To settle FDI
consequences,
Legal loopholes bring bad
consequences
The Ministry of Planning and
Investment (MPI) has reported that the number of escaped foreign invested
enterprises (FIEs) has been increasing sharply in recent years, but the state
management agencies don’t know how to deal with the problem.
In principle, state agencies will
revoke the investment licenses from the FIEs which no longer operate in
Local authorities cannot come forward
and liquidate or dissolve businesses, because under the current regulations,
this is the enterprises’ responsibility, while enterprises will get dissolved
only if they pay off debts and other duties.
When taking back the land allocated
before to enterprises, local authorities may face high risks once
enterprises’ owners may accuse them of selling the assets at the prices lower
than the market prices.
Meanwhile, it’s impossible to handle
with the enterprises’ assets and debts through arbitrators bring the cases to
the court, because the investors have run away and the investors’ addresses
cannot be found.
A lot of FIEs’ owners have run away
when they did not pay off salaries to workers and pay to the social insurance
agencies. Workers have got lost jobs and have not received salaries, but they
don’t receive any support from the state management agencies because the
legal documents don’t show what to do in this case.
Phan Huu Thang, former Director of
the Foreign Investment Agency, noted that the figure of 500 business owners
running away is really alarming, which shows the FDI mismanagement.
However, since the ministries did not
cooperate in managing FIEs, they lacked information about the FIEs’ operation
seriously. Only when businesses “died,” were the agencies informed about
that. In most of cases, they could not do anything with the businesses,
because the enterprises’ owners have run away.
An expert, who once worked for the
Legal Department under MPI, noted that post licensing management has been
very problematic. State agencies don’t have updated information about the
operation of FIEs after they granted them licenses. They even did not know
the enterprises’ addresses, because FIEs did not inform if they moved to
other locations.
Vietnam vows to amend laws, tighten
supervision
The 1987 Foreign Investment Law
stipulated that foreign investors must develop projects in
However, the 2005 Investment Law
stipulates that foreign investors are equal with domestic ones in borrowing
capital from domestic banks. As a result, a lot of real estate investors came
to
Vu Dinh Anh, a well-known economist,
believes that there should be a regulation allowing to supervise the capital
transmission to
Source: NLD
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Chủ Nhật, 25 tháng 8, 2013
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