Showing posts with label survey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label survey. Show all posts

Monday, February 21, 2011

Survey targets industrial investors

Workers of the Nidec Co operate lathes in HCM City's high-tech park. A survey will assess the impact of foreign investment on industrial development. — VNA/VNS Photo Van Khanh

Workers of the Nidec Co operate lathes in HCM City's high-tech park. A survey will assess the impact of foreign investment on industrial development. — VNA/VNS Photo Van Khanh

HA NOI — The Viet Nam Industrial Investor Survey 2010 was officially launched yesterday by the Ministry of Planning and Investment's Foreign Investment Agency (FIA) and the UN Industrial Development Organisation (UNIDO).

The survey, which will be conducted from October 25, 2010 to January 15, 2011, is expected to provide policy-makers with data for assessing the impact of the foreign-invested sector on Viet Nam's economic development by looking specifcally at the impact of foreign investment on the development of domestic enterprises.

The survey will analyse the performance of these enterprises and their assessment of the local business climate and also help enhance the investment capacity of the national institutions.

It will be conducted in nine cities and provinces where the majority of domestic and foreign-invested enterprises are based.

Over 1,640 manufacturing, processing and construction firms - 60 per cent of which are foreign-invested - will be selected randomly from a total of 6,830 firms across Ha Noi, Vinh Phuc, Bac Ninh HCM City, Hai Phong, Da Nang, Binh Duong, Dong Nai and Ba Ria - Vung Tau.

The survey's findings will be consolidated on the web-based interactive Viet Nam Investment Monitoring Platform that enables authorities and enterprises to make enquiries to better understand the domestic investment environment.

FIA director Do Nhat Hoang invited all enterprises to participate in the survey, saying that it would create a chance for participants to get free access to business partners, suppliers and potential customers who have taken part in the UNIDO international network of investment and technological promotion offices.

With UNIDO's technical and financial supports, the survey is expected to be conducted every two years.

In addition to the Investment Monitoring Platform, FIA is joining hands with UNIDO and the Viet Nam Chamber of Commerce and Industry to develop the Supplier and Partnership Exchange (SPX), which is intended to strengthen the linkages between foreign and domestic enterprises in sectors such as metal processing, plastics and footwear.

The survey's data and the SPX will be integrated to support domestic firms in promoting investment and linking them with foreign-invested and large-scale enterprises, said Nilguen Tas, a UNIDO representative in Viet Nam. — VNS

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Monday, December 27, 2010

Vietnamese SMEs upbeat about economy: survey

Jeff Mclean (C), general manager of UPS Vietnam, at the function held yesterday at the Sofitel Plaza Saigon in District 1 to announce the fifth UPS Asia Business Monitor 2010 - Photo: Nhan Tam
HCMC – Some 72% of 100 Vietnamese small and medium enterprises (SMEs) are optimistic that they will perform better business in 2010, according to a survey conducted in the Asia-Pacific region whose results were released here on Wednesday.

For economic sectors, the construction industry will continue to boom as 53% of Vietnamese SMEs believe that this sector continues to be the country’s key growth industry this year, followed by IT (36%) and leisure and tourism (28%).

In the medium term for between three and five coming years, local SMEs still place the top choice on the construction industry as the key economic pillar with 53%, followed by agriculture (29%), leisure and tourism (29%), and IT (26%), according to the fifth UPS Asia Business Monitor (ABM).

The survey, outsourced to the independent research organization TNS in Hong Kong by the logistics service provider UPS, was conducted between March 11 and April 20 this year. This is the first time Vietnam participated in the annual UPS ABM, which also covers other markets like Australia, China, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Japan, South Korea, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Taiwan and Thailand.

Vietnamese SMEs also cast an optimistic view on the Asia-Pacific region, with some 59% believing that the Asia Pacific economy would continue to grow while 9% of them expect a decline and the remaining 32% expect the economy to remain the same.

Jeff Mclean, general manager of UPS Vietnam, said that the Vietnam survey results would greatly assist the company in how to better meet the needs of local SMEs as they compete in the global market.

However, he added that despite the prevailing positive growth sentiment, Vietnam seems to be the least optimistic regarding workforce projection in the region. An overwhelming 61% of those surveyed intend to reduce their workforce, while none of them plan to increase their workforce.

“They have optimistic views about the future, but they still feel worried,” Mclean told the Daily after the function to announce the survey, adding that they just want to take advantage of current human resources to overcome the difficulties.

The survey also showed that although the Vietnamese economy is expected to grow this year, local entrepreneurs still encounter challenges as about 7 out of 10 Vietnamese SMEs say that their top business concern is costs.

The second biggest concern is the high interest rate while competition is the third biggest concern.

UPS ABM 2010 surveyed 1,351 decision-makers of SMEs between March 11 and April 20 this year. SMEs are defined as companies with fewer than 250 employees. Respondents were from a range of industries such as electronics, construction, food and beverage, services, manufacturing, automotive, garments and textiles, IT, tourism and hotel, healthcare and pharmaceuticals and others.

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Vietnamese SMEs upbeat about economy: survey

Jeff Mclean (C), general manager of UPS Vietnam, at the function held yesterday at the Sofitel Plaza Saigon in District 1 to announce the fifth UPS Asia Business Monitor 2010 - Photo: Nhan Tam
HCMC – Some 72% of 100 Vietnamese small and medium enterprises (SMEs) are optimistic that they will perform better business in 2010, according to a survey conducted in the Asia-Pacific region whose results were released here on Wednesday.

For economic sectors, the construction industry will continue to boom as 53% of Vietnamese SMEs believe that this sector continues to be the country’s key growth industry this year, followed by IT (36%) and leisure and tourism (28%).

In the medium term for between three and five coming years, local SMEs still place the top choice on the construction industry as the key economic pillar with 53%, followed by agriculture (29%), leisure and tourism (29%), and IT (26%), according to the fifth UPS Asia Business Monitor (ABM).

The survey, outsourced to the independent research organization TNS in Hong Kong by the logistics service provider UPS, was conducted between March 11 and April 20 this year. This is the first time Vietnam participated in the annual UPS ABM, which also covers other markets like Australia, China, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Japan, South Korea, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Taiwan and Thailand.

Vietnamese SMEs also cast an optimistic view on the Asia-Pacific region, with some 59% believing that the Asia Pacific economy would continue to grow while 9% of them expect a decline and the remaining 32% expect the economy to remain the same.

Jeff Mclean, general manager of UPS Vietnam, said that the Vietnam survey results would greatly assist the company in how to better meet the needs of local SMEs as they compete in the global market.

However, he added that despite the prevailing positive growth sentiment, Vietnam seems to be the least optimistic regarding workforce projection in the region. An overwhelming 61% of those surveyed intend to reduce their workforce, while none of them plan to increase their workforce.

“They have optimistic views about the future, but they still feel worried,” Mclean told the Daily after the function to announce the survey, adding that they just want to take advantage of current human resources to overcome the difficulties.

The survey also showed that although the Vietnamese economy is expected to grow this year, local entrepreneurs still encounter challenges as about 7 out of 10 Vietnamese SMEs say that their top business concern is costs.

The second biggest concern is the high interest rate while competition is the third biggest concern.

UPS ABM 2010 surveyed 1,351 decision-makers of SMEs between March 11 and April 20 this year. SMEs are defined as companies with fewer than 250 employees. Respondents were from a range of industries such as electronics, construction, food and beverage, services, manufacturing, automotive, garments and textiles, IT, tourism and hotel, healthcare and pharmaceuticals and others.

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Friday, November 19, 2010

Crisis impacts on two-thirds of local SMEs

Two-thirds of the small and medium-sized enterprises (SME) in Vietnam were affected by the global financial crisis but most of them said these challenges were temporary.

This is the result of a survey conducted at SMEs in 10 cities and provinces nationwide, which was announced at a seminar held in Hanoi Friday by the Central Institute of Economic Management (CIEM) under the Ministry of Planning and Investment.

Prof. Finn Tarp, coordinator and supervisor of the survey, said the business environment of SMEs in Vietnam seemed to worsen between 2007 and 2009, when SMEs faced more barriers, including the falls in both demands for products and supply of credits.

The rate of SMEs that annually survived the crisis dropped, while a large number of other SMEs were forced to halt operations, said the professor.

However, Tarp said super-small companies suffered fewer impacts from the crisis than bigger enterprises, as the crisis helped improve their business conditions, make competition less tough and push the government to offer them better assistance programmes.

According to the survey, SMEs in Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh city and the central province of Nghe An were hardest hit by the crisis, while those in the provinces of Phu Tho, Khanh Hoa and Lam Dong and Hai Phong city suffered fewer negative influences.

Almost 40 percent of the SMEs facing credit-related difficulties were in rural areas and household businesses in cities.

The survey, the sixth of its kind, was jointly carried out by CIEM, the Institute of Labour Science and Social Affairs under the Ministry of Labour, War Invalids and Social Affairs, and the Faculty of Economics at Copenhagen University.

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Thursday, November 18, 2010

Lack of credit hampers SMEs

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Lending rate almost beyond enterprises’ reach: report

The organizers of the survey Vietnam Business Insight Survey announce the results at a conference in HCMC - Photo: Thu Nguyet
HCMC – Many local enterprises are taking out short-term loans with interest rate of more than 12% a year, which they say they can’t afford for a long time, according to a survey report released on Thursday.  

The Vietnam Business Insight Survey, conducted among nearly 400 enterprises in the country, shows the current interest rate of short-term loans is nearly touching the unaffordable level for many local companies. It means many of them are hardly able to burden the high rate any longer.

The survey is made every quarter by the Vietnam Chamber of Commerce and Industry (VCCI) in co-ordination with the General Statistics Office and Asia Competitiveness Institute, under the financial support of the Asia Foundation.  

In details, two-thirds of nearly 400 corporate respondents are borrowing short-term loans at an annual interest rate of more than 12%. About 60% of these enterprises say the lending rate is unreasonable, and 36% of them can’t afford the high capital cost loans in the long term.

Therefore, instead of borrowing from banks, they resort to other capital sources to support their operations and production, which negatively affects their investment strategy. According to the survey, about 94% of business respondents say under-12% lending rate is reasonable for them.  

Besides the expensive loans, the survey found many local companies are facing challenges from lack of electric power and skilled labor, and traffic congestion.  

In addition, local companies are coping with obstacles from the current business environment, said Vu Kim Hanh, vice chairwoman of Leading Business Club, at a conference to release the survey in HCMC.  

Hanh explained that they suffered fierce competition from fake, cheap and smuggled goods. Hence, some of them stopped their production and were having their products outsourced to China then labeled “Made in Vietnam” to reduce costs of the products.    

“Even some companies recognized as producers of high-quality Vietnamese products are outsourcing to China and label the goods as domestically made,” she said.  

Hanh added that local enterprises also told her that they were burdened by un-official fees but didn’t give any details. Costs for after-sales services, promotion and environment protection are challenging local producers.

The survey also shows local enterprises’ trade and production improved in the second quarter of this year compared with the first quarter.

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Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Lending rate almost beyond enterprises’ reach: report

The organizers of the survey Vietnam Business Insight Survey announce the results at a conference in HCMC - Photo: Thu Nguyet
HCMC – Many local enterprises are taking out short-term loans with interest rate of more than 12% a year, which they say they can’t afford for a long time, according to a survey report released on Thursday.  

The Vietnam Business Insight Survey, conducted among nearly 400 enterprises in the country, shows the current interest rate of short-term loans is nearly touching the unaffordable level for many local companies. It means many of them are hardly able to burden the high rate any longer.

The survey is made every quarter by the Vietnam Chamber of Commerce and Industry (VCCI) in co-ordination with the General Statistics Office and Asia Competitiveness Institute, under the financial support of the Asia Foundation.  

In details, two-thirds of nearly 400 corporate respondents are borrowing short-term loans at an annual interest rate of more than 12%. About 60% of these enterprises say the lending rate is unreasonable, and 36% of them can’t afford the high capital cost loans in the long term.

Therefore, instead of borrowing from banks, they resort to other capital sources to support their operations and production, which negatively affects their investment strategy. According to the survey, about 94% of business respondents say under-12% lending rate is reasonable for them.  

Besides the expensive loans, the survey found many local companies are facing challenges from lack of electric power and skilled labor, and traffic congestion.  

In addition, local companies are coping with obstacles from the current business environment, said Vu Kim Hanh, vice chairwoman of Leading Business Club, at a conference to release the survey in HCMC.  

Hanh explained that they suffered fierce competition from fake, cheap and smuggled goods. Hence, some of them stopped their production and were having their products outsourced to China then labeled “Made in Vietnam” to reduce costs of the products.    

“Even some companies recognized as producers of high-quality Vietnamese products are outsourcing to China and label the goods as domestically made,” she said.  

Hanh added that local enterprises also told her that they were burdened by un-official fees but didn’t give any details. Costs for after-sales services, promotion and environment protection are challenging local producers.

The survey also shows local enterprises’ trade and production improved in the second quarter of this year compared with the first quarter.

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Crisis impacts on two-thirds of local SMEs

Two-thirds of the small and medium-sized enterprises (SME) in Vietnam
were affected by the global financial crisis but most of them said
these challenges were temporary.


This is the result
of a survey conducted at SMEs in 10 cities and provinces nationwide,
which was announced at a seminar held in Hanoi on Sept. 17 by the
Central Institute of Economic Management (CIEM) under the Ministry of
Planning and Investment.


Prof. Finn Tarp,
coordinator and supervisor of the survey, said the business environment
of SMEs in Vietnam seemed to worsen between 2007 and 2009, when SMEs
faced more barriers, including the falls in both demands for products
and supply of credits.


The rate of SMEs that
annually survived the crisis dropped, while a large number of other SMEs
were forced to halt operations, said the professor.


However, Tarp said super-small companies suffered fewer impacts from
the crisis than bigger enterprises, as the crisis helped improve their
business conditions, make competition less tough and push the government
to offer them better assistance programmes.


According to the survey, SMEs in Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh city and the central
province of Nghe An were hardest hit by the crisis, while those in the
provinces of Phu Tho, Khanh Hoa and Lam Dong and Hai Phong city suffered
fewer negative influences.


Almost 40 percent of the SMEs facing credit-related difficulties were in rural areas and household businesses in cities.


The survey, the sixth of its kind, was jointly carried out by CIEM,
the Institute of Labour Science and Social Affairs under the
Ministry of Labour, War Invalids and Social Affairs, and the Faculty of
Economics at Copenhagen University./.

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Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Locals travel more, opt for budget tours: survey

Local tourists visit Thien Mu Pagoda in the former imperial capital of Hue. More local people plan to travel this year but tend to spend less during their tours - Photo: Anh Khoi
HCMC – The number of local people making plans for vacations this year has increased strongly, but they tend to spend less on travel, according to a survey released here on Wednesday by the local newspaper Sai Gon Giai Phong.

Nearly 64.5% of the respondents in the survey said they and their families made frequent trips every year, compared to over 54% of last year’s similar survey. The newspaper conducted direct interviews with 2,100 people in HCMC about the travel trend from April to July as part of a program to select Vietnam’s favorite travel trademarks in 2010.

While more people are traveling this year, they tend to spend less on travel, as more people bought budget tours and fewer people agreed to pay a higher cost, according to the survey.

It showed that 19.9% of the respondents agreed to spend more than VND10 million per trip, down from 20.2% of 2009, and 46.3% of the respondents agreed to spend VND5-10 million per trip compared to over 57.4% in last year’s survey.

Meanwhile, the proportion of people willing to pay VND2-5 million per trip increased from 22.3% of last year to 33.8% in this year’s survey.

The budget-saving trend is clearer with 24% of respondents saying the most uncomfortable thing in travel is the additional charges from service providers, followed by complaints about the unprofessional service from tour guides and food quality.

Despite the price-conscious trend, travelers still choose well-established brands when traveling, rather than comparing prices.

More than 52% of respondents said they selected tours from the trustworthy brands while only nearly 17% of travelers saw prices as a decisive factor.

Tran The Tuyen, editor-in-chief of the newspaper, said Sai Gon Giai Phong had made the survey with people from 18 to 64 years old, who were divided into different income categories, from VND3 million to VND5 million per month, from VND5.1 million to VND8 million, then under VND3 million and over VND8 million.

Up to 43% of respondents searched for travel information on the internet, while 40% obtained it from friends or relatives, according to the survey. The marketing method via leaflets and advertising is less influential on customers as only nearly 9.3% of the people looked for travel information by this way.

As for domestic destinations, local travelers still preferred familiar places such as Halong Bay, Phu Quoc, Nha Trang, Hanoi, and Phan Thiet.

The newspaper on Wednesday handed out the Vietnam Favorite Trademark Awards 2010 to 61 companies, including travel firms, hotels, restaurants, resorts, supermarkets, banks, insurance service providers, and other consumer service providers.

Tuyen said along with direct interviews, nearly 6,640 readers of the newspaper have voted for such brand names.

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