A lot of big guys met crushing misfortune in 2013
2013 was a
horrible year for some state owned conglomerates which were considered the
“iron fists,” or the “motive force” of the national economy.
Big bosses met big disasters
While Vinashin (Vietnam Shipbuilding
Industry Group) case, found as incurring big debts and losses due to the
mismanagement, was considered the highlighted event of 2012, the corruption
case at Vinalines (Vietnam National Shipping Lines) has been put on the top
highlight of 2013.
In mid-December 2013, former Head of
the Vietnam Maritime Bureau, former President of Vinalines Duong Chi Dung,
and Vinalines’ General Director Mai Van Phuc was sentenced to death for the
counts of making corruption and intentionally violating the laws on economic
management, causing serious consequences.
The other 17 defendants in the case
have been sentenced to up to 20 year imprisonment.
The case relates to a ship repair
yard in the south in 2007. Vinalines’s managers bought an old, seriously
damaged floating dock worth $2 million, reporting the purchase price at $19.5
million.
By 2012, Vinalines had poured more
money into the floating dock, raising the total investment capital of the
valueless thing to $24 million. However, it remains useless, has been left as
scrap iron polluting the sea.
Each Dung and Phuc reportedly pocketed
VND10 billion from the affair, while the State lost VND366 billion.
Vinalines’ case has been stirring the
public for the last many months. Analysts have recalled that just two years
ago, Vinalines, which was still considered as a powerful state owned
corporation, together with the Vietnam Oil and Gas Group (PetroVietnam), were
assigned the task of rescuing Vinashin.
Prior to that, in 2012, former
Vinashin’s President Pham Thanh Binh was sentenced to a 20-year imprisonment.
Binh and the other eight defendants, who bought the old and backward Hoa Sen
Ship, caused the loss of VND910 billion to the State. The figure is 2.4 times
higher than the loss caused by Vinalines.
In 2009, President of the Vietnam
Coal and Mineral Industries Group (Vinacomin) Doan Van Kien was dismissed for
the “management loosening.”
Dao Van Hung, President of the
Electricity of Vietnam, was dismissed for a series of mistakes in the
management. Especially, EVN incurred the loss of over VND1 trillion when it
made investment in telecom, which was not its core business field.
The big state owned corporations and
the big debts
State owned economic groups and
general corporations have been described as the economic sector which has
been going very slowly in the restructuring process and operating
ineffectively. “Loss” and “debt” are the two words most popularly used when
talking about them.
In late November 2013, Minister of
Finance Dinh Tien Dung, reported before the National Assembly that 105 state
owned groups and corporations had incurred the huge debt of VND1,350 trillion
and the accumulative loss of VND29 trillion.
The ratio of accounts payable on the
stockholder equity of the enterprises was 1.46. However, 48 of them were
found as “going beyond the safety line” with the ratio far exceeding the
allowed level.
Lilama, for example, had the ratio at
53.19, Bach Dang Construction Corporation 20.97, Cienco 8 20.02.
Dr. Pham The nh, a well-known
economist, has noted that the debts are so big that the State may have to
come forward and pay the debts instead of letting the enterprises go
bankrupt.
Pham Huyen,
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Thứ Hai, 13 tháng 1, 2014
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