Showing posts with label support. Show all posts
Showing posts with label support. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Businesses can do more with support: economist

Vietnamese firms have come through the global economic crisis well and can achieve more with support from the government, economist Pham Chi Lan said.

Lan, a former member of the Prime Minister’s Research Commission, told Tuoi Tre that though the number of businesses in the country rose 12.5 times from 40,000 to 500,000 between 1990 and 1999, the change in political and social perception about their roles only started five years ago, five years after the Enterprise Law too effect.

What is the contribution of Vietnamese entrepreneurs?

Since October 13 has been chosen as the national day for them and not for business in general, it is clear that Vietnam has started to recognize their contributions. The number of businesses, at around six per 1,000 population, is still small compared to other countries where the average rate is 19 per 1,000 people in low-income nations and 29 per 1,000 in middle-income countries.

The fact that more than 1 million jobs have been created, mainly in the private sector, is enough to show the undeniable contributions of Vietnamese entrepreneurs. During the crisis, the number of enterprises going bankrupt and the percentage of workers laid off were very small, making Vietnam one of a handful of countries enjoying positive growth rate during the period.

What kept our businesses afloat during the economic downturn?

It was the national campaign to promote the consumption of domestically-made goods.

But the main problem is that in the campaign policymakers just paid attention to the tip of the iceberg by calling for consumer patriotism and developing the distribution system.

The more important part, support for businesses to adopt global technological and management advances to cut costs and improve quality and packaging, has yet to receive attention.

What are main shortcomings of Vietnamese businesses and entrepreneurs?

Though many Vietnamese entrepreneurs are competent at doing business, they are desperately short of capital.

Since Vietnam does not have enough resources for all, it is allocating most of the resources to state conglomerates. So Vietnam should consider this more carefully so that capital will be redirected to those who operate the most efficiently.

Another problem is that a large part of our resources is channeled into the real-estate and stock markets and not manufacturing due to our administrative system, legal framework, and policy making. So our policymakers are still playing catch-up with the market and not moving ahead of it.

Are the existing incentives enough to promote Vietnamese goods at home?

There are a lot of incentives but they have little effect.

For example, the 15 measures the government announced to support development of small and medium-sized enterprises in 2006-2010 … A survey by the Central Institute for Economic Management found that only 12 of them have been implemented.

[However] even the measures have had little effect since there are only nine municipal credit guarantee funds for small and medium-sized enterprises in the country’s 63 provinces and cities, with just three actually operational.

There are too many policies that require a large number of guiding documents. So the most practical solution is to focus on the implementation and effectiveness of each policy.

To back Vietnamese businesses, what areas should policies focus on?

Dominating the domestic market and then expanding to the global market needs outstanding quality at reasonable prices. So the application of technological advances is the key.

Though we claim that research and development is a priority, the Ministry of Science and Technology returns hundreds of billions of dong [meant for research] to the budget every year since. The research projects receiving ministry funding are also impractical.

So the system should be changed and funding should go directly to businesses who want to take drastic action for their survival.

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Businesses can do more with support: economist

Vietnamese firms have come through the global economic crisis well and can achieve more with support from the government, economist Pham Chi Lan said.

Lan, a former member of the Prime Minister’s Research Commission, told Tuoi Tre that though the number of businesses in the country rose 12.5 times from 40,000 to 500,000 between 1990 and 1999, the change in political and social perception about their roles only started five years ago, five years after the Enterprise Law too effect.

What is the contribution of Vietnamese entrepreneurs?

Since October 13 has been chosen as the national day for them and not for business in general, it is clear that Vietnam has started to recognize their contributions. The number of businesses, at around six per 1,000 population, is still small compared to other countries where the average rate is 19 per 1,000 people in low-income nations and 29 per 1,000 in middle-income countries.

The fact that more than 1 million jobs have been created, mainly in the private sector, is enough to show the undeniable contributions of Vietnamese entrepreneurs. During the crisis, the number of enterprises going bankrupt and the percentage of workers laid off were very small, making Vietnam one of a handful of countries enjoying positive growth rate during the period.

What kept our businesses afloat during the economic downturn?

It was the national campaign to promote the consumption of domestically-made goods.

But the main problem is that in the campaign policymakers just paid attention to the tip of the iceberg by calling for consumer patriotism and developing the distribution system.

The more important part, support for businesses to adopt global technological and management advances to cut costs and improve quality and packaging, has yet to receive attention.

What are main shortcomings of Vietnamese businesses and entrepreneurs?

Though many Vietnamese entrepreneurs are competent at doing business, they are desperately short of capital.

Since Vietnam does not have enough resources for all, it is allocating most of the resources to state conglomerates. So Vietnam should consider this more carefully so that capital will be redirected to those who operate the most efficiently.

Another problem is that a large part of our resources is channeled into the real-estate and stock markets and not manufacturing due to our administrative system, legal framework, and policy making. So our policymakers are still playing catch-up with the market and not moving ahead of it.

Are the existing incentives enough to promote Vietnamese goods at home?

There are a lot of incentives but they have little effect.

For example, the 15 measures the government announced to support development of small and medium-sized enterprises in 2006-2010 … A survey by the Central Institute for Economic Management found that only 12 of them have been implemented.

[However] even the measures have had little effect since there are only nine municipal credit guarantee funds for small and medium-sized enterprises in the country’s 63 provinces and cities, with just three actually operational.

There are too many policies that require a large number of guiding documents. So the most practical solution is to focus on the implementation and effectiveness of each policy.

To back Vietnamese businesses, what areas should policies focus on?

Dominating the domestic market and then expanding to the global market needs outstanding quality at reasonable prices. So the application of technological advances is the key.

Though we claim that research and development is a priority, the Ministry of Science and Technology returns hundreds of billions of dong [meant for research] to the budget every year since. The research projects receiving ministry funding are also impractical.

So the system should be changed and funding should go directly to businesses who want to take drastic action for their survival.

Related Articles

Friday, December 24, 2010

WTO calls on US to cut farm subsidies

GENEVA – The World Trade Organization called on US  Wednesday to cut its farm subsidies, saying that they were so "considerable" that they could affect market prices.

In a report analysing Washington 's policies since 2007, the trade body said that while promoting its exports, the United States should also reduce "distorting measures ... including ... support for agriculture."

The WTO noted that support granted to the sector under the multi-billion-dollar 2008 Farm Act are mostly "linked to prices and or production."

Thanks to this support, "producers of cereals, oilseeds, and cotton are effectively insulated from market prices while sugar and dairy have market price support programmes," said the WTO.

"The large size of the agriculture sector means that the absolute amount of support is considerable, varies from one year to another depending on prices, and can affect world prices," it added.

Brazil also hit out against the US ' farm policies during the WTO's examination of Washington 's trade policies every two years.

"Agriculture accounts for only 0.8 percent of US GDP and it employs just 1.4 percent of its labour force," noted Roberto Azevedo, Brazil 's envoy to the WTO.

"Nevertheless, this sector displays a considerable arsenal of trade-restrictive and distorting measures."

Azevedo pointed out that most of the subsidies are concentrated on crops such as cotton soybeans and rice.

"When prices drop, those subsidies will be in place again precisely at the moment when they will provoke the largest distortions and most damage to producers elsewhere," he charged.

Washington 's subsidies to its agriculture sector is a key sticking point holding up long-stalled Doha negotiations for a new global free trade deal.

Its support for cotton producers has been judged illegal by the WTO, in a complaint brought by Brazil .

Brazil however agreed to not apply reprisals after both countries decided to wait for the new Farm bill in 2012 to see what modifications would be made.

 

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Thursday, December 23, 2010

ADB provides US$630 million for SOE reform

HCMC - The Asian Development Bank (ADB) and the Vietnamese Government have signed a US$630 million multi-tranche financing facility to support the nation’s efforts to accelerate reforms of state-owned enterprises (SOEs).  

The transformation of SOEs started in 1992, aiming at increasing their efficiency and reducing the role of the state in their management. However, the process has been slow and confined mainly to smaller enterprises.

Nguyen Quang A, a local economist, shared the same view at last week’s workshop held by the National Assembly Economic Committee, saying SOE reform had been moving at a snail’s pace since 2006.  

As the Government is planning to equitize and transform large general state corporations to unlock their subsidiary companies’ potential, ADB assistance will support some SOEs to become more efficient, profitable and transparent with better corporate governance.  

“Enhancing corporate governance at SOEs is key for Vietnam to enhance the efficiency of its economy and achieve higher economic growth through reducing inefficient state production and promoting private sector development,” said ADB country director for Vietnam Ayumi Konishi.  

“With this facility, we hope to help restructure several general corporations to become subgroups of companies that can operate independently, secure financial resources from the capital markets on their own without relying on the Government, and meet all the conditions for eventual listing.”  

With ADB financial support, training and other assistance will also be provided to government institutions involved in the SOE reform process, such as the Debt and Asset Trading Corporation.  

The first tranche of US$130 million will also support the transformation of the Song Da group of companies, which are involved in several different business segments related to infrastructure, and the Southern Waterborne Transport Corporation providing logistics services.  

ADB will provide US$600 million from its ordinary capital resources to strengthen the balance sheets of selected corporations through debt restructuring, and US$30 million from its highly concessional Asian Development Fund to support improvements in their operations and corporate governance, as well as their and related institutions’ institutional capacity.  

The financing facility, signed by State Bank of Vietnam Governor Nguyen Van Giau ADB country director Ayumi Konishi, will be utilized by December 2015.

Related Articles

ADB provides US$630 million for SOE reform

HCMC - The Asian Development Bank (ADB) and the Vietnamese Government have signed a US$630 million multi-tranche financing facility to support the nation’s efforts to accelerate reforms of state-owned enterprises (SOEs).  

The transformation of SOEs started in 1992, aiming at increasing their efficiency and reducing the role of the state in their management. However, the process has been slow and confined mainly to smaller enterprises.

Nguyen Quang A, a local economist, shared the same view at last week’s workshop held by the National Assembly Economic Committee, saying SOE reform had been moving at a snail’s pace since 2006.  

As the Government is planning to equitize and transform large general state corporations to unlock their subsidiary companies’ potential, ADB assistance will support some SOEs to become more efficient, profitable and transparent with better corporate governance.  

“Enhancing corporate governance at SOEs is key for Vietnam to enhance the efficiency of its economy and achieve higher economic growth through reducing inefficient state production and promoting private sector development,” said ADB country director for Vietnam Ayumi Konishi.  

“With this facility, we hope to help restructure several general corporations to become subgroups of companies that can operate independently, secure financial resources from the capital markets on their own without relying on the Government, and meet all the conditions for eventual listing.”  

With ADB financial support, training and other assistance will also be provided to government institutions involved in the SOE reform process, such as the Debt and Asset Trading Corporation.  

The first tranche of US$130 million will also support the transformation of the Song Da group of companies, which are involved in several different business segments related to infrastructure, and the Southern Waterborne Transport Corporation providing logistics services.  

ADB will provide US$600 million from its ordinary capital resources to strengthen the balance sheets of selected corporations through debt restructuring, and US$30 million from its highly concessional Asian Development Fund to support improvements in their operations and corporate governance, as well as their and related institutions’ institutional capacity.  

The financing facility, signed by State Bank of Vietnam Governor Nguyen Van Giau ADB country director Ayumi Konishi, will be utilized by December 2015.

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Saturday, September 18, 2010

VN too dependent on imports

A production line at Viet Nam Key Plastics. The company, in southern Binh Duong Province, is 100-per-cent Japanese invested. — VNA/VNS Photo Chi Tuong

A production line at Viet Nam Key Plastics. The company, in southern Binh Duong Province, is 100-per-cent Japanese invested. — VNA/VNS Photo Chi Tuong

HA NOI — Viet Nam industry's dependence on imports for production was identified as a major weakness in the economy at a seminar in Ha Noi yesterday.

The country was passive in the input of materials for its industrial production, said Ha Noi University of Foreign Trade's Professor Dao Ngoc Tien.

"Therefor its exports are dependent on its imports."

And the increase in the price of input materials had exacerbated the imbalance, the professor told the meeting to promote Viet Nam's support industries.

Development of the support industry was a key to improving the quality of the country's growth, said Professor Tien.

It would help promote the development of domestic small to medium enterprises as well as create a wide-ranging, diversified production and business system.

Capacity

The result would lift the competitive capacity of all economic sectors.

Viet Nam's support industries include material production, spare parts, garments, leather and shoes, motorbike and car assembly and mechanical engineering.

Viet Nam has attracted billions of dollars in foreign investment and provided up to 1.5 million jobs to play a pivotal role in the country's economic development since the introduction of renewal.

But economists put Viet Nam's industry at 20 to 40 years behind its regional neighbours.

It matches China of the 1980s; Malaysia, the 1970s; and South Korea, the 1960s.

Both Professor Vu Thi Xuan Thuy of the Viet Nam Development Forum and Vu Hoai Nam of the foreign trade university told the gathering of international and domestic experts that "assembly" remained Viet Nam's major industry despite its high economic growth.

Support industries were under-developed with few scattered domestic spare-parts factories that were unable to produce products in the quantity or quality of the region's other developing countries, they said.

Importance

International Economics and Politics Institute director Luu Ngoc Trinh said all sectors, enterprises, lawmakers and the people would have to understand the need and importance of a developed support industry.

"Government policies favourable to the development of support industries is one of the most important measures," they said.

A majority of leather and shoe enterprises were aware of the urgent need to develop the support industry for their production, said foreign trade university professors Nguyen Hoang Chau and Nguyen Van Minh.

But the domestic support industry's capacity was poor and almost 90 per cent of the enterprises did not trust it.

They agreed with Professor Trinh saying that the Government should introduce policies favourable to international and domestic enterprises so as to attract more "anchor" firms and train personnel.

Japan International Co-operation Agency economist Kyoshiro Ichikawa said Viet Nam's support industry was facing serious competition from foreign – invested enterprises and imports.

There were a number of domestic support-industries but they faced fierce competition from imports in both quality and delivery.

The economist said the Vietnamese Government should introduce policies designed to attract international companies provide more FDI for Viet Nam so that domestic enterprises could learn and compete with them.

Enterprises and firms should also receive subsidies to transfer technology, he said. — VNS

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