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Professor Dmitry Mosyakov
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Here’s Dmitry Mosyakov’s full article posted on New
Eastern Outlook website on November 5:
The media publishes a lot of different information
about the economic development of China ,
but in the East there are many countries with which Russia (and
others) would be able to interestingly and profitably develop cooperation in
the coming years. One of these countries is Vietnam . It is an old friend and
trading partner, which has close ties to Russia , especially in the field
of military cooperation, oil and gas, nuclear power, and tourism. What is the
economic situation in this country?
The key index PMI, which indicates the situation in
production over the course of 13 months, is higher than 50 points. Exports
are also showing a positive trend. Over the nine-month period export volume
climbed to US$109.63 billion, 14.2% higher than the same period in 2013. The
trade surplus is US$2.47 billion.
The situation in the economy today is so favourable for
investment that the US Chamber of Commerce in Singapore
include Vietnam
in the list of the most attractive ASEAN countries for American businessmen.
The well-known Fitch rating agency recently announced its intention to
increase Vietnam ’s
rating from B + to BB- due to the stable growth of the economy.
It should be noted that, like any growing Asian
economy, Vietnam
faces a number of relevant problems. Vietnamese economists consider it
dangerous that the national economy is highly dependent on foreign-owned
enterprises, which account for about 70% of the country’s total exports.
Another problem is the low demand in the domestic market, it is 1.5% lower
today than a year ago. The number of liquidated companies is also large. In
less than nine months in 2014 about 50,000 companies went bankrupt, slightly
more than in 2013. The amount of arrears of economic actors is also great,
and the process of privatising public sector enterprises is proceeding
slowly. During the first eight months of 2014 only 55 out of 432 companies
were privatized, all of which must undergo this procedure by 2015.
It should be noted that all these problems, although
they create difficulties in the development of the economy, do not in fact
have a critical effect on the overall acceleration of development. The key
indicators of the Vietnamese economy look very positive, so virtually all the
international rating agencies have made forecasts of GDP growth in Vietnam of
5.4-5.6% in 2014 and 6% and 6-7% in 2015 and 2016-2017, respectively.
VOV
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