Chinese
dealers stopped showing up to the Vinh Kim Market, the largest fruit trading
outpost in the Mekong Delta, in June, blowing a huge hole in sales.
Prices have been cut to less than a
dollar per kilogram for durian or some 50 cents a kilo for dragon fruit.
The ongoing territorial dispute in
the
This isn't the first time politics
have hurt business and Vietnamese traders say they're beginning to pursue new
markets .
Dealers from the delta have
advertised star apples, dragon fruit and sweet potatoes in ASEAN countries
like
Tran Huu Danh, director of a fruit
export company in the province, said he used to sell 90 percent of his dragon
fruit to
Consequently, Danh has expanded his
business to
He said ASEAN markets favor
Vietnamese dragon fruits, while
“
Vietnamese dragon fruit has been a
hit in many picky markets, including the
A source from Vietnam Food
Association said China has grown to become Vietnam’ biggest rice importer in
the last two years and currently buys more than 60 percent of the country's
rice exports, Tuoi Tre newspaper reported.
On the other hand,
Huynh Quang Dau, the general
director of the An Giang vegetable firm, Antesco, and vice chairman of
Vietnam Fruits and Vegetables Association, said Vietnamese farmers should
focus on improving quality.
Dau said local farms are small and
scattered and can't provide consistent quality.
He said government agencies need to
guide businesses and farmers to build larger production areas for single
fruits.
Antesco exports frozen and canned
fruit to the
“[
Dr Pham Sy Thanh, an expert on the Chinese economy at
The company will soon expand into
the Middle East thanks to cheap loans (7-10.5 percent) secured for building
processing factories and developing large fields.
The few companies that have broken
into high-end markets, like Antesco, say they are overwhelmed by demand.
Dong Dang Huan, a representative of
Thinh Cat Company in
Looking for new fiber
Investors in
Tran Quang Nghi, general director of
the state-owned clothing giant Vinatex, said the company has invested a great
deal into yarn and textile production facilities.
Its nine ongoing and planned
projects -- worth more than VND2 trillion ($94.36 million) -- are set to
produce more than 40,000 tons of yarn and 20 million meters of cloth a year
staring in 2015.
The company also plans to put more
than VND10 trillion into cotton fields, sheep pastures (for wool), and
eucalyptus plantations (for rayon).
Le Quang Hung, board chairman of
Garmex Saigon that grew by an average of 30 percent annually during the past
decade, said local producers will have to depend on Chinese materials to some
extent as their major clients in China require them to do so.
His company must use 90 percent
Chinese materials for that reason.
He said local businesses can loosen
their dependence on
Diep Thanh Kiet, vice chairman of
the Vietnam Leather, Footwear and Handbag Association (Lefaso) said
Vietnamese businesses rely largely on
The industry imported $13.54 billion
of materials in 2013, including more than $8 billion worth of cloth, 48
percent of which came from
Dyes used in
Two industrial zones were planned in
northern and southern
Dr Pham Sy Thanh, director of the
Chinese Economic Study Program at
Thanh said local businesses should
stop considering
He told Tuoi Tre that Vietnamese
manufacturers should capitalize on the upcoming Trans-Pacific Partnership
Agreement, which would make the country a free-trade partner of big economies
like the US, Canada, Australia and Japan.
“[
By organizing an economy that's
better than
|
Thứ Ba, 24 tháng 6, 2014
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