BUSINESS
IN BRIEF 28/9
Sales
promotion helps clear inventories
Businesses and
retailers have doubled or tripled revenue compared to last month, Tin Tuc
(News) newspaper reported yesterday.
According to the
HCM City Department of Industry and Trade's figures, sales have increased by
40-50 per cent in the past month.
Fresh foodstuff,
household appliances, electronics, and clothing have been the most popular.
Nguyen Thanh Nhan,
director of Co.opmart supermarket chain, said the chain had seen good growth
in the number of shoppers and sales turnover.
Fresh foodstuff saw
the highest increase, 80 per cent, compared to non-sale days.
Tran Tan Hoang Hau,
marketing director of Thien Hoa electronics centre, said the Sales Promotion
Month is an opportunity for businesses to stimulate demands and increase
sales, as well as help them to clear inventories to prepare for new products
for the Lunar New Year 2014.
After discounts of
49 per cent, sales turnover increased 200 per cent compared to the previous
month. Customer traffic also went up, with more than 50,000 shoppers coming
to the centre in the weekend.
Sales are expected
to continue to be strong during Sales Promotion Month, Hau said.
According to
experts, the Sales Promotion Month has helped both consumers and stores
considerably.
Le Van Khoa, deputy
director of the HCM City Department of Industry and Trade, said that positive
signs from Sales Promotion Month had given retail businesses more motivation
to work closely with manufacturers and suppliers to prepare sources of goods
for the peak shopping time in the year-end.
Many promotions
will be launched in the near future to stimulate market demand, he added.
Textile
material supply hangs by a thread
Viet Nam's textile
and garment industry is teetering on the threshold of recovery but is now
falling short of material supply due to a temporary lack of imports and the
incompetence of local material manufacturers.
On 15 September,
total textile and garment exports reached US$12.237 billion, up 16.9 per cent
year on year. This figure is estimated to grow in the coming months with
However, that move
is also expected to create a bigger deficiency in materials available for
domestic producers.
The Vietnamese
industry imported 99 per cent of the material demanded by manufacturers last
year, according to the Viet Nam Textile and Apparel Association (VITAS)
statistics, but the process is getting slower, with damaging effects.
Le Quang Hung,
chairman of the board of Sai Gon Garment Manufacturing Trade JSC (Gamex Sai
Gon) told VnEconomy that garment companies were worried about their input, as
cloth and apparel processing countries were struggling to source raw
materials.
Material orders
previously took one week to be delivered but are now taking up to one month,
Hung said, adding that foreign material producers had taken advantage of the
current shortage to raise prices by 10-15 per cent.
Major material
suppliers for
Deputy General
Secretary of VITAS Nguyen Van Tuan, for example, said the entire garment
industry last year used 6.8 billion metres of cloth, of which 88 per cent was
imported. Domestic cloth production only supplied 0.8 billion metres.
Tuan said the
government should call for more direct investment from foreign textile
manufacturers, while creating favourable conditions for the production of raw
materials and core products.
Independent
economist Pham Chi Lan also warned that building a self-supply capacity was
getting more important with the TPP talks advancing and certificates of
origin for fibre and cloth becoming more important.
Gold
measures balance market
The State Bank of
Viet Nam (SBV) announced yesterday that its intervention in the gold market
has helped curb inflation and stabilise the economy.
According to the
Forex Management Department, the central bank's gold auctions helped reduce
speculative activity in the market, with around 60 tonnes of gold being
auctioned since March.
The department said
18 credit institutions were able to close their gold positions with the first
30 tonnes auctioned by the bank.
The remaining
supply of gold (around 29 tonnes) was sold to the market by winning bidders,
far below the range of 50-100 tonnes imported each year.
The measure has
helped minimise gold imports and increase foreign reserves, said a department
official. The department has also conducted regular inspections of the 2,500
licensed retail points in Viet Nam, to ensure prices are transparent and in
compliance with regulations.
The inspections aim
to enforce a 2 per cent equity rule for local banks, who are required to keep
gold reserves at the set level.
The SBV also said
banks must keep a record of ID for clients who carry out gold transactions
worth more than VND300 million (US$14,285) under the Government Decision
20/2013/QD-TTg, to prevent money laundering.
The SBV has said it
will continue to manage the gold market and raise public awareness of its
policies.
Yesterday, the
Saigon Jewellery Company (SJC) posted a rate of VND37.38-37.58 million
($1,781-1,790) on its website at 3pm, while the kitco.com trading floor
listed the price at $1337.30 per ounce, or $1,611 per tael, leaving prices in
Viet Nam $179 per tael higher than global rates.
Interbank
interest rates fall 1.17%
The interest rate
that Vietnamese banks charge each other for under-12 month term loans in dong
and US dollars dropped last week by up to 1.17 percentage points.
The change came
amid a redundancy of cash in the banking system and at a time where finding a
sound borrower is still challenging.
The State Bank of
Viet Nam's report, released yesterday, showed that loan terms for both dong
and the greenback were mostly overnight and one week, totalling VND64.98
trillion (US$3.26 billion) and VND30.1 trillion ($1.4 billion), respectively.
The overnight rate
for the dong was 2.42 per cent, one-to-three week loans for 2.84-3.82 per
cent, one-to-six month loans for 4.17-6.34 per cent and 8.72 per cent for 12
months.
Loans in US dollars
were charged 0.19 per cent for an overnight term, 0.37-0.27 per cent for one
to three weeks, 0.44-1.59 per cent for one to six months, and 2.8 per cent
for 12 months.
Interest rates that
banks can charge their customers have also been slashed to 7-11.5 per cent,
3-5 percentage points against last month, to stimulate businesses and achieve
low and stable inflation.
However,
outstanding loans of the system are not expected to grow because of the
current economic turmoil.
While large
companies can access credit easily despite the sluggish consumer market, many
small- and medium-sized enterprises don't have assets as a mortgage to borrow
money.
Index rise
ignites industrial hope
The country's index
of industrial production (IIP) saw a year-on-year increase of 5.4 per cent in
the first nine months of the year, signalling a promising sign in the
economic slowdown.
This month alone
the IIP is estimated to have increased 5.6 per cent over last September, said
the Ministry of Planning and Investment (MPI).
The Index is
calculated using four groups: the mineral exploitation, processing and
manufacturing industry, electricity production and distribution, water
supply, and waste management and disposal.
The IIP in mineral
exploitation this month is estimated to decrease 5.1 per cent from the
previous year, while the processing and manufacturing sector shows a 8.5 per
cent increase. The two sectors have a large impact on the overall IIP.
Electricity
production and distribution, as well as water supply industries, saw surges
of 9.4 per cent and 11.2 per cent respectively.
The Ministry of
Industry and Trade said both heavy and light industries faced difficulties.
For example, the
garment and textile sector has had to cope with fierce competition from
neighbouring countries in its domestic market, though they had export
contracts for the whole year.
The paper sector
has also been struggling with competition from imported products.
The ministry said
paper production last month rose 10.4 per cent while its inventory increased
25 per cent against the same period last year.
It said its would
closely supervise the implementation of set targets and measures, especially
giving attention to exploiting the domestic market and strengthening the
distribution system, while developing a new export market.
The Finance
Ministry said it will carry out inspections to detect smuggled goods in
purchasing activities.
In addition, it
will adjust the management policies on imported items and create favourable
conditions for investment.
The MPI also
revealed that more than 42,000 businesses closed down or suspended their
operation in the January-September period.
The ministry said
in the nine-month period, of that figure, 6,700 enterprises dissolved
completely, a 2 per cent decrease over the same period last year.
However, the number
of firms suspending operations rose 13 per cent against the same period last
year, reaching 35,700.
It said the figures
show that the economic situation is difficult.
The country saw
11,300 businesses resume operation between January and September, an
encouraging result for the economy.
As many as 4,000 of
these enterprises were involved in wholesale, retail, and auto and motorbike
repair, 1,900 were in construction and 1,600 in manufacturing.
The MPI indicated that
the country established 19,300 new companies in the third quarter of this
year with total registered capital of VND87.8 trillion (US$4.18 billion), a
decrease of 17 per cent in the number and 23 per cent in capital over the
previous quarter.
The total number of
newly established firms for the first nine months of the year was 58,200 with
capital of VND281.3 trillion ($13.3 billion), an 11 per cent increase in term
of quantity but a 22 per cent decrease in capital from last year.
Many investment
chances are waiting for Vietnamese investors in the
At the conference,
which included representatives of
Lawrence Miller,
Secretary of Commerce for the State of
He said that
student exchanges and tourism would continue to strengthen relations between
They were always
ready to support for Vietnamese investors to come to
Speaking to Viet
Nam News, Hoang Kim Son, head of the
"Vietnamese
investors must pay attention to developing tourism products here because we
are a tourism destination. Every year, there are many EU tourists who come to
our state to go skiing," he added.
Bilateral trade
turnover between
Son said that the
growth rate of trade turnover between
Furniture
design contest launched
Registration is now
open for a contest to choose the best furniture designers in the country.
Organised by the
Handicraft and Wood Industry Association of HCM City (HAWA), the Apricot
Blossom furniture design competition 2013-14 is open to all Vietnamese and
foreigners living in Viet Nam, especially university students, young
designers and designers working at woodworking companies.
Contestants are
required to send their drawings to the organiser by December 25. The
organising board will select 20 best works for the second phase. In the
second phase, contestants will be provided with design training course as
well as wood and equipment so they can make real products for submission by
March 6.
Awards will be
presented on March 10 and wining works will be displayed at the Viet Nam
International Furniture and Home Accessories Fair 2014, which is held in
Supply
Chain Congress slated for October
The
This year, the
annual event is expected to attract the participation of more than 600
professionals and enterprises in the industry.
The conference will
include discussions on purchasing, manufacturing, retail and distribution,
including
Viet Nam Supply
Chain has been the leading dynamic independent platform for over 9,000 supply
chain professionals in the country since 2008.
SBV
regulates debt grouping
State Bank of
Under the
directive, the Governor requires credit institutions to restructure loan repayment
periods and keep loan groups on the basis of assessing the conditions for
production, business and service supply, as well as the ability to repay
debts; and to inspect and strictly control restructured debts to ensure that
borrowers can repay the debts in accordance with restructured repayment
period.
Credit institutions
will not restructure the repayment period and maintain loan groups for
customers that use funds for improper purposes or violate provisions of the
credit agreements and related regulations.
The lenders can
actively decide to restructure the repayment period on the basis of
monitoring and assessing customers' business conditions and financial
strength.
Additionally, they
can simultaneously reconsider interest rates in line with the financial
conditions of borrowers, of credit institutions and the actual monetary
market to support customers in overcoming difficulties in production and
business.
They can also only
restructure the repayment period and keep loan groups for clients unable to
repay the principal or interest within the terms of the loan or when due, if
they have new feasible business plans, and is determined that they have a
better ability to repay the debts once the debt repayment period is adjusted.
At the same time,
the institutions will have to promulgate internal regulations for
restructuring debts to ensure unity in implementation; have internal control
mechanisms to ensure control strictly and safely to prevent violations.
Besides reporting
internal regulations and internal control mechanisms to the central bank, the
institutions must also build and report their deployment plans and
implementation commitments.
Under the
directive, the Governor also requires the supervising agencies of the central
bank and its branches nationwide to better monitor credit institutions to
ensure they obey regulations and provide timely solutions to remove the
barriers faced by lenders and borrowers.
Labour
exporters rate performance
An additional 30
agencies sending workers abroad have committed to self-regulate to promote
protection of migrant workers.
The agencies will
comply with the Code of Conduct (
The voluntary
instrument covers advertising, recruitment, training, contracts for
Vietnamese workers abroad, dispute resolution and helping workers return to
Although the
mechanism does not replace the government's own ability to monitor, inspect
and sanction agencies, it encourages companies to review and improve existing
procedures.
"Businesses
are ranked based on a criteria of business performance," he said.
Last year, a total
of twenty companies – responsible for sending almost 30 per cent of
Vietnamese workers abroad – volunteered to be part of the pilot phase that
rated agencies according to their compliance with the COC-VN.
VAMAS ranked the
firms into four groups: excellent, good, satisfactory and not satisfactory,
Trao said. Eight of the firms were graded as "excellent".
With the additional
registration of 30 more recruitment agencies, the evaluation will expand to a
total of 50 agencies among 170 that operate in the country.
Trao said
businesses implementing COC-VN could seek feedback from local departments of
labours, invalids and social affairs on their progress.
Speaking at a
workshop this year to review the implementation of the COC-VN, Deputy
Minister of Labour, Invalids and Social Affairs Nguyen Thanh Hoa said the
COC-VN would encourage recruitment businesses to comply with national laws
and international standards.
Companies can build
a reputation in the eyes of workers and foreign partners while complying with
best practice on labour export management and legal protection, he said.
Hoa urged relevant
agencies to work closely with VAMAS to encourage licensed labour export
companies to sign onto the COC-VN.
Co-ordinator of the
ILO's GMS TRIANGLE project Max Tunon said "self-regulation tools could
play an important role in enabling best practice in the recruitment industry,
as they supplement and support Government regulations".
"This is
particularly important for countries like
The benefits of the
COC have also been recognised by recruitment agencies and workers.
Director of Ha
Noi-based Labour Exporting and Training Co Ltd Bui Kim Son said the company
had attracted more clients and partners since being ranked second among the
20 recruitment agencies.
"Our
negotiations with international partners have also become easier now that
they know we fully comply with the COC-VN," he said.
Pham Minh Toan, who
used to work in the
"However, it
often made me confused because I was overwhelmed with information and risks
were unavoidable," he said.
"But now, it
is easier for workers who want to work abroad like me to choose qualified
recruitment enterprises thanks to the COC-VN rating," he said.
"Looking
ahead, it is important to increase the number of agencies in the
ranking," he said, "and include an independent body to evaluate the
companies objectively."
Around 80,000
Vietnamese workers are sent abroad each year, according to figures from the
Ministry of Labour, Invalids and Social Affairs. Approximately 500,000
workers are working abroad under contract in more than 40 countries.
US remains
leading importer of Vietnamese seafood
The
Exports to
According to the
Vietnam Association of Seafood Exporters and Processors (VASEP), shrimp
exports are back on track at a growth rate of 38%. They hit a record high of
US$335 million in August alone, up 65.5% compared to the same month of last
year.
Due to inadequate
supplies of prawn, the export of white-legged shrimp will pick up in the
coming months.
It is expected that
Meanwhile, exports
of tra fish, tuna and other seafood products tend to decline sharply by 14%,
25% and 10.7%, respectively.
VASEP forecast that
it is difficult for these products to increase this year due to unstable
supplies of input materials and shrinking demands in the world.
Teleconference
helps
A teleconference to
facilitate Vietnamese businesses’ trade promotion in
Head of the
African-West and South Asian Market Department under the Ministry of Industry
and Trade Tran Quang Huy said the event helped businesses of both countries
seek partners as well as providing information related to trade policies and
the ASEAN-India Agreement on Trade in Goods.
According to the
ministry’s statistics,
More high added-value
Vietnamese products are entering the India market, including mobile phones,
computers, electronic products and components, material plastic and steel
embryo apart from traditional commodities like pepper, rubber and footwear,
Huy said, adding that this will help narrow the trade balance in the coming
time.
General Head and
General Director of the Federation of Indian Export Organisations Ajay Sahai
said the ASEAN-India Free Trade Agreement, which was effective in 2010, has
created a favourable legal foundation for Vietnamese exports to
He said he believes
that the future signing of the Trade And Service Agreement and the Investment
Agreement between ASEAN and
Addressing a
September 26 meeting of the HCM City People’s Committee on socio-economic
development in the fourth quarter, Chairman of the committee Le Hoang Quan
noted that the local economy has showed signs of recovery with more than
4,700 businesses resuming their operations and nearly 1,800 new ones established.
This shows that
businesses have initially overcome their difficulties so the city should
create more favourable conditions for them, he said.
The chairman
instructed agencies and local administrations to keep a close watch on
production and business activities in order to provide timely assistance,
particularly in improving credit access for businesses ahead of the peak
consuming season of the year before the New Year festival.
The Department of
Planning and Investment reported that in the first ninth months of this year,
HCM City maintained a quarter-to-quarter GDP growth, with the Q3 figure
reaching 10.3%, 0.7% higher than that of the same period last year. The
city’s index of industrial production (IIP) was estimated to increase by 6%
year-on-year.
However, the
southern h ub still faces high inventories and bad debts.
To deal with these
problems, the municipal People’s Committee has set out measures such as
providing credit support and increasing trade promotion, investment and
service.
Vietnamese
firms ready to spread to other Asian markets
Many small
Vietnamese businesses have developed into companies that are ready to spread
their wings to the rest of Asia, said Thng Tien Tat, Executive Director of
To help Vietnamese
businesses expand their operations in Asia, UOB in
According to him,
from the first half of 2012 to the first half of 2013, UOB's business flows
between
Edlyn Khoo, IE
Singapore's centre director for
“Partnerships in
the financial sector were a key area highlighted at the recent bilateral
strategic partnership agreement,” he added.
Earlier this month,
Khoo stressed that
Singaporean companies can bring relevant global experience and connections to
Vietnamese firms planning their next stage of growth.
UOB has opened
seven FDI advisory centres since 2011 in
Central
bank no longer concerned about exchange rates
For the first time
in several decades, the State Bank of
SBV introduced a
range of measures that helped cool down a currency market risking overheating
earlier in the year.
It laid out plans
to keep exchange rates within the 2–3% margin during 2013, stabilising the
currency market and reinforcing trust in the local Vietnam Dong.
Domestic exchange
market fluctuations forced the bank to intervene in February–March and
May–July.
It asked big
commercial banks to sell large amounts of US dollars, and worked with
relevant ministries and agencies on stepping up their scrutiny to keep the
market in check.
On June 28, the SBV
raised the inter-bank rate by 1% from 20,828VND/US$ to 21,036VND/US$, while simultaneously
lowering the US dollar deposit interest rate in accordance with market laws
of supply and demand.
Its flexible
management proved effective in prompting credit organisations to sell US
dollars to the central bank, increasing national currency reserves and
bringing the exchange rate back under control.
SBV management
policy, together with other monetary tools, helped control the quantity of
Vietnam Dong in circulation and thereby eased inflationary pressure
afflicting the economy.
A SBV report reveals
the ratio of currency deposits to overall money supply fell sharply from more
than 30% in the 1990s to 15.8% in late 2011, 12.3% in late 2012, and 12% as
of August 2013.
Thanks to the
stable exchange rate, the central bank has been able to purchase large
amounts of currencies for national reserves, strengthening the nation’s
financial power.
New era of
Thailand-Vietnam economic cooperation
The recently
established strategic partnership between
The view was shared
by hundreds of Vietnamese and Thai officials and businesspeople attending a
seminar in
Vietnamese
Ambassador to Thailand Ngo Duc Thang acknowledged the recent positive trade,
investment, and tourism development between the two countries, saying two-way
trade turnover reaching US$10 billion in 2012.
Thang stressed the
Vietnam-Thailand strategic partnership will help strengthen bilateral
economic cooperation and mutually beneficial ASEAN community integration in
trade, investment, agriculture, energy, telecommunications, information
technology, and transport.
Thang expressed
hope more Thai investors will explore Vietnamese opportunities in the near
future.
Thailand-Vietnam
Friendship Association President Prachuap Chayasan also acknowledged the role
of the strategic partnership in driving bilateral cooperation across all
fields.
He revealed the two
governments are working together to resolve issues related to Vietnamese
workers in
The Thailand Board
of Investment’s (TBOI) Foreign Investment Promotion Agency Director Siriporn
Nuruksa said both countries expect to see increasing numbers of businesses investing
and operating in their territories.
Vietnamese Trade
Office and TBOI representatives briefed seminar attendees on
A number of Thai
business leaders already boasting effective Vietnamese operations also shared
their experiences with participants.
Nok Air
plans flights to Vietnam
Budget Thai airline
Nok Air has announced plans to expand its international flight routes,
foreshadowing new destinations including
NoK Air began
operating Bangkok-Yangon flights this year, and will conduct flights between
NoK Air Financial
Manager Vitai Ratanakorn confirmed consumer demand makes flights to
The two Thai budget
airlines Thai AirAsia and VietJet Air are currently running flights between
Thai and Vietnamese cities. Larger national airlines, such as Vietnam
Airlines, Thai Airways International, Qatar Airways, and Turkish Airlines,
also service the route.
Nok Air is also
considering launching Boeing 737-800 flights to
Airbus recently
reported Vietjet – another Vietnamese budget airline - has signed a US$6.1
billion purchasing contract for 62 Airbus A320s. The airline currently rents
nine Airbus A320s.
Vietjet started its
Vietnamese operations in late 2011. It is the country’s first private airline
and services both domestic and international routes.
Experts
skeptical over socio-economic situation
Officials and experts
during a conference in
Speaking at the
seminar, Deputy Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc said that the nation has seen
slow recovery while most regional countries have gained back their strength
after the crisis. In absolute terms, the gap between
The event, jointly
held by the Central Party Committee’s Economic Commission, the
Phuc said that many
targets set for the 2011-2015 period might not be fulfilled as well. In 2013,
seven out of 15 socio-economic development targets such as gross domestic product
(GDP) growth rate, industrial added value, construction and employment would
not be realized.
Local people are
still facing many problems such as poor living standards, criminals in
cities, and social conflicts in the rural area.
“Warnings of an
economy full of risks and with gloomy growth outlook are nearing the
reality,” Phuc said.
Adverse impacts of
the global economic crisis and weaknesses of the local economy are culprits
of high inflation, prolonged macro uncertainties, the slump in the real estate
market and other challenges against local enterprises, Phuc added.
However, former
Deputy Prime Minister Vu Khoan said that the main reason is poor internal
capacity of the country rather than external impacts.
“Impacts of the
global economic turmoil are not the key factor as many countries have also
suffered the same impacts. Meanwhile, some spheres exposed to external
factors such as exports, foreign direct investment (FDI) capital and tourism
have seen strong development. Therefore, we could not blame on external
problems,” Khoan said.
Internal problems
of the economy have existed for a long time, not just in recent period.
However, the economy earlier did not face many difficulties like now, he
said.
“Is it that our
subjective management has resulted in macroeconomic uncertainties?” he
pondered.
The 11th National
Congress has adopted two groups of principles related to institutional
mechanism and growth model renovation. However, these principles have yet to
come into the real life. For instance, principles on sustainable development
of the financial market, healthy development of the realty market, and
building up strong conglomerates have been below expectation.
Policy makers have
been either subjective in setting up utopian targets or failed to live up to
their commitments. Furthermore, they have focused too much on solving
immediate matters rather than setting up the right development course,
according to Khoan.
Cao Sy Kiem,
chairman of the Association of Small- and Medium-Sized Enterprises, said that
the Government is still sticking to old thinking, and even issuing
administrative orders like during the centrally-commanded economy. These
problems have made the business community, the key factor of the nation’s
development, shrinking.
Former head of the
Institute for Development Strategy Luu Bich Ho expressed his skepticism over
solutions to the current problems. “We have stayed in the talking shop but
failed to work things out, and I think that this time we will also fail,” he
said.
Only skin
deep?
Engineer Nguyen
Minh Son has his eyes glued to a computer screen. He is in the final stages
of a new invention that will help save lives. It is a respiratory monitor
used in surgery. His product may outperform some of its leading competitors
in the market today.
“This monitor may
become part of our Vietnamese production line,” said Son, who is working at
Metran Company Limited –
Tran Ngoc Phuc, an
overseas Vietnamese and president of 30-year-old Metran, said the company
held the patents on 20 inventions, many of which they planned to manufacture
in Vietnam in the near future.
Phuc has plans to
“make a major investment” to expand Metran’s production line in
The company
currently has two production centres in
“Compared to other
ASEAN markets,
Hirota Nakanishi,
assistant director of the ASEAN-Japan Centre’s Trade and Investment Division,
said that many Japanese enterprises are looking to
“
Daisuke Hiratsuka,
executive vice president of the Japan External Trade Organisation’s (JETRO), reported
that between April 2012 and March this year, 6,800 Japanese enterprises
inquired with the office in Hanoi about investing in Vietnam and another
5,700 in Ho Chi Minh City.
JETRO’s website
shows that access to
“Japanese investors
are showing great interest in
According to a
recently released JETRO survey on investment cost in major cities around
ASEAN,
Hiroshi Aimoto,
director of the Japanese Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry’s Trade
Policy Bureau, shared the opinion that Japanese companies were strongly
considering making
According to JETRO,
after
The Richest, a
Canadian website tracking the world’s wealthiest people, recently announced a
top ten list of nations with the cheapest labour costs.
According to the
list,
The website
calculated
At the recent
Vietnam-Japan Economic Summit in
“In the near
future, Japan’s support for Vietnam in terms of building up supporting
industries and the two countries’ ongoing joint initiative will lay a strong
foundation for Japanese companies seeking a manufacturing hub,” he said.
As of July,
Japanese investment capital in
Although
“The dialogues will
be organised quarterly and cover topics such as infrastructure, human
resources, supporting industries, tax, and so on. Comments, ideas, and
opinions from the discussions will be submitted to the government and
ministries, which can use them to eliminate challenges,” said MPI’s Vinh.
Vinh vowed to
improve the investment environment for Japanese enterprises.
“We need their
opinions, we want to solve their problems. We understand that is the only way
to access their investment,” Vinh stressed. “Investor are like shoppers, if
we don’t have good products and services, they will go to a different shop.”
His commitment
followed Japanese enterprises and organisations’ demands for support in
tackling major obstructions they currently faced in
Aimoto, from
Eriko Tayama, head
of the Japan Business Division at Singaporean investment consultancy Ascendas
“They decided to
invest in the
Echoing this view,
Japanese Ambassador to Vietnam Yasuaki Tanizaki underscored that
“One of the biggest
concerns is the slow restructuring process of
Aimoto proposed
that to solve these issues,
The initiative’s
fifth phase, launched in July and moving through 2014, includes 13 issue
groups that include law and policy, human resources, intellectual property,
banking, infrastructure, and macro-economic stability.
“All these sectors
need improvements,” Vinh said.
Kenji Itatani,
executive director of Tokyo-based Sonkenzai Centre, which often works with
Japanese agencies and delegations going to
“And
Source: VEF/VNA/VNS/VOV/SGT/SGGP/Dantri/VIR
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Thứ Sáu, 27 tháng 9, 2013
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