Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Dialogue on Vietnam’s tax, customs policies held in RoK

A dialogue on Vietnam’s new tax and customs policies was held in Seoul, the Republic of Korea (RoK), last week, drawing the participation of 118 local businesses.

The dialogue took place as part of a working visit to the RoK by a Vietnamese Finance Ministry delegation led by Deputy Minister Do Hoang Anh Tuan.

After briefing about Vietnam ’s tax and customs policies, the Vietnamese delegation answered RoK businesses’ questions on the country’s tax incentives, corporate taxes, value added tax and new regulations on customs procedures.

Tax incentives and relevant policies are always the leading interests of RoK businesses, Deputy Minister Tuan said, adding that more than 70 percent of RoK businesses investing in Vietnam are small and medium sized ones so they face difficulties in accessing policies and dealing with issues on procedures and tax incentives.

Tuan said that Vietnam’s Finance Ministry and General Department of Taxation have planned to coordinate with RoK authorised agencies in facilitating RoK businesses’ operations in Vietnam .

According to Tuan, this was the first dialogue between the two sides since their tariff cooperation agreement was signed.

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Vietnam urges US to reduce trade barriers

Vietnam has called on the US to minimize 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 US$15 billion 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 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, including $6.09 billion from Vietnamese exports.

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

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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Land ready for steel, power, port project

Contractors remove sand for a steel mine in Thach Khe District, central Ha Tinh Province. The province has handed over 3,300ha of land and sea surface for projects in Vung Ang Economic Zone. — VNA/VNS Photo Cong Tuong

Contractors remove sand for a steel mine in Thach Khe District, central Ha Tinh Province. The province has handed over 3,300ha of land and sea surface for projects in Vung Ang Economic Zone. — VNA/VNS Photo Cong Tuong

HA TINH — The management board of Vung Ang Economic Zone in the central province of Ha Tinh handed over last Friday 3,300 ha of land and sea surface to Taiwan's Formosa Group, investor in a US$16billion industrial complex.

The project includes a 7.5 million tonne/year steel mill, a 1,600MW power plant, and the Son Duong Seaport which will have a handling capacity of 30 million tonnes of cargo per year.

The area comprises more than 1,900ha of land and over 1,300ha of sea surface.

Ha Tinh authorities said nearly 2,500 households with a population of more than 10,000 in the communes of Ky Lien, Ky Long, Ky Loi and Ky Phuong in Ky Anh District had moved to new re-settlement areas during the site clearance process which lasted over two years.

Members of families affected by the project received over VND1.9 trillion (nearly $100 million) in site compensation and had been supported by the province's job-training programmes, the authorities said.

In addition to the site clearance, the authorities also built a canal over 10km long to supply water to the refinery and a 5.2-km road for transporting heavy machnery and equiment for construction of the Son Duong Deep water Sea port.

According to Sai Gon Economic Times newsmagazine, the Taiwanese group has also decided to raise investment in the first stage of the project from $7.9 billion to $8.9 billion.

Total investment of the two stages of the project amounts to $16 billion.

The project is expected to employ 10,000 local workers when the first stage is completed and the figure can increase to 30,000 after completion of the second stage.

Chu Xuan Pham, an engineer with Hung Nghiep Formosa Co, said construction of the steel refinery would be completed in 36 months and building of Son Duong Port to be completed in 48 months as required in the company's investment licence. — VNS

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Tuesday, January 4, 2011

US reduces dumping duties on shrimp

Farmers harvesting shrimp in southern Bac Lieu province's Vinh Trang Dong Commune_VNA/VNS photo Huynh Su

Farmers harvesting shrimp in southern Bac Lieu province's Vinh Trang Dong Commune_VNA/VNS photo Huynh Su

HA NOI — The US Department of Commerce has decided to cut anti-dumping tariffs it had imposed on 31 Vietnamese shrimp exporters by 0.01-0.69 percentage points.

The move followed feedback to the department's fourth administrative review conducted between February 2008 and January 2009 of shrimp imported into the US by Nha Trang Seafood Joint Stock Co, Minh Phu Seafood Co, and Minh Hai Seafood Co.

Under the revised tariffs, the duty on shrimps imported by Nha Trang will be reduced from a maximum on 5.58 per cent to 4.89 per cent. Minh Phu will see a reduction of 0.01 per cent to 2.95 per cent, while the others will be subject to a duty of 3.92 per cent, reduced from the previous 4.27 per cent.

Viet Nam urges US lower trade barriers

GENEVA — The US needs to minimise trade barriers and participate more actively in the multilateral trade system, said Ambassador Vu Dung, head of Viet Nam's delegation to the World Trade Organisation (WTO) and other international agencies in Geneva, at a session at WTO headquarters last week to review US trade policies.

Dung, leading a delegation of officials from the Vietnamese ministries of Foreign Affairs and Industry and Trade, voiced concerns over US trade barriers that have resulted in anti-dumping duties against frozen shrimp, tra (pangasius) fish, and plastic bags imported from Viet Nam.

Viet Nam expected the US to re-examine its imposition of anti-subsidy and anti-dumping tariffs before making decisions affecting other WTO members, Dung said.

The US became Viet Nam's leading export market in recent years, importing US$11.5 billion worth of goods in 2009 – a fifth of Viet Nam's total exports. — VNS

The Viet Nam Association of Seafood Exporters and Producers (VASEP) continued to complain, however, that Vietnamese companies were subject to higher duties than Indian exporters, which paid duties no higher than 4.44 per cent.

Last April, Viet Nam asked the World Trade Organisation (WTO) Dispute Settlement Body to set up a panel to review US anti-dumping measures imposed on frozen warm-water shrimp from Viet Nam. WTO general director Pascal Lamy recently appointed three members to the panel.

After six months, the panel was expected to make a final report, clearing the way for further legal action between the parties. If it proceeds, this would constitute Viet Nam's first trade lawsuit against a WTO member . — VNS

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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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