Vietnam-China trade: how much can VN get from the $60 billion cake?
Vietnam
and China
both have committed to increase the two way trade turnover to $60 billion by
2015. Analysts believe that China
would get more slices of the $60 billion cake.
Among the countries which have trade
relations with Vietnam,
no other has such a sharp increase in the two way trade turnover.
At first, in 2000, Vietnam and China agreed to set a goal to
obtain the turnover of $2 billion. However, the two-way trade turnover of the
year actually reached $2.5 billion.
After that, the target was lifted to
$5 billion by 2005. However, the two-way trade turnover reached $7.2 billion
in 2004 already. Since then, China
has been the biggest trade partner of Vietnam which makes up 14.8
percent of the total import & export turnover of the country.
The target was then raised to $20
billion by 2010, but once again, the threshold was exceeded when the turnover
reached $20.18 billion in 2008.
The rapid trade development has
prompted the two countries to raise the target sharply to $60 billion by
2015.
In order to speed up the
implementation of the commitments, the two sides have signed the agreements
on the establishment of trade promotion offices in every country, the
memorandum of understanding on the establishment of the Vietnam-China border
economic cooperation zones, the memorandum of understanding on the establishment
of the taskforce that supports the implementation of the Chinese invested
projects in Vietnam.
However, economists have warned that
this is not good news at all, if Vietnam cannot improve itself to
boost more products to the Chinese market. The increase in the two-way trade
turnover may mean the higher trade deficit for Vietnam.
China is the Vietnamese
biggest trade partner, the biggest exporter to Vietnam
and the biggest market with which Vietnam has trade deficit.
Meanwhile, Vietnam’s
export volume to China
only ranks the fourth, after the US,
EU and Japan.
In the first 10 months of 2013, Vietnam’s
export turnover to China
was just equal to 55 percent of its export turnover to the US during the
same time.
China buys Vietnamese rice in large quantities. It imports rubber
from Vietnam and then
exports tires to Vietnam.
It imports coal and iron and then exports steel.
China makes investment
in mining in Vietnam,
carries iron to China,
invests in power plants, mostly small and medium hydropower plants, pours
money into car part production projects, motorbike assembling and animal feed
factories.
At the same time, Chinese businesses
bring backward technologies and equipment, which cause environment pollution,
and thousands of workers to Vietnam.
Vietnam’s trade
deficit in the relation with China
is bigger than any other trade partner. In 2001, the trade deficit was
modest, at $200 million. Meanwhile, the figure soared $19.7 billion in the
first 10 months of 2013, or 98 times higher.
Chinese products have been flooding
the Vietnamese market, from cosmetics to clothes, from species to big
machines, from food to preservatives.
A report said Vietnam imports over 40 categories of products
from China,
including five categories which have the turnover of over $1 billion
(machines, tools and accessories, phone and accessories, computers,
electronics and electronic parts, fabric, and steel).
Nguyen Duy Nghia, VietNamNet Bridge
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