Trade deficit dives to
$95m
HA NOI (VNS)- The national trade deficit reached US$95.5
million in the first 11 months of this year, the lowest level since deficits
returned in the foreign trade balance in April, according to the General
Statistics Office (GSO).
The deficit rose
to $722 million in the second quarter after a $481 million surplus was
recorded in the first quarter.
GSO Trade
Department Director Le Thi Minh Thuy said the deficit contraction was thanks
to high export growth which had held steady at 15-16 per cent so far this
year – significantly higher than the 10 per cent quota targeted by the
Government.
In the first 11
months, export revenue reached $121.23 billion, up 16.2 per cent over the
same period last year; and import turnover was about $121.12 billion, a
year-on-year increase of 16.5 per cent.
Seventeen major
export products – including garments and textiles, footwear, seafood and
timber products – reached revenues exceeding $1.5 billion.
Telephones and
components hit $20.24 billion, up 78.4 per cent, while computers, electronic
products and components reached nearly $10 billion, increasing 41.6 per cent.
Foreign direct
investment (FDI) businesses dominated trade activities compared with domestic
firms, according to the office.
FDI enterprises
represented over two thirds of total export revenue with a growth rate of
23.5 per cent, while local firms accounted for below a third, growing only
3.6 per cent.
Foreign companies
also made up more than half of total import value, with a growth rate of 26
per cent, far exceeding local firms at 6 per cent.
"The FDI
sector has a trade surplus while the domestic sector is in a deficit,"
the GSO report said.
"This
reflects low export growth among domestic firms and also shows that the
nation's imports were mainly used by FDI businesses to make products for
export." - VNS
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Chủ Nhật, 24 tháng 11, 2013
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