Showing posts with label supporting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label supporting. Show all posts

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Weak supporting industry threatens FDI

 A Honda motorbike engine on display at an exhibition in Ho Chi Minh City. Vietnamese firms are able to meet only a very small part of the demand from Japanese investors for spare parts and accessories.

Vietnam faces a reduction in foreign capital inflow even as it implements free trade agreements with its partners because its underdeveloped supporting industries will be a discouraging factor, experts say.

The Japan International Corporation Agency (JICA) has said Vietnam would not be a choice for foreign investors interested in the ASEAN region to set up factories over the next five years, if the supporting industries developed very slowly.

ASEAN members including Vietnam will complete the Common Effective Preferential Tariff, cutting import taxes on most items to zero in 2015. Some tariffs will be removed three years later.

JICA expert Katsumata Teruhisa said investors would house their factories in countries where supporting industries are highly developed, and only consider the others as potential markets.

Vietnam’s supporting industries were far less developed than other ASEAN countries like Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia, he said.

Vietnamese firms are at present able to meet only a very small part of the demand from Japanese investors for spare parts and accessories in the automobile, motorbike, electric and electronic industries.

The local content ratio was about 5 to 10 percent in automobiles, 20 to 40 percent in electrics and electronics and 70 to 80 percent in motorbikes, Teruhisa said.

Half the content in local motorbikes was provided by foreign traders or investors who’ve set up factories in the country, he added.

Le Tuan Anh, managing director of Cathaco, said it was not easy for local firms to start up supporting industries because of the capital and skilled labor force required. Moreover, those entering this business need to be patient about getting returns on their investment, he said.

Cathaco, one of pioneers in the industry since 1999, manufactures parts and components of television sets or computers for foreign-invested businesses.

Anh said many local firms were not patient enough to run supporting industries which require producers to take care of details. They typically wanted to see their profits very quickly with minimum trouble, he said.

“That is the reason why only a small number of small- and medium-sized enterprises are involved in the (supporting) industries and why they have developed slowly in the country,” he told Thanh Nien Weekly.

Anh said his company was seeking foreign partners in Singapore, Thailand, Malaysia or China to join a new project which aims to increase its capacity and competitiveness because it was difficult to find local partners.

More time needed

Viroj Sirithanasart, managing director of Thai Tool and Die Industry Association, said it takes at least 10 years for a country to develop its supporting industries and Vietnam would need more than that.

Government support with favorable development policies and the supply of skilled labor was necessary for this development, he stressed.

Sirithanasart said Thailand had started developing supporting industries for electronics, plastics and steel over 10 years ago and now the country is focusing on the automation industry.

Thai supporting industries mainly serve the automobile industry and their capacity, with about 50,000 firms in the fray, exceeds its export demand.

Vietnam should utilize support from France and Japan, he said, adding the latter has also helped Thailand to develop is supporting industries.

Thai businesses are looking to collaborate with Vietnamese partners to develop the industry in the country, he added.

JICA has said it is developing a project to help increase local content in products made by Japanese businesses in the automobile, motorbike, electrical and electronic industries.

The project, which will work with 100 businesses over four years from 2010, was surveying requests from local businesses in three main regions of the country, the agency said. It said 21 businesses have been selected so far to receive support from Japanese experts in the technical aspects of plastic production and die-casting as well as management activities.

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Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Supporting industry and Metalex expos open in HCMC

Visitors view products at the supporting industry expo, which is organized concurrently with Metalex Vietnam on machine tools and metalworking technologies in District 7 - Photo: Quoc Hung
HCMC – An exhibition on supporting industries and an international machine tools and metalworking technology exhibition known as Metalex Vietnam opened on Thursday at the Saigon Exhibition and Convention Center in District 7.

The supporting industry expo is co-organized by the HCMC Investment and Trade Promotion Center and Japan External Trade Organization (JETRO) in the city, while Reed Tradex is the organizer of Metalex Vietnam.

While the supporting industry expo features Japanese manufacturers displaying parts, equipment, or supporting services, and Vietnamese suppliers who are part and equipment makers and subcontractors, Metalex Vietnam highlights latest machine tools and metalworking technologies.

Metalex Vietnam has a “Hi-Tech Zone” where modern machinery and technology are displayed, and “Robot Demonstration,” which unveils extraordinary capacity of “Motoman,” an intelligent industrial robot which can cut and weld metal with laser in fluid and precise movements.

Meanwhile, over 100 local suppliers and Japanese manufacturers mainly in the automobile, motorcycle and electronics parts manufacturing industries are looking for business opportunities at the supporting industry expo. Half of them are Japanese companies in Vietnam and directly from Japan, while the other half are local joint ventures.

This expo “aims to develop supporting industries in Vietnam as part of cooperation projects based on the Japan-Vietnam Economic Partnership Agreement signed in 2008,” said Tetsusaburo Hayashi, executive vice president of JETRO.

“One of the main problems for these firms is the difficulty in procuring parts. According to a JETRO survey, Vietnam ranks lower than its ASEAN neighbors in terms of local content rates for Japanese-affiliated firms in these countries,” he said, adding this issue affects not only the competitiveness of firms operating locally, but also Vietnam’s international competitiveness.

Duangdej Yaikwarmdee, deputy managing director of Reed Tradex, said, “The combination of two expos will create an all-under-one-roof meeting center for the manufacturing community. Buyers and sellers would meet, exchange knowledge and ideas, discover technologies, and develop business networks.”

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