Friday, February 18, 2011

Finance Ministry to control prices

Customers buy bread at Big C supermarket in Ha Noi. — VNA/VNS Photo Tran viet

Customers buy bread at Big C supermarket in Ha Noi. — VNA/VNS Photo Tran viet

HA NOI — The Ministry of Finance has said it will step in to control prices on the domestic market following predictions that they are expected to rise by the end of the year.

Nguyen Tien Thoa, director of the ministry's Pricing Management Department, said the recovery of the world economy and increasing demand for materials for production and business would push prices up on the world market by the end of this year.

He said the department should be able to keep the expected increases down to a modest level. However, the high demand for goods and services before Tet, plus any diseases in livestock would keep the pressure on prices.

Difficulty in raising capital for production and electricity costs would also add to the pressure.

Thoa said the State would check on the amount of goods in stock and register sales prices of 17 essential goods to avoid speculation.

By the end of December, prices of electricity, coal, paper, cement, tap water, transport would be stabilised.

Last week, Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung called on ministries, agencies and municipal and provincial authorities to implement strategies to stabilise the market and boost production.

Directive No1875/CT-TTg has been designed to ensure Viet Nam's growth rate reaches 6.5 per cent and the consumer price index (CPI) does not rise above 8 per cent. — VNS

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Province lures investors

Zinc-plated corrugated steel is rolled at the Hoa Sen Group factory in the southern province of Ba Ria – Vung Tau. — VNA/VNS Photo The Anh

Zinc-plated corrugated steel is rolled at the Hoa Sen Group factory in the southern province of Ba Ria – Vung Tau. — VNA/VNS Photo The Anh

HCM CITY — Southern coastal Ba Ria – Vung Tau Province has attracted an increasing number of investment projects over the last five years, according to the province's Department of Planning and Investment.

From 2006 through 2010, the province issued 196 new investment licences with total committed capital of US$24.26 billion.

The investment projects now number at 280, with total committed capital of $27 billion.

Most investment projects are in the tourism and industry sectors.

The number of projects has doubled, while committed capital has increased 10 times compared to the target set for the 2006-10 period, according to the department.

Implemented capital reached $3.39 billion, a rise of 1.5 times compared to the 2001 – 05 period, about $650 million higher than the target.

According to the department, foreign investment projects, mostly in the tourism sector, have accounted for 60 per cent of total investment capital and 50 per cent of export turnover.

During the 2006-10 period, foreign-invested projects made up 20 – 30 per cent of the total budget and created more than 20,000 jobs.

Local investors have focused on projects to develop seaports, residential areas and other infrastructure projects.

They include projects to develop Long Son Oil and Gas Industrial Park ($169.7 million), An Phu shipbuilding factory ($144.1 million), Chau Duc residential area ($63.43 million) and Nui Lon – Nui Nho tourist resort ($71.79 million).

Tan Thanh District in the province has attracted 127 projects with total investment capital of VND86,357 billion ($4.4 million).

Vung Tau City ranked second in the number of projects, with 76, and a total investment capital of VND24,099 billion ($1.2 million).

Viet Nam's membership in the World Trade Organisation (WTO) in 2007 has helped spur foreign investment growth, especially in Ba Ria – Vung Tau Province.

In 2007, the province attracted investment capital of only $1.4 billion, but capital rose to $11.6 billion in 2008.

Le Kim Huong, director of the province's Department of Planning and Investment, said the province wanted to create the most favourable conditions for both local and foreign businesses to invest.

The executive director of Ho Tram Beach Resort, Le Ngoc Quynh, noted that when his company invested in tourism in Phuoc Thuan Commune in Xuyen Moc District, local authorities supported them by improving infrastructure, such as power and telephone lines.

Because of the global recession, investors have also faced challenges in luring capital, particularly for large projects.

In addition, frequent changes in Government policies about land-use have postponed site clearance work because of lawsuits on compensation for displaced residents. This, in turn, has delayed progress on large projects.

Located in the major southern economic zone more than 100 kilometres from HCM City to the southeast, Ba Ria – Vung Tau Province is a major tourism site, favoured by nature with a long, beautiful coast.

The coastal province is also the country's only site for the offshore oil and gas industry. — VNS

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Bac Lieu farmers stuck with salt

BAC LIEU — With the next production season all set to start, farmers in Bac Lieu Province have 134,000 tonnes of black salt still in stock, according to the province's Department of Agriculture and Rural Development.

During the last season at the beginning of this year, Bac Lieu, which, at 3,500ha, has the largest salt-production area in the Cuu Long (Mekong) Delta, produced a record output of more than 266,000 tonnes, or two times the quantity produced a year earlier.

Of this, nearly 90 per cent was black salt.

In late June, the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development had ordered the Northern Food Corporation to buy salt from farmers in Bac Lieu who had around 200,000 tonnes in stock.

The corporation assigned the Bac Lieu Salt Trading Joint-Stock Company to buy 30,000 tonnes.

However, Bac Lieu and other companies could only buy a total of 7,000 tonnes of white salt due to finance, warehousing, and transportation problems.

To help farmers build warehouses to store their stocks, the provincial People's Committee has provided more than 400 of them interest-free loans worth a total of VND1.3 billion (US$68,000). — VNS

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Thursday, February 17, 2011

Co-operatives ‘are still a vital force'

HA NOI — Vietnamese co-operatives had made much progress in improving living conditions, especially in rural areas, and creating jobs, Deputy Prime Minister Hoang Trung Hai said here yesterday.

Hai, who was speaking at the third Patriotism Emulation Congress of the Viet Nam Co-operatives Alliance, urged co-operatives to fully utilise their economic potential.

Co-operatives have been the core of the collective economic sector in Viet Nam for more than 50 years. They operate on the voluntary participation of individuals and organisations and are particularly strong in rural areas.

Together with economic sectors run by the State, collective economic sectors are the foundation of Viet Nam's multi-sector economy.

Co-operatives enable members easier access to capital and techniques.

At the congress, the co-operatives alliance summarised the outcome of emulation movements launched five years ago to raise the effectiveness of co-operatives in alleviating poverty and building a new rural model.

"The two movements helped speed up the development of the collective economic sector with new models of large-scale co-operatives that offered jobs and improved living conditions for millions of labourers," said Hai.

Vice chairman of the alliance Nguyen Van Bien said that at present, Viet Nam had more than 18,200 co-operatives, 53 unions of co-operatives and 360,000 co-operative groups, 20 per cent higher than in 2005.

The sector created jobs for more than 12.5 million labourers in different economic fields, especially agriculture, handicrafts and aquaculture.

Moreover, Bien said, co-operatives also mobilised money from members to shift the economic structure and expand production.

For example, more than 1,000 credit funds offered loans worth a total of VND21 trillions (US$1billion). More than 80 per cent of the loans were used to help co-operative members develop agriculture and handicrafts.

The collective economic sector contributed about 5.45 per cent of the national gross domestic product, joining hands to reduce poverty rates in the last five years from 30 to 14 per cent.

However, the collective economic sector in general and the co-operatives in particular still face shortcomings. They often lack the management ability to provide close co-ordination with other co-operatives or with other sectors. — VNS

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President praises An Giang for becoming economic ‘hub'

AN GIANG — President Nguyen Minh Triet yesterday congratulated An Giang Province for becoming a key economic hub in the Cuu Long (Mekong) Delta.

"You're now leading the nation and the region in rice growing and fresh fisheries breeding," Triet, a member of the Communist Party of Viet Nam's Politburo, told the ninth An Giang Party Congress yesterday.

Triet said that in the last five years, most targets set at the last Provincial Party Congress had been achieved or surpassed.

However, he noted that economic development was not yet sustainable and called for infrastructure development to be sped up to attract more investors and to raise the province's competitive index.

Regarding the next five-year development plan, President Triet urged the province to pay more attention to agriculture and rural development.

He said the application of science and technology in agricultural production could add value to produce.

A political report delivered by the An Giang Party Committee said in the last five years, on average the province recorded annual gross domestic production (GDP) growth of 10.34 per cent against the target of 12 per cent.

Of this, the service sector increased by 13.46 per cent, industry and construction increased by 13 per cent and agriculture by 3.77 per cent.

Per capita income in the period under review increased by 2.5 times the 2005 figure.

The political report said the most striking success in the last five years was the impressive increase in total social investment in the province – VND 87.4 trillion (More than US$5 billion).

Export turnover in the last five years stood at $3 billion against the target of $2.68 billion, three times higher than the 2001-05 plan.

Reviewing the movement to follow President Ho Chi Minh's moral example, the report said much progress had been recorded by many individual and collective role models, particularly among party members.

The An Giang Congress closes today. — vns

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Businesses commit to price stabilization ahead of Tet

A consumer inspects sugar at the Co.opMart store on Nguyen Dinh Chieu Street in HCMC’s District 3 - Photo: Minh Tam
HCMC – Some 14 enterprises have pledged to join a price stabilization program in HCMC ahead of the forthcoming traditional Lunar New Year holiday, or Tet, despite market volatility in recent times.

The businesses said they had prepared larger stock than that assigned by the city’s Department of Industry and Trade and they are ready to supply the market with 6,000 tons of rice, 11,000 tons of sugar and 4,600 tons of livestock per month.

The companies have also completed goods storage plans to meet customer demands. For instance, meat processor Vissan has plans to launch 2,100 tons of pork, 360 tons of cattle meat and 3,400 tons of processed food in the lead up to the country’s biggest national holiday, higher than those registered with the department at 2,000 tons, 200 tons and 900 tons respectively. Vissan has also put around 2,000 tons of frozen meat in stock.

Saigon Co.op, the owner of the city’s leading retail store chain Co.opMart, has advanced VND300 billion for farms so that they can ensure sufficient food supply and low prices prior to the Tet season during which high demand often drives up prices.

According to the department, local consumers will be able to buy frozen and dried seafood from Ca Mau Province-based Phu Cuong Group at 10% low than market prices. The company says it will meet around 20% of demand in the city although it has got no preferential loans from the price stabilization program.

Phu Cuong is also committed to keeping prices unchanged from now to the end of next March.

The city kicked off the program on June 21 to stabilize prices of eight essential goods within this year and ahead of the upcoming Tet. The city offers interest-free loans to the 14 enterprises to store goods and sell them at prices 10% lower than market levels.

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Seminar discusses strategies for business growth held in Hanoi

Recruiting firm Navigos Group and the Associations of Chartered Certified Accountants (ACCA) Tuesday held a seminar discussing strategies for business growth in Melia Hotel, Hanoi.

The event, joined by 200 CEOs, CFOs, human resource managers from domestic and multinational companies and guest speakers from ANZ, Aon, Ford Vietnam and the hosts, focuses on the importance of qualified accounting/finance professionals to an organization’s financial management, and the greater strategic role being assumed by accounting/finance professionals.

According to recent research carried out by Navigos Group, accounting/finance ranked third amongst the top five functions with the highest demand for executive positions during the first three quarters of 2010.

Of the total demand for accounting/finance manpower, 25 percent was for finance managers and directors, 4 percent for finance controllers and demand for chief accountants and accountants was a substantial 38 percent and 33 percent respectively.

When segmented by industry requirements, the research revealed that demand for accounting/finance manpower was highest in the banking/finance sector at 46 percent, followed by 32 percent in trading/services and 22 percent in manufacturing/engineering/construction.

“The most recent monetary downturn was witness to the growing influence and control that CFOs and finance leaders have in guiding businesses through troubled times,” Nguyen Thi Van Anh, Managing Director of Navigos Group, said.

“No longer just bookkeepers for their firms, accounting and finance professionals are regarded as business partners, skilled in areas of divesting and restructuring businesses, developing financial models and analyzing financial forecasts, as well as developing back office transaction processes that support cash flow and drive efficiencies in so many areas,” she added.

“Changes in the roles of professional accountants and the finance function itself are partly a consequence of the downturn, and partly an outcome of a growing recognition of the value that the finance function and professional accountants can add to an organization,” Le Thi Hong Len, Country Manager of ACCA Vietnam, said.

ACCA found in its March survey in 105 countries that nearly 70 percent of respondents considered it very important for organizations to have a formal program to develop the best financial talent and 75 percent suggested that talent management was an important component in addressing financial skills shortages prevalent in many organizations.

The ACCA survey also indicated that 76 percent of respondents believed the primary objective of a talent management program is to retain key staff, while 60 percent felt another important objective is to attract and recruit candidates with promising potential.

“Since late 2008, the recession has provided the finance function with an unparalleled opportunity to shape and influence business. However, this opportunity can only be grasped if organizations and finance leaders invest in the skills and capabilities required to develop, manage and protect the integrity of these vital functions,” Reza Ali, Head of Business Development, Emerging Markets, Asia, said.

“Talent management practices for finance professionals need further development and must include elements for talent identification, development, deployment and retention,” he added.

In a related survey conducted by Navigos Group in September 2010, 41 percent of the more than 3,000 polled said that a poor work environment is the number one reason why employees leave a company. Unprofessional line-managers and inadequate remuneration packages were the following reasons with 37 percent and 22 percent, respectively.

Conversely, another Navigos Group survey revealed that 48 percent of respondents ranked development opportunities as the most important criteria for accepting a job offer and employer brand was regarded as the second most determining factor with 30 percent of the vote.

The combined results of these surveys point towards a strong confidence in the ability of a talent management program to contribute significantly to long term organizational growth and development.

Consensus amongst many in attendance is that the seminar provided an excellent opportunity for panelists and members of the audience to exchange information, ideas, and experiences across a broad spectrum of industries.

So, each must determine the role accounting/finance talent will play in their organization and how best to implement a talent management program that will enable them to find the right fit, as well as develop and retain the talent that will consistently contribute to organizational objectives.

A second seminar on the same topic, “Accounting/Finance Talent in 2010 – the Foundation for Growth”, will be held Thursday at the New World Hotel in Ho Chi Minh City with the participation of more than 200 client guests.

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