Viet kieu to come home and make profit
27/4/15
Those displaced by the war are now being encouraged to
play a prominent role in the emerging economy
Nguyen Cao Ky Duyen is a star in Communist-ruled Vietnam,
but she was once a refugee from it. The long-time co-host of Paris By Night,
a variety show devised for homesick expatriate Vietnamese in France and the US but also popular inside the
country,
Her father, Nguyen Cao Ky, was a fighter pilot and former premier of South Vietnam who escaped by flying a helicopter
to a US
warship. It took him almost 30 years to get back — and longer still to persuade
his daughter to join him.
“He said to me, ‘you should come back to Vietnam. That’s
where the future is, because Vietnam
is a growing country,” recalls Ms Ky Duyen in an interview in a restaurant on a
strip of glitzy developments by the Saigon
river. “But I didn’t know how to get started. I didn’t have any friends. I
didn’t have anyone here.”
As Vietnam prepares to mark the 40th anniversary of
reunification on April 30 1975, Ms Ky Duyen counts herself among the “war baby”
returnees whose stories hold a mirror to what has changed — and what has not —
in the country. The returnees, and in some cases their sons and daughters, are
having a roller-coaster ride in a frontier market of 90m people, more than 60
per cent of whom were born since the end of the war.
Reliable data for the numbers of overseas Vietnamese,
who have returned home are hard to find. But many people inside and outside
government say more are venturing back. They have been tempted by a range of
incentives over the past two years, from tax breaks on importing cars to a
relaxation on nationality and property ownership rules. For a country seeking a
return to strong growth, amid continued worries about the structural health of
the economy, the Viet kieu are an important source.
“They are a new potential investment source for Vietnam,” says
Dinh Tien Dung, finance minister. “And I believe they will come back more and
more.”
The wooing of the Viet kieu is part of a
wider opening of the economy that began in the 1980s and accelerated when the US ended its
trade embargo in 1994. That thaw turned Vietnam into a sought-after
frontier market for investors and a crucial manufacturing link in global supply
chains for the likes of Apple and Adidas.
But a property bubble developed during the mid and
late-2000s and the economy faltered after the global financial crisis, dragged
down by bad debts and financial troubles at big state companies. that accounted
for 40 per cent of gross domestic product. Growth fell to its lowest levels in
more than a decade, while in 2011 inflation soared to 187 per cent.
This means that the returnees have become an important
element in kick-starting the second economic act in a country that was once
growing at close to 10 per cent a year. Some officials talk cautiously about
recovery now that GDP has risen more than 6 percent for the last three quarters.
Vietnam has also benefited
from the relocation of factories by international companies looking for cheaper
labour, as wage costs rise in China
and regional rivals such as Thailand.
Vietnam
has invested heavily in financial incentives to attract big manufacturers such
as Samsung and Intel.
Scepticism remains however, about the touted Vietnam
revival: bad debt problems remain and a flagship plan to privatise hundreds of
state companies has all but stalled.
Yet, for all the wider doubts, the wealth on display
in Ho Chi Minh City
is testament to how members of the war babies generation are doing very well
for themselves.
Tran Quoc Tuan, chief financial officer of Viet Uc
Seafood, a food company with international ambitions, says he is more confident
after a “really tough” couple of years when he first returned in 2009. He talks
about how several of his friends who worked in Vietnam for investment funds left
in 2012-13. But many of those who stayed tend to be launching start-ups,
ranging from pharmacies to architectural design shops, or bringing big
international brands to this large consumer market.
Returnee Henry Nguyen, the son of an official in the
South Vietnamese government, when he was two years old. Mr Nguyen now runs IDG
Ventures Vietnam, a technology-focused venture capital business, and won the
franchise to open the country’s first McDonald’s last year.
He says he was regarded “more with curiosity” than
suspicion when he first returned in 2001. “I grew up speaking very little
Vietnamese. Much to my regret, and even shame, when I first got back to Vietnam it made
it very difficult, because my language skills were almost non-existent” says Mr
Nguyen.
Pham Binh Minh, Vietnam’s deputy prime minister and
foreign minister, insists that “there’s no prejudice against those who left”.
The government is trying to encourage even more Viet kieu to come
back, through programmes including summer camps for children of the diaspora.
Asked what the authorities will do about those whom he says still “retain the
hatred” for the Communist party, he says: “It’s our policy to welcome them back
home.”
Paris by Night’s
Ms Ky Duyen acknowledges that her celebrity status has helped ease her
re-entry. But, 40 years after those chaotic last days in Saigon,
a sense of a big chance for those fortunate enough to be able to take it is
drawing Ms Ky Duyen’s centre of gravity back towards her former home. While the
US is already “set and
settled”, Vietnam
is “hungry for everything”, she says. “I started coming back more and more
often. I look around at the market here, the growth, and I think, wow, there is
a lot of potential”./.
All comments [ 2 ]
for the past years, many overseas Vietnamese have increasingly come home to invest that not only brings their profits but also contributes to the country's development
almost Vietkieu are patriotic, so they want to make contributions to our country, but there are still some who have hatred and prejudice opinions
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