Vietnamese consumers ‘extremely optimistic’ about economy: survey
10/10/17
|
Workers produce bicycles at a company in Hanoi. Confidence among
Vietnamese consumers has fallen slightly since last year, but that has
not stopped them from being among the most optimisitc in the region, a
new survey has found. |
Vietnam scored 90.8 compared to the regional average of 66.9
in Mastercard's latest consumer confidence index.
Confidence among Vietnamese consumers has fallen slightly since
last year, but that has not stopped them from being among the most
optimistic in the region, a new survey has found.
The Mastercard Consumer Confidence Index released last week
ranked Vietnam second in
Asia Pacific after Cambodia.
The survey asked 9,153 adults from 18 Asia Pacific markets to
give a six-month outlook on five economic factors – the economy, employment
prospects, regular income prospects, stock market and quality of life.
Vietnam's
score of 90.8, compared to the regional average of 66.9, was 1.5 points down
from the previous survey, but still in “extremely optimistic” territory, the
survey found.
Its consumers are most positive about the overall economy and
regular income, although there's been a slight dip in their outlook regarding
quality of life.
The index is calculated on a scale of 0 to 100, putting 11
markets in the "optimistic” territory. Consumers in Taiwan and Sri
Lanka fell into the "pessimistic" group,
scoring below 40, while their peers in big economies such as Australia, Hong Kong,
Singapore and Japan fell into
the "neutral" category.
South Korea
recorded the largest improvement in the ranking with optimism at its highest
level since 1995.
Heightened expectations in its economic performance and
presidential elections in May have given a “meteoric leap” driving the
sentiment from pessimistic to very optimistic in six months, the U.S. payment
technology company said in a press release.
The Mastercard survey began in 1993 and is conducted twice a
year.
In February, a Nielsen survey of online consumers in 63
economies named Vietnam the
fifth most optimistic nation in the world, after India,
the Philippines, the U.S. and Indonesia.
Vietnam’s
growing middle class population with rising disposable incomes and the
country’s stable economic outlook remain the main drivers for its ranking,
Nguyen Huong Quynh, Nielson's managing director in Vietnam, said in a statement.
The country’s economic prospects have also worked their charms
on expats. A HSBC survey last month found half of the foreigners working and living
in Vietnam
agree that the country is a good place to progress their careers and two-thirds
feel confident in the economy.
Vietnam’s
economy has been one of the best performers in the region in recent years,
fueled largely by exports in the FDI sector. Expansion of 7.46 percent in third
quarter, the strongest third quarter growth since 2010, has strengthened the
country’s hopes of achieving its ambitious growth target of 6.7 percent this
year.
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