Wood businesses losing on
home turf
Vietnam is the sixth largest wood and
wooden product exporter in the world and the second largest in Asia, yet the
domestic wood processing sector is injured by low-priced, skillfully crafted
imports.
Weaknesses in management, coordination and trade
promotion campaigns, as well as in developing an effective distribution
system have created numerous inefficiencies and lack of competitiveness in
the domestic market.
Nguyen Ton Quyen, General Secretary of the Vietnam
Timber and Forest Products Association (Vietfores), says the country now has
over 1,000 craft villages and thousands of households specializing in
processing wood products, mostly in Hanoi, Bac Ninh, Ha Nam, Nam Dinh, Nghe
An and Quang Nam.
Rapid urbanization has fueled a huge demand for wood
products at hotels, restaurants, offices and new urban areas. Over the past
five years, domestic consumption has accounted for 40% of the country’s total
wood production, amounting to US$2.25 billion in value.
However, the wood processing sector faces many
obstacles, principally related to the fact that there are too few large
businesses and it is saddled with an excessive number of small-scale
businesses, Quyen says.
These smaller businesses are characteristically most
often equipped with obsolete machinery and equipment that are highly
inefficient that add a lot of cost to the final product, making it difficult
to compete with lower priced imports.
Many of these smaller businesses are relegated small
outsourcing contracts for the larger businesses, or in other words,
relatively low value and low profitability production.
Vietfores vice president Ngo Sy Hoai says
consumers now prefer products made of artificial boards with eye-catching,
modern designs and at reasonable prices. These products are imported into
Domestic processors want to cash in on this segment of
the market, but they find it difficult to compete with foreign rivals that
offer the items at a lower price.
A number of businesses want to get the lion’s share to
capitalize on this opportunity; however, they fail due to spontaneous
production and lack of a complete distribution network. If they sign export
contracts, they are not financially powerful enough to expand production to
meet orders.
This is why the domestic wood market has yet to attract
local processors, says Hoai.
One of the greatest challenges for local businesses is
that businesses have yet to develop their brand name and market products with
good design to cater to consumer tastes. In addition, marketing activities
and e-commerce application in wood craft villages remains poor, further
compounding the problem.
To anticipate the development trend, some craft
villages have cooperated to create specialty niches in the market producing
parts of wood products, a model that has proved effective in improving the
product quality and meeting big orders for export.
A case in point, Bac Ninh province’s
Trinh Quoc Dat, Vice President of Vietnam Association
of Craft Villages, says that craft villages and businesses should work
closely together to share market information and select a wood craft village
or a business capable of meeting big orders and seeking suitable markets.
He suggests that the State encourage linkages between
craft villages and processors by offering them credits and reducing taxes.
Trade agencies should play an important role in seeking outlets for their
products.
The Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development has
drawn up a domestic wood market development strategy, aiming to fetch US$4
billion in revenue by 2020.
Accordingly, craft villages and wood businesses are
required to develop materials supplies, diversify patterns, boost trade
promotion, and build a complete distribution network.
VOV
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Thứ Tư, 23 tháng 7, 2014
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