In Vietnam, the
rich advised to not buy luxury cars
In Vietnam’s
metropolises like Hanoi and HCM City,
even if you drive a super-car, your speed cannot exceed 40km per hour and
your car will have to inch in traffic jams or floods.
At a recent workshop, an official
from the National Traffic Safety Committee cited World Bank research to show
that transport costs in Vietnam account for 11.8% of GDP, compared to less
than 4.5% in the US, 4.8% in Singapore, 5.8% in the EU, and 6% in Japan.
Thus, the cost of travel and transportation in Vietnam is the highest in the
world.
All cats are grey in the dark
It is a waste for using a super-car in this situation.
An entrepreneur in HCM City
recently bought a VND1.6 billion ($800,000) car, which has maximum speed
beyond 200 km/h. However, on the first day he drove the car, he was very
disappointed seeing his super-car inching forwards together with bicycles and
motorcycles in traffic congestion. Traffic jams took him two hours just to go
through a distance of over 10km.
However, this rich man is not the
sole victim of traffic congestion in Vietnam. Previously Vietnamese
paid millions of US dollars to buy supercars, including a Bugatti Veyron
($1.4 million), which has a maximum speed of 407 km/h.
In the current traffic situation in Vietnam, such
supercars are only for marching during special cases or staying in garages as
part of car collections of rich people.
Losses caused by traffic jams
According to a seminar on
sustainable urban development held recently in HCM City
on September 15, annual losses due to traffic congestion in the city was
estimated at about VND23 trillion, equivalent to $1.2 billion.
Currently the total surface area for
traffic in HCM City accounts for 1.7% to 2% of the
total urban land, so the figure may keep rising.
However, the costs of travel and
transport in Vietnam
are high, not only from traffic jams but from many other reasons. Nguyen Van
Thanh, Chair of the Vietnam Automotive Transport Association, said besides
official costs such as fuel, labor, vehicle depreciation, the cost of
transportation in Vietnam
is because transport service providers have to "bear the huge cost that
they cannot reveal."
What are they? They are bribes for
traffic police, for poor-quality roads, for prolonged road projects or for
poor transport management?
Hanoi
once spent VND1 trillion ($50 million) for clearance and construction of a
500m road in Dong Da district, which is considered the most expensive road in
the planet. Sadly, as soon as the road opened for traffic, traffic jams still
occurred because of bottlenecks.
Similarly, Chu Van An Road in Binh
Thanh District, Ho Chi Minh City was described by a local newspaper as a road
with "big head and thin bottom" because this four-lane, 20m wide
road has a bottleneck of only 4-5m wide.
There are many transport projects
that have not been finished after several years to become traffic hindrance.
Vietnam
can learn from developed countries to invest in and manage traffic
infrastructure to significantly reduce the cost of transportation and travel,
to create a strong impetus for economic growth. South
Korea, Japan,
and Singapore are good
examples in Asia.
Even Southeast Asian countries like Cambodia and Myanmar are improving in this
matter. The quality of roads in Cambodia
and quality of airports in Myanmar
is now a challenge for Vietnam.
If Vietnam does not change, the
expensive transport and travel costs will be a major constraint to economic
development in the country.
Nguyen Anh Thi, VietNamNet Bridge
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