Sunday, December 19, 2010

A brighter economic future

Goods are exported from HCM City's Cat Lai Port. Viet Nam's economic growth was expected to reach 6.7 per cent in 2010 thanks to Government steps to stablise the economy. — VNA/VNS Photo Kim Phuong

Goods are exported from HCM City's Cat Lai Port. Viet Nam's economic growth was expected to reach 6.7 per cent in 2010 thanks to Government steps to stablise the economy. — VNA/VNS Photo Kim Phuong

HA NOI — Viet Nam should maintain macroeconomic stability in response to its new status as a middle income country, the Asian Development Bank said yesterday as it boosted the nation's 2010 growth forecast.

Viet Nam's economy was expected to grow 6.7 per cent in 2010, up from the bank's 6.5 per cent forecast earlier this year, following the Government's steps to stabilise the economy, the Manila-based bank said in its twice-yearly economic forecast.

The country's expected growth boost was in accordance with the expansion of Asian economies by 8.2 per cent, up from the previously estimated 7.5 per cent, as the region "recovered from the global (financial) crisis with remarkable speed and vigour", according to the report.

The bank also increased Viet Nam's growth forecast for next year from 6.8 per cent to 7 per cent. Inflation was projected to average 8.5 per cent this year, easing to 7.5 per cent next year on the assumptions that domestic macroeconomic stability is maintained and that global oil and commodity prices remain relatively steady next year.

Viet Nam, along with Thailand and Malaysia, would see an upswing in their exports, said the bank, which predicted Southeast Asian economies to grow 7.5 per cent in 2010, up from an earlier 5.1 per cent estimate.

Since the last forecast in April this year, "Viet Nam has consolidated its macroeconomic stability," the ADB Country Director for Viet Nam, Ayumi Koshini, told a press briefing in Ha Noi yesterday. "As a result, we are making upward adjustments in our growth forecast for both 2010 and 2011."

The steps taken by the Government to stabilise the economy had contributed to improvement in the external and foreign reserves positions, the Asian Development Outlook Update noted. With improvement in the capital account, the overall balance of payments would likely turn to a small surplus in the second quarter of 2010 after recording deficits since the start of last year. The bank predicted quick economic growth in the second quarter.

Viet Nam was recently upgraded to a Middle Income Country as the GDP per capita reached US$1,024. In order to prepare for the next ten year period as a new Middle Income Country, Viet Nam needed to be cautious about maintaining macroeconomic stability and effectively communicating relevant policies to the public while accelerating reforms, the bank said in its report.

The country is preparing a new 10-year Strategy and a new five-year Socio-Economic Development Plan as a new ‘middle income country'.

"It will be critical for Viet Nam to keep an eye on the global economic scene," said Koshini who warned that the transformation of China from the ‘factory of the world' to the ‘largest consumer market in the world' would certainly change the regional economic map, together with the establishment of the ASEAN Economic Community by 2015.

The bank advised the Government to continue its efforts to ensure a better public understanding of its policy stance, supported by greater and timely availability of information and statistics which should be applied not only to the Government but also to the corporate sector.

The ADB report noted that the two laws approved by the National Assembly in June 2010 – the laws on the State Bank of Viet Nam and on Credit Institutions – together with various legal documents issued by the State Bank of Viet Nam (SBV) and other agencies, marked important progress in strengthening the framework for monetary policy implementation and safeguarding the stability of the banking system.

The Asian Development Outlook and its Update are ADB's primary economic reports analysing the economic conditions and prospects in Asia and the Pacific. They are issued in April and September, respectively. — VNS

Related Articles

Agricultural exports rise 22.3% in first nine months

Workers process pineapple for export in Ninh Binh Province. Agricultural exports reached US$14 billion in the first nine months of the year. — VNA/VNS Photo Huy Hung

Workers process pineapple for export in Ninh Binh Province. Agricultural exports reached US$14 billion in the first nine months of the year. — VNA/VNS Photo Huy Hung

HA NOI — Agricultural export value reached US$14 billion in the first nine months of the year, an increase of 22.3 per cent over the same period last year, according to the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development.

Of the total, seafood accounted for $3.47 billion – an increase of 14.2 per cent over the previous year – while forestry products accounted for $2.6 billion, a whopping 36.3 per cent increase.

Remaining agricultural exports totalled $7.2 billion, an increase of 21.1 per cent, of which rice earned $2.56 billion, an increase of 14 per cent.

The sector as a whole generated 27 per cent of the nation's total export value in first nine months of the year, the ministry said.

Nguyen Viet Chien, director of the ministry's Centre for Information and Statistics, said the increases were due both to high demand and rising global prices.

Among leading cash crops, rice exports totalled 5.5 million tonnes during the nine-month period, an increase of 12 per cent, while rice prices rose to an average of $470 per tonne, 3 per cent higher than last year and nearly comparable to the average price for rice from Thailand, where rice production was effected this year by natural disaster.

Despite gloomy forecasts earlier this year that coffee exports would not reach $1 billion during 2010, coffee exports rose 4.2 per cent in the first nine months to a volume of 925,000 tonnes, while export value has already surpassed $1.3 billion.

Rubber exports climbed to 531,000 tonnes in the first nine months, an increase of 10.9 per cent, earning $1.45 billion – double last year's value.

Tea exports rose 4 per cent in volume during the period to 100,000 tonnes and 16.7 per cent in value to $146 million, while cashew exports jumped by 10 per cent in volume to 143,000 tonnes and by 30 per cent in value to $780 million.

Favourable conditions on world markets have made it likely that total agricultural export value would exceed $16 billion by the end of the year, Chien said. — VNS

Related Articles

Czechs enter shipyard deal

HA NOI — Vietnamese and Czech enterprises agreed to co-operate in shipbuilding and ship repair industries as well as technological transfer at a business conference held on Monday in the capital.

The agreement is confirmed by a contract signed by PSJ and Nosco Vinalines, a memorandum of understanding between PSJ and Vinalines Shipyard and a protocol between CREA Hydro&Energy and Ha Noi Mechanical Engineeging Co (Hameco).

According to the vice chairman of the Viet Nam Chamber of Commerce and Industry (VCCI) Doan Duy Khuong, Viet Nam views the development of trade and investment relations with the Czech Republic as an important endeavor.

The past few months showed stable development in the two-way trade, which topped US$156 million in 2009. Czech exports to Viet Nam stayed at $36 million and its imports at $120 million, most of which are agricultural products, seafood, footwear, garments, handicrafts and computer components. In addition, the Czech Republic has invested some $35 million in Viet Nam, with a focus on manufacturing crystal glass, beer, electrical devices and electronics.

These figures, however, failed to match the economic potential of the two countries, Khuong said, adding that the Czech Republic would be a gateway to a large and lucrative EU market, while Viet Nam would simultaneously introduce Czech products to ASEAN countries.

There were untapped opportunities for increased co-operation, said the minister of Industry and Trade Le Danh Vinh, citing Viet Nam's advantages in garments, footwear, agricultural production, food processing and consumer goods, as well as Czech strengths in the mining, pharmaceutical and IT industries.

He called for the frequent exchange of business delegations to foster transfers of trade and investment information as well as to find out new co-operation opportunities.

Vinh also proposes organising more business conferences and forums in each country. — VNS

Related Articles

Italian businesses eye investments

HA NOI — A delegation of Italian engineering companies and contractors in transport, energy and environment sectors will visit Viet Nam from Sunday to Wednesday, Trade Commissioner Marco Saladini said in Ha Noi yesterday.

The purpose of the mission was to aid the nation's rapid development by improving the country's infrastructure, presenting Italian companies with co-operation opportunities, Saladini said.

Over the past five years, infrastructure investment in the country had not kept pace with the GDP growth of 7.3 per cent. To meet demand and development goals, it was estimated Viet Nam's overall infrastructure spending requirements over the next five years alone were in the range of US$165 billion, about $33 billion a year.

Italian Trade Commission research indicated initiated projects to be completed by 2015 in the three key sectors' infrastructure were worth $85 billion.

Even this smaller figure implied a strong acceleration from the current overall expenditure level of $5 billion or 9.4 per cent of the country's GDP, which was the average of the last few years, Saladini said.

The trade commission would conduct a seminar next Monday and Tuesday on infrastructure development and co-operation opportunities with Italian companies. — VNS

Related Articles

Vinashin's new motorcycle product sparks debate

Vinashin's new motorcycle product sparks debateA new motorcycle put out this month by a subsidiary of state-owned shipbuilder Vinashin has set off a heated debate regarding design patent and the origin of its engine.

Vu Manh Ha, general director of Vinashinmotor, said that the  Diamond Blue scooters use a modern engine produced by the Sundiro Honda Motorcycle Co in China.

Honda Vietnam insisted that the engine was not manufactured by any branches of the Japanese company around the world, and not by Sundiro Honda specifically. Honda Vietnam also said it is the only company that has the right to produce and distribute Honda engines and motorcycles in the country.

Speaking to local news website VTCNews, Ha said Honda was trying to “mess up” with his company and inspire doubts in consumers. He said local authorities verified the origin of the engines when they were imported.

But the engine is not the only question that comes up in the ongoing controversy surrounding the Diamond Blue. There have also been concerns over design patent infringement as the scooter is a definite look-alike of the popular Vespa LX model.

Diamond Blue retails at around VND50 million (US$2,560) while a Vespa LX costs around $4,000.

Ha said the design was provided by a Chinese company and Vinashinmotor has not violated any regulation. 

The Italian scooter company, Piaggio, issued a press release saying it has known about “a motorcycle that is similar, in design, to the Vespa LX”.

“Many companies have made products based on the design of Vespa but they all failed because their products lack the same design quality and high-tech value as Vespa,” the company said in its statement.

Piaggio, however, did not mention Diamond Blue or any intention to take legal action to protect its product. It said “Vietnamese consumers are wise enough to tell the difference between genuine products and copycats.”

Analysts say this response is a smart move considering Piaggio has not patented the design of Vespa LX in Vietnam.

To Duc Long, an official at the Vietnam Register, a government body responsible for technical supervision of vehicles, said both Piaggio and the National Office of Intellectual Property of Vietnam had been alerted about the similarities in design. However, both of them confirmed that Piaggio did not have a local patent on the design of the Vespa LX.

The controversy has not affected Diamond Blue sales. Analysts say the bike's reasonable price and the engine claimed to be made by Honda have caught the attention of many consumers.

According to a sales representative for Vinashinmotor, around 300 scooters have been sold over the past three weeks in the northern region. The company’s assembly plant will continue to supply 50-70 scooters for the market every day, he said.

Related Articles

Power firms may be given more freedom in pricing

Power firms may be given more freedom in pricingVietnam may allow power companies to adjust prices on a quarterly basis as the country plans to create a more market-based pricing scheme for its power sector.

According to new regulations drafted by the Ministry of Industry and Trade, power wholesalers will be allowed to raise their prices accordingly if production costs increase by more than 1 percent from the previous quarter. In case of a price hike of more than 10 percent, the government will take measures to stabilize the market.

Power companies will be required to set aside parts of their profits for a price stabilization fund which will be used to offset future losses when production costs surge. The fund resembles a stabilization fund used by fuel traders.

Vietnam’s government currently allows power prices to change once a year. The most recent change was a 6.8 percent hike in March based on higher input costs for power production.

The new regulations are expected to be approved by the end of this year and new power prices will be announced in March 2011.

Officials at the Industry and Trade Ministry and state power utility Electricity of Vietnam (EVN) have said that the increase will be small and will not have any significant impact on daily life or production.

According to the Vietnam Energy Association, current power prices of around 5 US cents per kilowatt-hour are not attractive enough to encourage investment in the sector, as manufacturers only earn profits at prices of about 7-8 cents per kWh.

EVN posted a loss of more than VND3 trillion in the first six months this year because retail prices were set so low, the association said.

An EVN official said a more market-based pricing mechanism could help improve the companies financial situation and make it easier to secure loans.

Related Articles

Saturday, December 18, 2010

Power firms may be given more freedom in pricing

Power firms may be given more freedom in pricingVietnam may allow power companies to adjust prices on a quarterly basis as the country plans to create a more market-based pricing scheme for its power sector.

According to new regulations drafted by the Ministry of Industry and Trade, power wholesalers will be allowed to raise their prices accordingly if production costs increase by more than 1 percent from the previous quarter. In case of a price hike of more than 10 percent, the government will take measures to stabilize the market.

Power companies will be required to set aside parts of their profits for a price stabilization fund which will be used to offset future losses when production costs surge. The fund resembles a stabilization fund used by fuel traders.

Vietnam’s government currently allows power prices to change once a year. The most recent change was a 6.8 percent hike in March based on higher input costs for power production.

The new regulations are expected to be approved by the end of this year and new power prices will be announced in March 2011.

Officials at the Industry and Trade Ministry and state power utility Electricity of Vietnam (EVN) have said that the increase will be small and will not have any significant impact on daily life or production.

According to the Vietnam Energy Association, current power prices of around 5 US cents per kilowatt-hour are not attractive enough to encourage investment in the sector, as manufacturers only earn profits at prices of about 7-8 cents per kWh.

EVN posted a loss of more than VND3 trillion in the first six months this year because retail prices were set so low, the association said.

An EVN official said a more market-based pricing mechanism could help improve the companies financial situation and make it easier to secure loans.

Related Articles