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Vietnam seeks FDI quality, not
quantity
While the commitments may have shrunk
from last year, the actual disbursement has risen by 5% to US$4.2 billion,
according to the Foreign Investment Department.
Authorities have been paying more
attention to the "quality" rather than "quantity" of
investment.
"[While considering an FDI
project] authorities should ignore the idea of ‘more the better'," said
Phan Huu Thang, a former head of the department.
Recently the central city of Danang
rejected two multi-million dollar foreign projects over environmental issues.
To ensure the city's sustainable
development, Danang authorities have adopted policies to attract FDI in
hi-tech projects and supporting industries with high value addition,
especially in "clean" projects.
Other provinces like Ba Ria – Vung
Tau and Dong Nai have also rejected projects that could cause pollution,
require large tracts of land, and employ unskilled workers.
The
This year Hai Duong has also stopped
seeking investments in production of construction materials and manufacturing
that mainly involves exploitation of natural resources like minerals.
"
International organisations like the
World Bank and International Monetary Fund, European, American, Japanese, and
Korean business associations and the media had praised these efforts, Thoi
bao Kinh te
Mai believed foreign investment would
pick up this year due to the Government's efforts at institutional reforms
and improving the business environment.
At a meeting to announce the
acquisition plans on May 5, Luu Trung Hoa, deputy chairman of the District 1
People's Committee, told people affected by the acquisition that the total
area to be taken over was 16,550sq.m.
Twenty four households and eight
organisations will lose their lands, three households fully and the rest,
parts of them.
Hoa said District 1 authorities had
arranged for replacements for them, including nine apartments in Tenement No
203,
City authorities are scheduled to pay
compensation and take over the lands in September this year.
The lands will then be handed over to
Construction of line No 2 is
scheduled to begin in 2017.
Steel industry
battered by imports, excess capacity
Though domestic steel production is
two times the demand, imports of steel products are rising relentlessly,
putting local manufacturers under even more pressure.
According to figures from customs, in
the first quarter of this year Vietnam imported 2.88 million tonnes of steel
products worth US$1.72 billion, an increase of 30.7% in volume and 15% in
value from a year earlier.
Notably, imports from
Last year out of 11 million tonnes
imported, steel containing boron from
The Chinese steel was sold for
construction at VND1 million to VND2 million per tonne lower than local
products.
This has forced many local steel
manufacturers to scale down production, some by 60%, or even shut down their
plants.
The import of scrap iron is another
headache for local steel producers.
Demand for domestically made steel
remains sluggish as due to the import of cheap steel from neighbouring
countries.
Despite promotions, in the first
quarter only 300,000 tonnes of local products were sold in the market, down
30% year-on-year.
The Vietnam Steel Association said
demand in the local market this year would be around six million tonnes, 8
per cent higher than last year.
But the capacity in the country is around
11 million tonnes a year, nearly double the demand, creating bruising
competition.
According to a report from the
Ministry of Industry and Trade, the competition would become even more
intense when steel imports from a number of countries enjoy lower taxes under
bilateral trade agreements
In addition, local supply has been
increasing with the opening of new plants by Posco SS,
"The licensing of new steel
plants at a time when there is a surplus in local steel supply (though the
existing plants are not operating at full capacity) has led to a
demand-supply imbalance," an official from the Ministry of Industry and
Trade's Market Department said.
Faced with such a situation, local
steel firms have demanded protection against imports in the initial stages of
global integration.
Relevant agencies should impose
"technical and commercial barriers" on steel products containing
boron imported from
They also want the Government to
reject investment projects that use outdated facilities to keep supply lower.
"To ensure sustainable
development of the steel industry, the Government should allow non-state
enterprises to submit tenders for projects funded by State budgets,"
said Tran Minh Ngoc of the HCM City University of Technology.- VNS
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Thứ Hai, 11 tháng 5, 2015
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