International Senior economist: Vietnam, Asia’s New Tiger Economy
24/3/15
Vietnam is a developing country, which have gained a lot of
important achievements in recent period, especially after the country’s “Doi
moi” market opening in the 1980s. We’re having many chances to raise our
economy up to new level of development that has been seen by our international
friends and partners. They highly appreciate our effort and conditions to develop.
That’s why everyone all over the world is seeing Vietnam
as a new tiger economy in Asia.
According to PricewaterhouseCoopers
LLP, the country has the potential to become one of the world’s fastest-growing
economies over the period to 2050. Not only is the Southeast Asian nation
gaining ground as a cheaper manufacturing alternative to neighboring China,
Vietnam is also a politically palatable destination for Japanese firms boosting
investment in the region amid recurring Sino-Japan spats.
“It is quite possible that Vietnam could become the fastest-growing economy
in Asia,” said Vikram Nehru, a senior associate in the Asia Program and Bakrie
Chair in Southeast Asian Studies at the Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace in Washington.
“It has all the ingredients for rapid growth if it can address the challenges
in the state sector.”
Growing Clout
Signs of Vietnam’s
growing clout are gathering: In 2014 the country overtook regional counterparts
to become the biggest exporter to the U.S.
from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, or Asean, muscling ahead of
its more established manufacturing rivals of Thailand
and Malaysia.
Disbursed foreign investment in Vietnam has
soared in the past 14 years to reach $12.35 billion in 2014, up 7.4 percent
from 2013 and compared with $2.4 billion in 2000, figures from the Foreign
Investment Agency show. Samsung’s operations in the country are growing so big
that it got government approval to operate its own terminal at Hanoi’s
Noi Bai International
Airport.
And manufacturers are shifting from China. Japanese
printer maker Kyocera Document Solutions Inc., a unit of Kyocera Corp., plans
to quadruple its annual printer production in Vietnam to 2 million units by March
2018, the company said this month. Part of its operation in China will be moved to Hai Phong, making Vietnam the
company’s biggest manufacturing base for printers, with another plant planned
by August, it said.
‘Big Winner’
“Vietnam is really the big winner from
China losing its competitiveness because of rising wages” and a strong
currency, said Frederic Neumann, co-head of Asian economics research in Hong
Kong at HSBC Holdings Plc. “By moving very early into the space vacated by
China, Vietnam has first-mover advantage and it is now starting to show.”
Before weakening last year, the yuan in
Shanghai had a
four-year advance of 13 percent that was the best performance among 24
emerging-market currencies tracked by Bloomberg.
Vietnam's benchmark stock index has climbed 5.5 percent this
year, compared with Indonesia's
4.1 percent increase, Malaysia's
2.4 percent and Thailand's
2.2 percent.
Vietnam’s annual real gross domestic
product growth could average 5.3 percent in the 2014-50 period, a pace only
bettered by Nigeria, according to PwC’s “The World in 2050” report. Growth in China may fall
below 4 percent.
Demographics are a big help. Some 13
percent of China’s
population in 2012 was already 60 or older, compared with 9 percent in Vietnam,
according to the United Nations. More than 40 percent of Vietnam’s
population of about 90 million in 2013 was in the labor force aged 15 to 49,
government data show.
The average monthly wage in Vietnam was $197 in 2013 compared with $391 for Thailand and $613 for China, according to International
Labour Organization calculations. That disparity is widening. The Economist
Intelligence Unit predicts that in 2019, manufacturing labor costs per hour in China will be 177 percent of those in Vietnam, up
from 147 percent in 2012.
Bad Loans
“I remember when I was in China a couple of years ago and went to buy a
pair of shoes and found they were all made in Vietnam,” said John Hawksworth, one
of the authors of the PwC report.
There are caveats to the optimism.
Lenders in Vietnam are creaking under bad
loans, and the government has struggled to overhaul inefficient state-owned
companies. Inadequate infrastructure, skills gaps and corruption remain risks. Vietnam ranked
119 out of 175 countries and territories in the Berlin-based Transparency
International’s 2014 Corruption Perceptions Index.
China came in at 100th place. Meanwhile, other Southeast Asian
countries such as the Philippines
and Malaysia
are also competing to win manufacturing jobs.
“It’s not guaranteed that Vietnam will
fulfil its potential,” said Hawksworth. “Part of it is that Vietnam is
simply in a good geographic location and part of it is that it does have some
catching up to do in terms of GDP per capita.”
Labor Intensive
Much of the work being transferred to Vietnam is in low-end manufacturing as China
moves up the value chain: labor-intensive work in textiles, garments, furniture
and electronics.
“The productivity of Vietnam’s
manufacturing sector is very low,” Karel Eloot, Shanghai-based director at
McKinsey & Co.’s Asia Operations Practice, said in November. “That’s the
biggest blowback for further expansion in Vietnam.”
The government is working on some of
the economy’s biggest millstones.
Vietnam will attempt to sell a record amount of shares in
state-owned companies this year, Dang Quyet Tien, deputy general director of
the finance ministry’s corporate finance department, said in an interview March
13. The plan to sell stakes in about 280 entities this year is “credit
positive” for banks, Moody’s Investors Service said.
There are other positives. Vietnam is in
talks on a free trade deal with the European Union and is part of U.S.-led
negotiations for a major regional trade deal, the Trans-Pacific Partnership.
Mekong Star
“Vietnam will displace Thailand as the
greater Mekong star,” said Tim Condon, head of Asia research at ING Groep NV,
referring to the Mekong River basin region that includes the nations of Cambodia, Laos,
Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam,
along with China’s Yunnan province.
Exports from Thailand, one of the nations dubbed
by analysts and the media as a rapidly developing tiger economy before the
1997-98 Asian financial crisis, have contracted in the last two years. By
contrast, Vietnam
in 2014 saw its shipments overseas jump almost 14 percent.
Australia & New Zealand Banking
Group Ltd. this month upgraded Vietnam’s
GDP forecast to 6.5 percent for this year and next, citing strengthening retail
sales, accelerating industrial production and improving construction.
“The economy’s structure is shifting,
it is moving from agriculture to manufacturing,” said Victoria Kwakwa, the
World Bank’s country director for Vietnam. “You can see there is a
progression happening”
Vietnam is a promising economy in the region and the world
and our dream of a developed country is going to come true. Now the most
important thing is, we, Vietnamese people all over the world, must spend our
best effort to fulfill this task together./.
All comments [ 0 ]
Your comments