A woman pays for a refill at a gas station in
State-owned giants have announced large profit
increases for 2013, but economists say the gains came from monopolies
and pricing privileges, not good business practices.
Experts said
successful giants like power provider EVN (Electricity of Vietnam), fuel
retailer Petrolimex, coal and mineral group TKV, or telecommunication service
providers Viettel and VNPT (Vietnam Post and Telecommunications Group) are
either the dominators or sole occupiers in their economic sector, and
tend to raise prices anytime they like, according to a Tuoi Tre (Youth)
newspaper report.
The military-run
Viettel’s pretax profit surged 27.5 percent from 2012 to more than VND35
trillion (US$1.66 billion), topping all telcos' profits and accounting for
21.5 percent of the company’s revenues.
VNPT, which owns
MobiFone and VinaPhone and together with Viettel holds 97.3 percent of the
market share, profited 89.38 percent more than last year with VND9.3
trillion in registered profits.
The companies made
more profits during the second half, when they hiked 3G fees by 40 percent in
October to VND70,000 a month. In April they had raised the monthly tariff
from VND40,000 to VND50,000.
Local experts and
the public accused the companies of violating the competition law by
increasing their fees at the same time but Vietnam Competition Authority said
it did not detect signs of collusion.
Nguyen Ngoc Son, a
lecturer on competition laws at the Ho Chi Minh City University of Economics
and Law said monopolies making profits is a normal story.
“Given their
market dominating position, and many price hikes, their profits are not a
surprise,” Son said.
Petrolimex also
reported a 97.07 percent increase in its pretax profit, of VND1.93
billion as after many ups and downs in 2013, gasoline retail price ended up
at VND24,710 ($1.17) a liter, or 6.7 percent higher than in the end of 2012.
Gasoline accounts
for 40 percent of the company’s profit and the rest comes from its side
investments in banking, insurance, transport and cooking gas.
Tran Van Thinh,
general director of Petrolimex, said its success is thanks to government
policies but also its own efforts.
But economists
said the only thing the company has been good at making is filing
requests to the government and demanding stable import tariffs
and more autonomy.
Son said the
gasoline profits merely came from price increases.
He said the market
operation has to have price cuts and increases as a matter of course, but what
angers the public is the fact that the company always raises
prices more than it reduces them.
“It’s an unfair
game,” he said.
“Fuel businesses
have kept moaning about losses, but the losses are not clear as they are
referring to base prices, not real ones. At the end of the year, they’re
still making profits.”
Vietnam National
Coal and Mineral Industries Group TKV was an unexpected winner,
according to analysts.
The group reported
VND3 trillion in profit for 2013, up around 20 percent from the previous
year.
Its deputy general
director Nguyen Van Bien said the figures were estimations and the real ones
could be larger.
Its report said
the important factor driving its finances is the fact that the government
cut export tariffs and allowed it to increase prices to power plants.
The Ministry of
Finance in September 2011 raised export tariffs to 20 percent to reduce
the flow of raw ores out of the country, but TKV then complained about
stockpiles, and the tariffs were halved a year later.
The tax was raised
to 13 percent last May again on ore waste concerns, but it was
brought down again more than a month later after requests by TKV.
The company's
general director Le Minh Chuan said the group’s exports were struggling at
around 1,000 tons a day under the 13 percent tax, but then surged to more
than 4 million tons in December.
EVN has announced
its profits, but announced a revenue increase of 19.8 percent in 2013 to
VND172.4 trillion.
The company has
surged prices seven times since 2009, including the latest for 5 percent in
August, citing losses every time.
Its report said
the company “has basically cleared its losses from previous years,” which
were previously revealed to be VND19.8 trillion.
A recent approval
by the government gave the company more rights to set prices until 2015.
On conditions
Economist Pham Chi
Lan, a former government advisor, said privileges should be given to
state-owned enterprises on the condition that they need to
improve technologies, maintain supplies and avoid making wastes.
Vu Dinh Anh,
deputy director of the state-backed
“State-owned
enterprises (SOEs), for their monopoly position, can raise prices and people
still have to buy.
“Take electricity,
there’s hardly another option for Vietnamese consumers if they don’t buy from
EVN,” Anh said.
Anh said the
profits that SOEs are enjoying are given by the government, and that should
be called “spoiling” rather than "support."
Nguyen Hoang Hai,
general director of Vietnam Association of Financial Investors, agreed that
the privileges have to come with requirements like lowered expenses, and more
transparent information about operations.
But Hai said the
best way to increase competitiveness among the monopolies is
privatization.
“The government
should not hold the dominant shares, but leave it to private investors.”
Vu Quoc Tuan, who
used to be a member of the Prime Minister’s Study Group, also said that the
businesses need to be taken away from government agency umbrellas to
avoid an economy of “group interests.”
Tuan said
“There are only
market prices when there’s harsh competition, when businesses are forced to
reduce costs, sometimes accept losses to have the chance to survive and
develop in the long term.”
He said the
sectors need to be open to more participants.
Thanh Nien
News
|
Thứ Năm, 23 tháng 1, 2014
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