VN
trade surplus for 2014 hits $2b
HA NOI (VNS) - Viet Nam's trade surplus in
the first 11 months of 2014 has reached US$2 billion, a $100-million increase
over the surplus recorded in the first ten months of the year.
The General
Statistics Office (GSO) made the announcement and predicted that Viet Nam
would finish 2014 with a trade surplus and a large contribution from the
foreign direct investment (FDI) sector.
GSO figures
showed that the country's export revenues reached $137.33 billion, a 13.7-per
cent year-on-year increase, and 67 per cent came from the FDI sector,
including crude oil. The FDI sector's exports increased by 13 per cent
year-on-year.
Leading exports
include garments and textiles, with a turnover of $19.183 billion, an
18.2-per cent increase; phones and components, $21.681 billion, an 8.3-per
cent increase; footwear products, $9.181 billion, a 23-per cent increase; and
computers and electronic components, $10.259 billion, a five-per cent
increase.
Products with
rapid export growth this year include seafood, which increased by 20.2 per
cent to reach $7.272 billion; fruits and vegetables, by 39.6 per cent to
$1.35 billion; and coffee, by 34.3 per cent to $3.31 billion.
However, several
traditional exports witnessed declines in either volume or value or both.
Coal fell by 1.8 per cent in volume to 6.812 million tonnes and 37.9 per cent
in value to $506 million. Rubber reached $1.634 billion, a 26.2-per cent
decline, because of the sharp fall in world prices.
The United States
was the country's leading importer, with an export value in the first 11
months of this year reaching $26.2 billion, a 21.3-per cent increase.
The country's
import value reached nearly $135 billion, a 12.6-per cent year-on-year
increase, with the FDI sector accounting for more than 56.8 per cent.
Viet Nam mainly
imported raw materials for production such as fabrics, plastics, machines and
equipment.
Worth considering
is Viet Nam's trade deficit with China which, in the first 11 months of this
year, reached $26.4 billion, a 22.1-per cent year-on-year increase and nearly
one-fifth of the country's total import turnover.
Viet Nam's imports from China reached $40 billion or nearly 30 per cent
of the country's export turnover. This high rate is a serious concern,
according to the GSO. - VNS
|
Thứ Ba, 25 tháng 11, 2014
Đăng ký:
Đăng Nhận xét (Atom)
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét