leaders. The sector has also failed to make competitive products for the country.

The number of SOEs has reduced from 12,000 to 1,500 units over the last 20 years, and the main state-run enterprises are now key corporations like PetroVietnam, Vietnam Airlines, Vinashin, Electricity of Vietnam, Vietnam National Coal and Mineral Industries Group, and Vietnam Posts and Telecommunications Group.

Nguyen Dinh Cung, head of Central Institute for Economic Management, said SOEs have been assigned to use almost all the national resources but contributed less than 20 percent to the country’s annual exports, 20 percent to the state budget and accounted for just one third of the national gross domestic product.

Cung said the sector has suffered major losses for years and Vinashin, the shipbuilder that piled up VND86 trillion (US$4.4 billion) in debts compared to its total assets of over VND104 trillion, was an example. Five senior leaders of the shipbuilding corporation, including chairman Pham Thanh Binh, have been arrested.

Other economists said many SOEs have “hidden” big losses that threaten them with bankruptcy, like Vinashin.

Former Minister of Trade Truong Dinh Tuyen said many SOEs have expanded to other fields besides their core businesses, but weak management and strategies led to unsuccessful results.

Tuyen said leaders of the corporation and government officials had such “close” relationships that they were able to “distort” regulations and rules in an attempt to benefit them and cause losses to their competitors.

Economist Le Dang Doanh said SOE leaders are promoted unfairly, while talented but nonparty members are disqualified for promotions in the enterprises. Supervision was also ineffective because boards were set up by the leaders themselves, he said.

No exceptions

While the economists conceded that the state sector is an essential part of the national economy that helps the government achieve its social and economic goals, they said its inefficiencies are dragging the economy down.

They said the government has to change its policies toward the state-owned sector because it was threatening sustainable growth of the country.

Private and foreign sectors have contributed a major part to the country’s economic growth of 6 to 7 percent for years through yearly increases in exports, they said, adding that in contrast, SOEs have contributed to a bigger trade deficit by importing machinery.

Economist Nguyen Quang A said the ownership of SOEs, which accounts for half of the country’s total investments, should be restructured.

He said the government should retain state ownership of businesses involved in national security and public services while others undergo equitization.

Doanh said the national economy needed new mechanisms in governance which ensures a level playing field for state and non-state firms. The government should also allocate national resources and give support like allowing other businesses, not just SOEs, to issue bonds abroad.

The non-state sector should also benefit from foreign aid. No exception should be given to any business, said Doanh.

Vo Dai Luoc, director of Vietnam Asia-Pacific Economic Center said SOEs have been part of national development in developed and developing countries, but generally, governments supported businesses irrespective of their ownership.

Keiko Kubota, senior economist with the World Bank, said SOEs should be supervised through regular reports that they are required to put out. They also have to improve corporate governance.

Kubota said the government should constrain economic groups and large SOEs to areas that require technological upgrading and skills development in order to avoid sectoral losses.

Nguyen Quang A said the government has erred in introducing policies to develop SOEs without effective strategies to make them a strong pillar of the economy. Economists have for several years predicted and warned the government of the consequences of this approach.

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Thursday, December 9, 2010

Vietnamese inflation quickened in September to 8.92 pct

Vietnamese inflation quickened in September to 8.92 pctVietnamese inflation accelerated for the first time in six months as food and education costs rose, signaling the government may have less scope to push for lower lending rates to bolster the economy.

Consumer prices climbed 8.92 percent in September from a year earlier, compared with an 8.18 percent advance in August, according to figures released Friday by the General Statistics Office in Hanoi. The reading is the highest since May. Prices rose 1.31 percent in September from the previous month.

Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung’s government is targeting a 25 percent expansion in credit this year and 6.5 percent economic growth, even as inflation has held above its 8 percent goal for eight consecutive months. Today’s data may fan concerns that the drive to increase loans and a recent devaluation of the dong conflict with price stability.

The latest inflation figure is “surprisingly high, even though we had expected greater price pressures this month as the effect of the dong’s devaluation kicked in and world commodity prices rose,” Hai Pham, a Singapore-based analyst at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd., said in a note. “We are concerned about high inflation becoming more entrenched in the coming months.”

The State Bank of Vietnam weakened the dong’s reference exchange rate by 2 percent last month, citing the need to narrow the trade deficit.

‘Weak currency’

The dong traded at 19,490 per dollar at 1 p.m. in Hanoi from 19,099 before the devaluation was announced. The Ho Chi Minh City Stock Exchange’s VN Index fell 0.2 percent today to 449.71, and is down 9.1 percent this year.

“Vietnam’s expansionary fiscal and monetary policy are resulting in a weak currency and high inflation,” said Jonathan Pincus, a Ho Chi Minh City-based economist with the Vietnam Program at the Harvard Kennedy School. “Unless we see evidence of tighter policy, we would expect prices to continue to rise.”

The government has been urging commercial lenders to cut loan rates. The central bank said this month short-term lending rates in dong ranged from 12 percent to 15 percent, and that credit growth reached 16.3 percent in the first eight months of 2010 from the end of last year.

While the government is concerned that high lending rates could affect industrial activity, “premature” monetary loosening may cause a “deterioration” in the trade deficit and boost inflation, the International Monetary Fund said in a report this month.

Overall food prices gained 10.81 percent in September from a year earlier, while costs in a category including rice advanced 14.01 percent, today’s report showed. Education prices jumped 15.56 percent from a year ago, and surged 12.02 percent from August.

“The lofty rise in education” largely reflects an increase in tuition costs as well as back-to-school spending, Matt Hildebrandt, a Singapore-based economist at JPMorgan Chase & Co., said in a note.

Economic growth may reach 6.7 percent this year, exceeding the government’s target, Deputy Minister of Planning and Investment Cao Viet Sinh said on Sept. 17.

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Sunday, December 5, 2010

Refinery lands 1b USD loan package

PetroVietnam has obtained 1 billion USD in financing for the Dung Quat
Oil Refinery, the Ministry of Finance announced on Sept. 23.


The Vietnam Development Bank will co-ordinate the financing package,
which includes 700 million USD from Government bond proceeds and the
remainder from French bank BNP Paribas, which is extending credit for
the deal through 2020 at an annual interest rate of 3.3 percent,
following a four-year grace period.


PetroVietnam
will borrow the bond proceeds for a 16-year term at a fixed interest
rate of 3.6 percent, following four year's grace.


The ministry has authorised Citibank's Trust Agency in New York to
collect interest on the 700 million USD loan made from Government bond
proceeds, while the Ministry of Finance will make interest payments
directly to BNP Paribas.


The financing will be
allocated to the Dung Quat Oil Refinery Plant No 1, which began
operating at 100 percent production capacity last month. The plant has
imported 5.7 million tonnes of crude oil and processed nearly 5 million
tonnes so far, delivering over 4.7 million tonnes of refined products to
market.


In order to ensure repayment, Circular No
114/2010/TT-BTC issued by the ministry late Sept. 23 requires
PetroVietnam to give highest priority to servicing the loans under this
package. If it falls past due, the Ministry of Finance will require
other lenders to freeze existing and further credit to the oil giant.


The ministry is preparing further risk-provision plans
to ensure repayment of the 1 billion USD debt at maturity and is
guaranteeing ultimate repayment from the State budget.


However, following the recent troubles of debt-laden shipbuilder
Vinashin, PetroVietnam was expected to set an example as the best
economic group in Vietnam.


Last week, the
Government instructed the Ministry of Finance to consider Vinashin's
request for 300 million USD in Government bond proceeds to service its
debt to French bank Natixis.


If this proposal is
approved, the 1 billion USD in capital raised by Vietnam's second
overseas sale of Government bonds – offering higher yields than the
lower-rated Philippines and Indonesia – would go to Vinashin and
PetroVietnam.


The bonds were expected to offer a yield of 6.95 percent and a nominal interest rate of 6.75 percent.


The bond sale was originally conceived to provide capital for energy
and infrastructure projects that would support growth in an economy
suffering from a shortage of foreign exchange./.

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Saturday, December 4, 2010

Refinery lands $1 bln loan package

PetroVietnam has obtained US$1 billion in financing for the Dung Quat Oil Refinery, the Ministry of Finance announced Thursday

The Vietnam Development Bank will co-ordinate the financing package, which includes $700 million from Government bond proceeds and the remainder from French bank BNP Paribas, which is extending credit for the deal through 2020 at an annual interest rate of 3.3 percent, following a four-year grace period.

PetroVietnam will borrow the bond proceeds for a 16-year term at a fixed interest rate of 3.6 percent, following four year's grace.

The ministry has authorised Citibank's Trust Agency in New York to collect interest on the $700 million loan made from Government bond proceeds, while the Ministry of Finance will make interest payments directly to BNP Paribas.

The financing will be allocated to the Dung Quat Oil Refinery Plant No 1, which began operating at 100 percent production capacity last month. The plant has imported 5.7 million tonnes of crude oil and processed nearly 5 million tonnes so far, delivering over 4.7 million tonnes of refined products to market.

In order to ensure repayment, Circular No 114/2010/TT-BTC issued by the ministry late Sept. 23 requires PetroVietnam to give highest priority to servicing the loans under this package. If it falls past due, the Ministry of Finance will require other lenders to freeze existing and further credit to the oil giant.

The ministry is preparing further risk-provision plans to ensure repayment of the $1 billion debt at maturity and is guaranteeing ultimate repayment from the State budget.

However, following the recent troubles of debt-laden shipbuilder Vinashin, PetroVietnam was expected to set an example as the best economic group in Vietnam.

Last week, the Government instructed the Ministry of Finance to consider Vinashin's request for $300 million in Government bond proceeds to service its debt to French bank Natixis.

If this proposal is approved, the $1 billion in capital raised by Vietnam's second overseas sale of Government bonds – offering higher yields than the lower-rated Philippines and Indonesia – would go to Vinashin and PetroVietnam.

The bonds were expected to offer a yield of 6.95 percent and a nominal interest rate of 6.75 percent.

The bond sale was originally conceived to provide capital for energy and infrastructure projects that would support growth in an economy suffering from a shortage of foreign exchange.

 

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Friday, December 3, 2010

Government promotes e-bidding

The Son La Hydropower Plant is being built with public investment. The newly introduced online bidding process is expected to help the Goverment save money and increase the efficiency of public investment projects. — VNA/VNS Photo Huy Hung

The Son La Hydropower Plant is being built with public investment. The newly introduced online bidding process is expected to help the Goverment save money and increase the efficiency of public investment projects. — VNA/VNS Photo Huy Hung

HA NOI — Ministries, ministerial-level agencies, localities and enterprises nationwide are encouraged to take part in the trial project of an online bidding application so as to improve their operation efficiency and raise the popularity of the method , according to a conference held by the Ministry of Planning and Investment on Wednesday.

Deputy Minister Dang Huy Dong said that the trial programme proves the Government's determination to boost transparency and fight corruption during the bidding process, and increase the efficiency of public investment projects.

Le Van Tang, director of the Bidding Management Department, said that every year, the Government had to spend a lot of money, effort and time to buy goods and services for public interests.

Applying e-bidding would help save costs and time for the Government and furthermore, promote healthy competition among enterprises, Tang said.

Online bidding would facilitate enterprises' ability to access information and minimise the provision of wrong information because both buyers and sellers will have to comply with a procedure automatically part of the e-bidding system.

Tang emphasised that "the direct contact between project owners and bidders is unnecessary and it also means that there is no opportunity for corruption."

Online bidding moves to trial stage

Online bidding will be implemented on a trial basis starting on September 15 at three State organisations, namely the Ha Noi People's Committee, the Viet Nam Post and Telecommunications Group, and the Electricity of Viet Nam Group. Under Circular 17/2010/TT-BKH, issued by the Ministry of Planning and Investment, that has been in effect since last Wednesday, the trial online bidding will be applied to consulting services, goods procurement, and construction packages.

Each of the three organizations will put forth at least five goods procurements, three consulting services, three construction packages for competitive bidding.

Both the bidder and the bid organiser will have to register on the website http://muasamcong.mpi.gov.vn in order to participate and receive a digital identity code.

All electronic documents with the digital signatures of the representatives made via the online system will have the same legal value as the paper-based documents. — VNS

Online bidding would stimulate ministries and agencies to invest further in information technology infrastructure and develop electronic transactions, Tang said. This is also a significant step in the process of developing e-Government.

Deputy General Director of the Viet Nam Post and Telecommunications Group To Manh Cuong said that VNPT was planning to invite bids for 12 projects for consulting services, goods procurement and construction and will ask its subsidiaries to do the same. Cuong believed that with the group's IT network and the abilities of its staff, the online bidding process would be carried out smoothly.

Le Thiet Hung, deputy director of the Project Management Board under Ha Noi's People's Committee, said that the policy was very necessary as it would save time and cut down paper usage.

He said that the project should have been implemented earlier, but it was not too late to start now. Tang also worried that the current nationwide information technology infrastructure had not been well developed and that many problems relating to security and tranmission lines could arise.

However, Tang said the IT system was not the biggest problem, but that the greatest obstacle lay in the determination of investors because bidding over the Internet could harm the "benefits" to some people. Officials at all levels had to change their way of thinking and working so that the modern bidding method could comfortably replace the traditional one, Tang added.

According to Tang, the Ministry will collaborate with related authorities in the near future to provide training courses, increase staff abilities, complete legal frameworks and intensify the examination and supervision of bidding activities.

The Government targeted to open the bid for 15-20 per cent of total projects using State capital. — VNS

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Friday, October 22, 2010

Drastic measure planned to boost public investment management

Cua Viet Bridge, which was built from the State budget, is one of the key projects for central Quang Tri Province's socio-economic development strategy. The Government is expected to improve its public investment management with drastic measures and mechanisms. — VNA/VNS Photo Ho Cau<br /><br />

Cua Viet Bridge, which was built from the State budget, is one of the key projects for central Quang Tri Province's socio-economic development strategy. The Government is expected to improve its public investment management with drastic measures and mechanisms. — VNA/VNS Photo Ho Cau

HA NOI — The Vietnamese Government is to implement drastic measures and transparent mechanisms to improve its public investment management, international participants at a seminar in Ha Noi yesterday were advised.

The Government would focus on improving its policies and structures on investment management, especially regarding State funded projects, the head of the Planning and Investment Ministry (MPI)'s External Economy Department, Ho Quang Minh told the participants.

The seminar was held to share international experiences in public management and help Viet Nam learn lessons from other countries in the field.

To improve the effectiveness of public investment, said Minh, the government was speeding up the completion of guidelines related to investment management. The policies and mechanics on consulting, supervising and managing of publicly invested projects will be improved to make the processes more transparent, according to Minh.

According to MPI statistics, around VND286 trillion (US$14.6 billion) was spent on public investment during the 2001-05 period, accounting for more than 23 per cent of the total investment in all social fields. Total expenditure is expected to rise to VND739 trillion (nearly $37.9 billion), accounting for more than 24 per cent of total investment, during the 2010-15 period. That means huge investment from the State budget on the public projects and targeted programmes, according to the MPI.

It is vital to have efficient management to make the most effective use of investment. The Government therefore needs to have proper measures and policies to ensure national investment funding is effectively used.

Viet Nam had a high rate of public investment, throughout a wide range of different fields, accounting for nearly 40 per cent of the nation's gross domestic production, Martin Rama, head of the World Bank's East Asia Development office, told the seminar.

There were, however, weaknesses in many of the country's investment fields, said Rama, the bank's lead economist, who pointed out the drawbacks in public investment at the meeting. Regional development as a component of the comprehensive investment plan had not received adequate attention and a strategic environment evaluation had not been completed to determine key fields for investment, said Rama.

Decentralisation has resulted in inefficiencies and an overlapping in the public investment management, according to the bank's economist.

Sharing the South Korean experiences in economic renovation, head of the Public and Private Infrastructure Management Centre of the country's Development Institute Kim Jay-hyung said he agreed with the Vietnamese Government's plan which would see investment project assessment at both central and local levels.

The Vietnamese Government would adopt comprehensive measures when assigning responsibilities to relevant authorities and investors based on the grade of the project, said Minh. The works on assessment, supervision and inspection will be improved while ineffective projects and investment funds which did not meet the requirements of the comprehensive plan reviewed, according to Minh. — VNS

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Friday, October 15, 2010

Vietnam 2010 inflation may stay below 7 pct

investment

HANOI - Vietnam's inflation rate this year may stay below 7 percent, below earlier government and World Bank forecasts, state-run newspaper quoted a government minister on Tuesday as saying.

Industry and Trade Minister Vu Huy Hoang said keeping the annual inflation at below 7 percent was "fully feasible" if the industrial sector expands 13-14 percent a month between now and year-end, the Lao Dong newspaper reported.

With such monthly growth, the sector would make a significant contribution to Vietnam's economic growth, expected at between 6.5-6.7 percent this year, Hoang told a ministry meeting to review performance in the first eight months of 2010.

In May Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung raised the government's inflation target for this year to 8 percent from 7 percent, and said the central bank will increase liquidity in the economy by boosting money supply.

Forecasts released early this year by the Asian Development Bank placed Vietnam's 2010 inflation at 10 percent while the World Bank projected a 9 percent consumer price increase.

The monthly consumer price index in January-August rose an average 8.61 percent from a year ago, while annual inflation in August eased to 8.18 percent from 8.19 percent in July and 8.69 percent in June, government statistics show.

Last Wednesday a state media report quoted Nguyen Tien Thoa, head of the Finance Ministry-run Price Management Department, as saying full-year inflation could be as low as 7 percent.

Hoang urged businesses to pay more attention to expanding retail sales in order to stabilize domestic markets in the remaining months of this year and avoid unexpected price changes caused by intermediaries, Lao Dong said.

Experts said a central bank devaluation of the dong last month did not affect the country's consumer price index.

On Aug 18 the central bank cut the dong exchange rate by around 2 percent against the dollar, saying the move was to help control the trade gap.

The Vietnamese government has also projected inflation next year at around 7 percent and the economic growth at 7.5 percent.

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Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Four more detained at debt-laden shipbuilder

HCMC – Ministry of Public Security police have arrested four more former senior executives of the debt-laden shipbuilding giant Vinashin in a high-profile mismanagement case, according to a statement of the ministry.

The statement, which was posted on the Government site at about 3:30 p.m. last Friday, half an hour after Lt. Gen. Hoang Kong Tu, chief investigator of the ministry, called a news conference in Hanoi, says the four are accused of intentionally violating state regulations causing serious consequences.

Tran Quang Vu – who succeeded Pham Thanh Binh as general director of Vinashin shortly after the Party Central Committee’s Commission for Inspection proposed disciplining the then chairman and general director Binh over mismanagement two months ago – is among the four put into police custody last Friday for interrogation.

Late last month Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung signed a decision suspending Vu from the board of directors of the state-owned Vietnam Shipbuilding Industry Group (Vinashin) and asking the board to suspend him from the post of general director.

Tran Van Liem, another board member and chief controller who was also suspended by the Government leader, is the second to be arrested. The other two are Nguyen Van Tuyen, ex-general director of Hoang Anh Shipbuilding Industry Co. Ltd., and Nguyen Tuan Duong, ex-chairman of Cuu Long Investment Co.

The Ministry of Public Security statement says clues were uncovered during the probe into Pham Thanh Binh, who was arrested in Hanoi early last month over intentional violations of State rules on economic management which caused serious consequences and put Vinashin on the brink of bankruptcy. Vinashin’s total debt is VND86 trillion (about US$4.5 billion) while its combined assets are VND104 trillion.

The clues indicate the Prime Minister’s instructions had not been strictly implemented and violations of regulations on economic management causing serious consequences committed in connection with the purchase of a secondhand Italian-built ship locally known as Hoa Sen, the development of Song Hong power station and the sale of a mortgage asset by Nam Trieu Shipbuilding Industry Corporation (Nasico).

Tran Quang Vu, while serving as Nasico CEO, was aware that the Government did not allow the buying of used vessels but he and the then Vinashin chairman Binh approved a plan to convert Bach Dang Giang ship, which Vinashin had bought for steel, into a floating hotel.

Vu used the ship as collateral to borrow VND105 billion from Vinashin Finance Co. with funding coming from an international Government bond sale. But finding that the vessel could not be converted, Vu ordered its dismantlement for steel scrap without seeking consent from Vinashin leadership and reporting to Vinashin Finance.

The money gained from the sale of the steel scrap was not returned to Vinashin Finance, according to the ministry’s statement.

Tran Van Liem was assigned by Binh to oversee the project to buy Hoa Sen ship but he did not organize a competitive tender. Even worse, he signed the purchase contract before the project was formulated, and no technical inspection was done before delivery, the acts that went against a Government decree on ship buying.

Nguyen Van Tuyen of Hoang Anh Shipbuilding Industry Co. Ltd., and Nguyen Tuan Duong of Cuu Long Investment Co., together with Pham Thanh Binh, decided to build Song Hong power plant in Nam Dinh Province though they all knew the Government had not permitted it.

Tuyen and Duong bought equipment made in the 1960s from two old power stations in South Korea which stopped generation in 2004, including transformers containing a toxin which was banned from export by South Korea and prohibited from import by Vietnam.

The two even used falsified documentation in the name of the ministries of Natural Resources and Environment, and Industry and Trade to facilitate the import of the equipment.

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Saturday, October 9, 2010

EVN told to start talks for long-term power import

HCMC – Deputy Prime Minister Hoang Trung Hai has asked the Electricity of Vietnam (EVN) Group to start talks over a long-term contract to import power from China as well as from other regional countries.

In a document issued by the Government’s Office on Tuesday, the Government ordered that EVN buy power from China during 2010-2015 via the 110-kilovolt and 220-kilovolt power lines. EVN was told to report to the Government the progress of negotiations for power purchase by October this year.

EVN was also instructed to do a feasibility study for a plan to set up the 500-kilovolt power transmission line connecting Vietnam and China, and submit the feasibility study to the Government no later than next January.

In addition, the Government also asked EVN to execute projects that had been approved for building the power link between regional countries as well as to complete procedures for starting work on Duyen Hai 3 Thermoelectric Plant this year.

The deputy prime minister asked the Ministry of Industry and Trade to complete mapping out the national master plan for power development for the next period in September.

According to the document, Vietnam is accelerating projects to tap hydropower sources in Laos and Cambodia as well as hastening construction of a common power line between Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia.

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Tuesday, October 5, 2010

India tells Google, Skype to set up local servers

google
Photo: AFP

NEW DELHI - India told Google and Skype on Wednesday that they must set up servers in the country to allow law enforcers to screen traffic, as it widened its security offensive on Internet communications firms.

The government has already told the maker of the BlackBerry smartphone, Research in Motion (RIM), that it must set up a server in India to allow security forces to intercept the phone's encrypted messaging system.

"We have made this clear to other companies" that they must do the same, Home Secretary G.K. Pillai said.

He added that notices were being dispatched to Google, which uses powerful encryption technology for its Gmail email service, and Skype, the Internet phone provider.

"All people who operate communication services in India should have a server in India," Pillai told a news conference. "This applies to all."

The government's statements came two days after it gave BlackBerry a two-month window to provide a way to read the smartphone's corporate email and messenger chatting services, or face a shutdown of the core functions of the phone.

Finnish mobile phone giant Nokia, a key BlackBerry rival, has already acceded to the government's demands, announcing this week it would set up a server in India by early November to give security forces access to data carried by its smartphones.

India's government, battling multiple insurgencies in areas from Kashmir in the northwest to the remote northeast, is worried that militants could use encrypted services to coordinate attacks.

"It is basically a debate between public security versus the privacy of citizens," Nareshchandra Singh, principal research analyst at Gartner global consultancy, told AFP.

"It is my belief that the upper hand is with security rather than privacy and the government will have to draw a fine line," Singh said.

Home ministry officials say Skype, which uses Voice-Over-Internet-Protocol (VOIP) technology to send calls over the Internet, poses a difficulty for the domestic intelligence services.

"It is very difficult to track communications on VOIP, especially if the servers are not within India," Gartner's Singh said.

BlackBerry's reprieve came after the government said the smartphone's Canadian maker had made proposals to give security forces "lawful access" to messages carried on the handsets.

The government began testing RIMs monitoring proposals on Wednesday to assess their effectiveness.

"Discussions with BlackBerry are still continuing. We have given them 60 days' time" to find a complete solution to government demands for access, Home Secretary Pillai said.

India, which has the world's fastest-growing number of mobile users, is a key market for BlackBerry, which has 1.1 million customers in the country.

BlackBerry has become a global market leader in the smartphone sector thanks to its heavy encryption, and analysts say any compromise with the Indian government could damage its popularity with its high-profile clientele.

RIM is already facing threats to its dominance in the smartphone segment from other feature-rich rivals globally, such as Apple.

But its reputedly impenetrable data protection has also raised a chorus of security concerns from governments in the Middle East and elsewhere.

The Times of India reported Wednesday that the reprieve for BlackBerry resulted from the flood of international visitors expected for the Commonwealth Games in New Delhi next month, as well as US President Barack Obama's planned visit in November, rather than any breakthrough in talks with the company.

The blackout of BlackBerry's core features would have disrupted communications for the two events, the newspaper said, adding there would be more talks with RIM before Obama's visit.

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Sunday, October 3, 2010

Gov’t determined to pursue express railway project

Vinashin leaders suspended over alleged irregularities

HANOI – The Government has reiterated its intention to press ahead with a controversial big-ticket project to build the country’s first express railway linking the two biggest cities, Hanoi and HCMC, but two priority stretches will be studied first.

“(Vietnam) cannot help having a second north-south (express) railway after the existing one,” Minister of Transport Ho Nghia Dung told reporters in Hanoi on Tuesday, days after news reports said the project had resumed though the National Assembly disapproved of it two months ago.

Dung said the project should start with the reservation of land for a dozen years later but when the Government would forward the project to the legislature for approval remained unknown because it would take years to collect as sufficient data as needed.


Local media has in recent days reported that the ministry was considering developing the first two sections of the cross-country railway, with one connecting Hanoi and Vinh and the other linking HCMC and Nha Trang, instead of the whole line worth around US$56 billion as originally proposed.

The Government approved in principle a proposal on July 23 to allow the ministry and the Vietnam Railways Corporation to get technical assistance and grants from the Japanese government to conduct a feasibility study for the two said sections and that for a rail line between Hanoi and Noi Bai International Airport.

“This is a feasibility study and it will take three to four years to finish before it goes before the National Assembly,” said the transport minister.

He went on to say that the Government had found it necessary to study the project to make clear the points questioned by National Assembly duties during their meeting in Hanoi in June, including scale, time frame, efficiency and financial viability.

There is concern that once Vietnam receives Japanese grants to do the feasibility study, it will have no choice but to opt for Japanese contractors and technology suppliers. Minister Dung, however, said, “We will reserve the right to choose technology and contractors.”

But Japan is now Vietnam’s largest bilateral aid donor and its aid normally goes to key social and economic infrastructure.

* Regarding the recent suspension of Vinashin general director Tran Quang Vu and chief controller Tran Van Liem, Minister Dung said investigators had found the two committing violations.

The police had asked the Government to suspend them to facilitate a probe into their alleged irregularities, he said.

Explaining why the suspension came less than two months after Vu was picked for the job, Dung said the unripe selection of Vu for the post of general director at Vinashin resulted from a crisis situation in which Pham Thanh Binh was removed from the posts of chairman and general director.

The Vinashin board is undergoing a gradual revamp, he said.

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Saturday, October 2, 2010

Vietnam 2010 GDP to grow 6.7 pct, beating target: gov’t

Vietnam 2010 GDP to grow 6.7 pct, beating target: gov’tVietnam's economy is expected to grow 6.7 percent this year, beating a government growth target of 6.5 percent, the government said.

The economic growth would accelerate to 7.18 percent in the third quarter ending September from a year ago, from an annual growth of 6.4 percent in the second quarter, it said.

"The GDP growth in the third and the fourth quarters of 2010 will be higher than the growth rate in the first and the second quarters as domestic production has gathered growth momentum and global trade is rising rapidly," the government said in a statement issued late on Tuesday.

The National Assembly, the parliament, has initially targeted economic growth this year at 6.5 percent, rising from 6.32 percent in 2009.

The growth forecasts were released at a monthly cabinet meeting ending on Tuesday, at which the government set a growth target of 7.5 percent for 2011, the statement said.

The target for next year needs approval from the National Assembly, which will review next year's projections during a month-long autumn session starting on Oct. 20.

Vietnam's industrial output between January and August rose 13.7 percent from a year ago to 69.51 trillion dong ($3.58 billion), more than doubling the annual expansion in the first eight months of 2009, government statistics show.

The Vietnamese government has projected average annual economic expansion of between 7.5 percent and 8.5 percent over the five years from 2011, local media reported in July.

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Thursday, September 30, 2010

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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