Tuesday, January 4, 2011

S Korea hosts dialogue on Viet Nam tax, customs rules

SEOUL — A dialogue with 118 local businesses on Viet Nam's new tax and customs policies was held in Seoul on Friday .

The event was part of a working visit to South Korea by a Finance Ministry delegation led by Deputy Minister Do Hoang Anh Tuan.

The delegation answered questions on the country's tax incentives, corporate taxes, value added tax and new regulations on customs procedures. Tuan said more than 70 per cent of Korean businesses investing in Viet Nam were up to medium size so they faced difficulties in accessing policies and dealing with issues on procedures and tax incentives.

He said Viet Nam's Finance Ministry and General Department of Taxation had planned to co-ordinate with South Korean authorised agencies in facilitating Korean businesses' operations in Viet Nam.

Tuan said the dialogue was the first between the two sides since their tariff co-operation agreement was signed since March 1995.

Before the dialogue, the Vietnamese delegation worked with the South Korean departments of taxation and customs to exchange experiences in building automatic information systems.

South Korea is a world leader in the application of e-technology in tax and customs procedures. — VNS

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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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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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Vietnam’s real estate market stagnates

A deluge of development has left Vietnam swimming in apartments no one can afford



Workers at a construction site in downtown Ho Chi Minh City. Supply will increase on the local real estate and experts say this can put more pressure on prices.

The real estate market, especially the high-end aparment segment, has hit a rough spot recently as prices remain high in the face of abundant supply.

The actual demand for luxury property is very low, at the moment. Many developers have had to cut their prices and begin offering lots of perks to attract buyers. Despite these efforts, sales have sagged, according to Nguyen Manh Ha, director of the Construction Ministry’s Housing and Real Estate Market Management Department.

“This month only two people bought apartments,” said Nguyen Thu Ha, a salesperson from a real estate exchange center in Khuat Duy Tien Street in Hanoi. “Most people come here to check prices only.”

Many real estate exchange centers in the area are seeing the same situation, she said. Despite the slow trade, property prices remain beyond the financial grasp of many customers she explained.

In Ho Chi Minh City, only 14 percent of the luxury apartment supply was sold in the first eight months of this year. Meanwhile agents sold off 17 percent of midrange and 20 percent of low-end apartments, according to a recent survey conducted by the market research firm Cushman & Wakefield Vietnam.

The primary apartment market in Hanoi was generally not very vibrant in the second quarter. Only 670 units were sold, accounting for 48 percent of the primary supply, said Savills Vietnam, a UK-based research firm.

Hugo Slade, deputy director of Cushman & Wakefield Vietnam, attributed the stagnation to high real estate prices and high interest rates. Complicated borrowing procedures remain a major obstacle for those who cannot afford the inflated prices.

The price of luxury apartments stands at US$2,350-2,870 per square meter, while mid-range and low-end flats sell for $1,460- 1,860; and $780-810, respectively, according to the survey.

Nguyen Van Minh, general secretary of the Vietnam Property Association said the real estate market in Hanoi and some neighboring areas was very hot, when the National Assembly discussed the Hanoi zoning plan some months ago. Because the plan has still not been approved, the market has reverted to its previous state.

A supply surplus has only exacerbated the situation. According to the Ministry of Construction, 2,500 apartment projects are currently underway nationwide, including 800 in Hanoi, and 1,400 in Ho Chi Minh City.

A recent report from Savills Vietnam said there were 11,200 apartments available for sale in the southern city’s primary market in the second quarter, an increase of 24 percent compared to the first quarter. The company said about 28,500 apartments that are currently in the works will be completed between 2010 to 2012. An estimated 5,800 apartments will become available in the second half of 2010.

Minh from the property association, said the government has facilitated the construction of low-income apartments, and many projects have been implemented. Thus, many apartments will become available for sale by the end of this year.

The real estate consulting firm CB Richard Ellis, sales of mid-range and affordable development will continue to flourish in the coming months.

According to the Ho Chi Minh City Real Estate Association, mid-range housing will be the key real estate product both this year and the next. Housing products priced between VND12- 15 million per square meter will grow the most because both homebuyers and investors can afford them.

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TNK-BP said to bid for BP Vietnam project as soon as next week

TNK-BP said to bid for BP Vietnam project as soon as next weekTNK-BP will make an offer to buy BP Plc’s stake in an offshore natural-gas project in Vietnam and three assets in Venezuela as early as next week, said a person close to the Russian oil producer’s board.

TNK-BP, owned 50-50 by BP and a group of Russian billionaires, received board approval today to bid for the Nam Con Son gas block, pipeline and facilities in Vietnam and oil assets in Venezuela, the person said, declining to be identified before the offers are made.

The board didn’t approve proposals for assets in other countries, the person said. BP’s directors on the board recused themselves from the vote, the person said.

TNK-BP board directors BP’s former Chief Executive Officer Tony Hayward, former German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder and former NATO Secretary-General George Robertson declined to comment.

BP, Europe’s largest oil producer by volume, plans to sell $30 billion of assets in 18 months to cover costs linked to the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, the worst in U.S. history. In Venezuela, BP has stakes in the Petroperija and Boqueron oil fields and the Petromonagas heavy oil-upgrading project, which produces 110,000 barrels of oil a day, according to BP’s website. Petroperija and Boqueron produce a combined 19,500 barrels a day, according to PDVSA’s website.

Mikhail Fridman, executive chairman and one of the Russian shareholders in TNK-BP, said in a Sept. 15 interview that the venture is ready to buy the assets, as well as those BP is selling in other countries.

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TNK-BP said to bid for BP Vietnam project as soon as next week

TNK-BP said to bid for BP Vietnam project as soon as next weekTNK-BP will make an offer to buy BP Plc’s stake in an offshore natural-gas project in Vietnam and three assets in Venezuela as early as next week, said a person close to the Russian oil producer’s board.

TNK-BP, owned 50-50 by BP and a group of Russian billionaires, received board approval today to bid for the Nam Con Son gas block, pipeline and facilities in Vietnam and oil assets in Venezuela, the person said, declining to be identified before the offers are made.

The board didn’t approve proposals for assets in other countries, the person said. BP’s directors on the board recused themselves from the vote, the person said.

TNK-BP board directors BP’s former Chief Executive Officer Tony Hayward, former German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder and former NATO Secretary-General George Robertson declined to comment.

BP, Europe’s largest oil producer by volume, plans to sell $30 billion of assets in 18 months to cover costs linked to the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, the worst in U.S. history. In Venezuela, BP has stakes in the Petroperija and Boqueron oil fields and the Petromonagas heavy oil-upgrading project, which produces 110,000 barrels of oil a day, according to BP’s website. Petroperija and Boqueron produce a combined 19,500 barrels a day, according to PDVSA’s website.

Mikhail Fridman, executive chairman and one of the Russian shareholders in TNK-BP, said in a Sept. 15 interview that the venture is ready to buy the assets, as well as those BP is selling in other countries.

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Vietnam urges US to reduce trade barriers

Vietnam urges US to reduce trade barriers

Vietnam has called on the US to minimise its trade barriers and
play a more active role in the multilateral trade system.


A Vietnamese representative made the request at a session held at the
World Trade Organisations (WTO) headquarters in Geneva on Sept. 29 and
Oct. 1 to review the US ’s trade policies.


Head
of the Vietnamese Delegation to the UN, WTO and other international
organisations in Geneva Ambassador Vu Dung and officials from the
Ministries of Industry and Trade, and Foreign Affairs attended the
event.


The representative voiced concerns over the
US ’s trade barriers that resulted in anti-dumping duties against frozen
shrimp, plastic bags and tra fish (Pangasius) imported from Vietnam .


Vietnam expected that the US would
re-examine its investigations on the imposition of anti-subsidy and
anti-dumping tariffs before making decision to avoid affecting other WTO
members.


Two-way trade between Vietnam and the
US has grown steadily, reaching its peak of 15 billion USD in 2009, 15
times higher than the figure in 2001 when the two nations had not
signed the Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA) yet.


The
US has become as Vietnam ’s biggest importer in recent years,
importing 11.5 billion USD worth of goods in 2009, accounting for
one-fifth of the Southeast Asian country’s total exports. In the first
five months of 2010, bilateral trade hit 7.75 billion USD, including
6.09 billion USD from Vietnamese exports.


The
country emerged as the biggest foreign investor in Vietnam last
year, with a combined registered capital of 9.8 billion USD.


The US is also an important partner of Vietnam in the current
negotiations on the Trans-Pacific Strategic Economic Partnership
Agreement./.

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