Thursday, September 2, 2010

Vietnam economy to become ‘important’: 3M CEO

George Buckley
3M CEO greeting local staff upon arrival

George Buckley, global chief of the US-based consumer and industrial conglomerate, visited Vietnam for the first time Thursday and spoke to TuoiTreNews about Vietnam’s role in 3M’s global value chain, reverse innovation, and training future business leaders.

What is the purpose of your trip to Vietnam?


Several times a year, the head of international operations and I travel to several countries, usually large ones such as China, Japan and India. From time to time I take a detour through places that are just beginning to get going and that we think will be very important in the future. And of course Vietnam fits into that category.


I think in particular, Vietnam and Indonesia are two countries of enormous potential for us. So we’d like to invest our time and money early.


This is also a chance for me to personally witness what happens in Vietnam. When I am here, I am astounded by how many young people there are. Along with that is the vibrancy and modern way of thinking. Of course the right investment and giving people the right focus would generate a lot of good growth.

3M is probably most famous for its innovation culture. How does the firm encourage and reward innovations?


We have had a culture of innovation for many years. To build it, first of all you need great technical competencies. Second you must provide the appropriate tools such as lab equipment. Once you set up the physical aspect you have to create an environment that encourages innovation. That means promoting a spirit of curiosity, investigation, and discovery.


In addition, we accept that in the journey to discovery there are failures. We investigate in markets that haven’t been built or technology that hasn’t been developed before. So we count those journeys as experiments. We do not immediately characterize things that don’t work as failures because we know well enough that we have to invent maybe 100 patents before the technology is sufficiently robust and viable for us to achieve economic success.

Can you give me an example of a 3M policy that encourages innovation?


We give our researchers 15 percent free time to do what they want. Theoretically, they could say ok, maybe I can work on something irrelevant, but actually it doesn’t happen too much. There is always some peer pressure which keeps them focused around certain activities.


We also have a policy that anytime an economy becomes sufficiently large for us, we establish a lab there to encourage localization. We believe that locals are the best people to decide what is right. In Vietnam, for example, that would be the Vietnamese, not the Americans. We can develop some basic technology but ultimately the best people to decide the right market direction and what special features to include in a product are the people in the local market.

How about reverse innovation whereby a product invented in a developing country can become successful in a developed market?


This happens to us all the time. Our headquarters in St. Paul, in the US, was the original hotspot of innovation. But we have developed about 36 labs all over the world. Initially the labs adapt maybe American, German, or British products for the local market and give advice to customers. But gradually, the local market will begin to modify American products and then progressively begin to formulate ideas and invent local products.


Ultimately, the labs will become worldwide centers of excellence. For example, for us, America is the worldwide center of excellence for material sciences-surface chemistry, German and France for telecommunications, Japan and Germany for automotive technology. Before technology or ideas came from the US while now other centers supply those technologies to the mother countries. This is how we accelerate growth.

Innovation and inventions can’t come happen without leadership. So how do you develop leaders for 3M?


The only way to learn to lead is by doing it. We are providing formal training at multiple levels to our leaders to then place them in circumstances where they can experience real life challenges with real risks.


To become global leaders, employees from a local office like Vietnam, I think, need to be willing to relocate. That would be a great chance to build skill sets, not only in the environment in which they are comfortable with, but also in one where they are not.

3M is very open-minded in terms of choosing its leaders. Let me just give you an example of our leadership team. It’s an American corporation.


I am British and the majority of the people who report directly to me are not American. In fact the head of our consumer and home improvement business, the next level down, is Vietnamese. Two thirds of our sales are outside the US. We are genuinely international. Personally, I’d like for local people to be in charge. But obviously as you move up the level in the organization, it is very diverse. If I think of the top 100 people in 3M, 65 percent were born outside the US.

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Bankrupt airline’s Vietnam agent to meet creditors

vivamacau

The Macau Supreme Court has ordered Global Distribution System Co Ltd, Viva Macau Airlines’ general sales agent in Vietnam, to attend a two-day meeting with the bankrupt carrier’s creditors next month.

But GDS, a subsidiary of TransViet Co, said the carrier may be unable to pay the $130,000 it owes travel firms, ticket agents, and passengers since it does not have enough assets to cover the amount, Nguyen Hai, chairman of TransViet Co, warned.

GDS has compiled a list of creditors and submitted to the Consumer Council and the Court of First Instance in Macau.

The budget airline’s services to Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City were suspended March 27 when the Macau government withdrew its license for its failure to pay fuel bills of nearly 200 million patacas (US$25 million).

The Macau Consumer Council said 2,039 passengers had filed complaints as of May 18, seeking $783,000.

Of them 714 are from Macau, with the rest being from mainland China, Hong Kong, Singapore, Vietnam, Indonesia, South Korea, Japan, the Philippines, Australia, France, Germany, and the US.

Viva Macau began flying to HCMC three years ago and to Hanoi in February 2009.

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French advice sought on nuclear power

PARIS — A delegation from the Vietnamese Ministry of Industry and Trade, led by Deputy Minister Do Huu Hao, ended a visit to France on Saturday after discussions on nuclear power generation and the nation's successes in using energy sources more effectively.

At a working session with Christian De Gromard, head of the French Development Agency's energy projects, the two sides reviewed the agency's operations and projects on energy saving, while also discussing plans to improve energy use in Viet Nam.

The French Development Agency pledged to support Viet Nam's efforts to save energy and use experiences the agency has drawn from its projects in Indonesia.

Deputy Minister Hao introduced Viet Nam's newly-approved law on energy saving to French Development Agency officials and urged the agency to assist the country in drafting practical sub-law documents.

During the trip, the Vietnamese delegation also held discussions with Othman Salhi, Vice President for Asia of the AREVA group – a leading provider of solutions for carbon-free power generation.

Salhi discussed the AREVA group and its experiences in designing, building and operating nuclear power reactors as well as its capacity in providing nuclear fuel rods, treating and preserving nuclear waste and producing uranium.

He said AREVA wanted to co-operate with Viet Nam in developing nuclear power.

Hao told his host that Viet Nam was willing to join with other nations that have nuclear technology and are able to provide nuclear fuel rods while also safely treating and disposing of nuclear waste.

The Deputy Minister said he highly valued AREVA's know-how in consultancy, supervision and human resources development, adding that these experiences would be useful to Viet Nam when it builds its first nuclear power reactor.

AREVA would have the opportunity to co-operate with Vietnamese partners in different aspects as Viet Nam plans to construct a series of nuclear power plants from now until 2035, said Hao. — VNS

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Vinaconex launches cheap housing project

HA NOI — Vinaconex Xuan Mai Concrete and Construction Joint Stock Company last week began construction of low-income apartments in Ha Noi's Ha Dong District.

Covering an area of more than 24,000sq.m, the VND950 billion (US$50 million) project will include five 19-storey apartment blocks, a ground floor and commercial centres in the Kien Hung residential area, 11km west of the capital.

Director of Vinaconex Xuan Mai Dang Hoang Huy said the project would add 1,512 apartments to the market by the first quarter of 2012. The price for the 65 to 70sq.m apartments will be VND8 million ($420) per square metre.

Vice chairman of the municipal People's Committee Phi Thai Binh said this was the largest low-cost housing project so far in the capital in terms of scale and the number of apartments.

The capital is striving to build 15,000 apartments with an average area of 70 square metres and total investment of VND7-9 trillion ($368-474 million) by 2015.

Binh said the city had already carried out several social housing projects for workers, students and low-income earners in Viet Hung, Sai Dong, Dong Anh, Ha Dong, Hoang Mai districts.

Construction of several low-cost housing projects in An Khanh residential area and Me Linh district would begin by the end of this year. — VNS

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Africa offers huge trade potential

Workers at the Thuan An Production Trading and Service Co Ltd process tra fish for export. Domestic businesses are being encouraged to strengthen their exports to Africa. — VNA/VNS Photo Van Khanh

Workers at the Thuan An Production Trading and Service Co Ltd process tra fish for export. Domestic businesses are being encouraged to strengthen their exports to Africa. — VNA/VNS Photo Van Khanh

HCM CITY — Domestic businesses should strengthen their exports to Africa where demand for Vietnamese goods is huge, a senior trade official has said.

Speaking at a conference held last Friday, Ly Quoc Hung, head of the Ministry of Industry and Trade's Africa-West Asia-South Asia Markets Department said the promising market has great demand on consumer goods, machines, technology, and agricultural products, especially rice. "The African countries' rice demand reached nearly 10 million tonnes per year," he said.

Africa has plentiful unexploited natural resources, minerals and land. Its population is crowded and is growing rapidly but its capacity for agricultural and industrial production is weak.

Furthermore, Africa still benefits from the Generalised System of Preferences from the US and EU and Vietnamese businesses should take full advantage of it to set up production bases there.

Currently, Vietnamese products are present in 53 African countries. The key export-import markets are Egypt, South Africa, Angola, Nigeria, Ghana, and Algieria.

Last year, Viet Nam's exports to Africa reached US$1.56 billion, an increase of 20 per cent compared to 2008, with the main products including consumer goods, textiles and garments, electronics, plastic and wooden products, coffee, motorbikes, dairy products, seafood and processing foodstuff.

Viet Nam's imports reached $508 million.

Hung also said fields for cooperation in the near future include mineral exploitation and exploration, chemicals, textile and garment, agricultural product processing, agricultural machines, motorbikes and bicycle production.

Vietnamese businesses should pay much attention to trade and technical barriers, the production must meet the import requirements of the African countries. The payment method mainly used is Documents against payment (D/P), with just some countries using Letter of Credit (L/C).

For instance, the brands and information on products are written in English, French or the mother-tongue. Besides, the businesses need to thoroughly understand the customs and tastes of local customers.

Promising markets

At the conference, the commercial counsellors in Egypt, Algieria, Morocco, Nigeria and South Africa shared experience to give more support to Vietnamese businesses in Africa, which is a promising market for Vietnamese goods.

Nguyen Thi Hong, vice chairwoman of HCM City People's Committee said the commerce counsellors played as important bridges in attempt to help them become successful in the potential market.

City authority also highly evaluated the African market and would create more favourable policies to intensify the investment, trade and service development in this market.

She said the City had asked the Investment Trade Promotion Centre to carry out promotional programmes, organise many visits to make surveys on this market, as a result, the businesses would map out suitable strategies to expand their exports.

Do Quang Lien, commercial counsellor to South Africa said Vietnamese businesses should strengthen their investment and exports to the South Africa, which is the continent's largest economy and is a strategic transport gateway in trading between the continental and many other foreign countries.

Dang Ngoc Quang, commercial counsellor to Egypt said seafood was the key Vietnamese export product in Egypt. In the first six months, seafood turnover reached $25.93 million, of which tra and basa catfish turnover was $16.9 million and shrimp $8.1 million

"Viet Nam is seen as a strong seafood exporter, and it is able to provide various kinds of seafood at a competitive price and quality to the African market," he said, adding that Viet Nam could totally supply these products in the long-term and in huge volume.

Product diversification and promotional programme intensification are keys to help the domestic seafood businesses to expand exports.

The commercial counsellors to Algieria, Morocco, and Nigieria agreed that the businesses should take part in fairs, exhibitions and look for long-term and large contracts as well as popularising their images and brands to the market. — VNS

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Viet Nam sues US over duties

GENEVA — Viet Nam submitted documents to the World Trade Organisation (WTO) in Geneva on Friday, challenging the US imposition of anti-dumping duties on frozen shrimp imported from Viet Nam.

The move is a next step in the WTO settlement process, after WTO director general Pascal Lamy constituted a three-member panel in late July at Viet Nam's request to consider the case and assist the WTO Dispute Settlement Body in making final rulings or recommendations.

Viet Nam and the US had held consultations back in March but failed to reach any consensus on the issues in controversy, necessitating the formation of the panel.

The key issue involved is the US practice of ‘zeroing' to determine dumping. Zeroing treats all non-dumped sales as having a dumping margin of zero rather than a negative, thereby preventing non-dumped sales from offsetting dumped sales in overall computations.

Zeroing has been proven to be an unfair practice and it violates the rules of the WTO.

After six months, the panel will present its final conclusions to the concerned parties and, three weeks later, inform all WTO member countries of the result. If the Dispute Settlement Body agrees, the panel's final conclusions will become the body's rulings or recommendations. The US first officially imposed anti-dumping duties on Vietnamese shrimp in February 2005, with levies ranging from about 4 per cent to more than 25 per cent. — VNS

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Garment firms face labor shortage as orders pour in

Garment firms face labor shortage as orders pour inDespite a surplus of buyers willing to pay top dollar, a labor shortage continues to stymie the garment industry’s production capacity and business.

Prices have jumped an average of 15 percent from year to year and some firms are booked with orders through the end of 2010. According to Le Quoc An, chairman of the Vietnam Textile and Apparel Association (VITA), some business owners have had to turn customers away due to the manpower shortage.

Vietnam exported US$5.87 billion worth of textiles and garments in the first seven months of this year, a 17.4 percent rise over the same period last year, according to the General Statistics Office. Shipments to South Korea saw the biggest hike, some 80 percent. The Southeast Asia market is up 30 percent; the US, 23 percent; and Japan, 15 percent.

Do Dinh Dinh, general director of the garment firm Hung Long, said demand for Vietnamese garment products from big importers like the EU and the US soared. Many customers turned to the Vietnamese market after China increased its production prices to serve its salary increase policy for employees.

“There are too many orders for garment firms to fill,” he said. “Orders from the US rose by 40-50 percent.”

Le Ngoc Hoan, general director of Nha Trang textile and garment firm, said the global economic recovery has increased consumption. Thus, the number of orders from his firm’s two biggest buyers, the US and EU, has increased by 30 percent.

But as the number of orders skyrockets, the number of available workers is plummeting. According to the VITA, the number of laborers in the industry dropped by 17 percent in the first half of this year

 

Dinh said his firm needs an addition of 1,000 laborers to meet all of its new orders. Now, the firm has 2,700 employees, but the actual number of people reporting for work on a given day is only some 2,400.

“We see workers leaving their jobs every day. Meanwhile, some others are off sick or on leave for their children’s illness,” he explained. “Most garment workers are female.”

His company has had to lower its employment requirements in an effort to recruit, Dinh said. “Now workers only need know how to sew; we had to drop our standards for health and education. Some laborers can’t even fill out an employment application.”

There is an abundant source of laborers in rural areas, but employees in the countryside generally aren’t interested in industrial jobs.

Pham Thi Du, director of garment firm Tien Tien, said garment laborers earn an average of VND3 million ($157.9) and often quit because of low salaries.

“We always have demand for more employees; we could never hire enough workers,” she said. At the moment, the company employs more than 2,000 people.

Hoan from Nha Trang said over 200 workers have quit the company since the beginning of this year for more cushy jobs in the tourism industry – Nha Trang is a famous coastal resort destination.

Meanwhile, his firm has had to hire mostly unskilled workers. “We spend VND500-600 million on vocational training for workers each year, but after undergoing training, they leave for other jobs,” he said.

The labor shortage has affected the turnaround time for many firms. Dinh said his firm typically ships its products out by sea. When orders are overdue, however, he has to use airplanes. Meanwhile, aviation fees are very high, some $10 per kilogram for products delivered to the US.

Many garment firms have increased workers’ salaries to lure more laborers. Dinh said his company increased the starting salary for its employees by 15 percent to no avail.

His firm has also opened a production establishment in rural Son Dong District of Bac Giang Province, to lure local laborers. The firm offered allowances and vocational training to the laborers, with unimpressive results.

“Early this year, we held a vocational training course for over 200 laborers there, but only 70 percent of them stayed to work for us after the course finished,” Dinh said.

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