VN
urged to tap China trade, investment
HCM CITY - China is expected to import more than $10
trillion in goods and services and invest $500 billion abroad in the next
five years, offering opportunities for Viet Nam and other countries in the
Asia-Pacific region.
Speaking at a
seminar held yesterday in HCM City, Li Zhenmin, commercial and economic
counselor at the Chinese Consulate General, urged Viet Nam to seek Chinese
partners for long-term cooperation in trade and investment.
Viet Nam's trade
deficit with China has ballooned in recent years, and now stands at $9.8
billion.
While Vietnamese
officials have urged China to increase imports, Zhenmin said that China had
opened its doors to Vietnamese exports.
Citing statistics
from China's Customs department, he said China's import turnover from Viet
Nam had recorded an average growth of 15-20 per cent per year in recent
years, a relatively high rate.
For many years,
China has been the largest buyer of agricultural exports from Viet Nam.
Viet Nam is the
second largest trade partner of China in the ASEAN region.
This year,
bilateral trade between the two countries is expected to reach $100 billion,
Zhenmin said.
"To increase
cooperation, a transnational e-commerce floor for the two countries should be
established. We can take advantage of the internet to increase information
transparency, which would create favourable conditions for the two countries'
businesses," he said.
Chinese importers
did not understand the Vietnamese market fully, he said, adding that
Vietnamese businesses also encountered obstacles and should seek only
competent and reliable Chinese importers.
Zhenmin advised
Vietnamese businesses to increase export quality, avoid violations of
intellectual property rights, and refuse to make or buy counterfeit products.
Nguyen The Hung,
deputy director of the HCM City branch of the Viet Nam Chamber of Commerce
and Industry, said bilateral relations between Viet Nam and China had shown
impressive growth but there was still unexploited potential.
Last year, the
total export-import turnover of the two countries reached $58.7 billion, an
increase of 16.5 per cent compared to the same period last year.
Viet Nam's
exports in 2014 totalled $14.9 billion, up 11.8 per cent. Imports were $43.8
billion, an increase of 18.2 per cent.
In the first five
months of this year, Vietnamese exports to China reached US$6.1 billion, a
decrease of 1.2 per cent over the same period last year.
Viet Nam's
imports totalled $15.9 billion, an increase of 19.1 per cent in the first
five months.
Viet Nam's main
exports to China are crude oil, telephones and parts, rubber, rice, fruit,
vegetables and seafood, while it imported machinery, equipment, steel and
fertiliser from China.
Last year, China
had the largest number of tourists to Viet Nam (1.9 million), an increase of
2.1 per cent over 2013.
In the first five
months, the number of Chinese tourists to Viet Nam reached 700,000.
China had a total
of 1,112 projects with total registered capital of $8 billion by March this
year, ranking ninth among 100 countries and territories investing in Viet
Nam.
China had 99
investment projects in Viet Nam with total investment capital of $253 million
in 2014. — VNS
|
Thứ Bảy, 27 tháng 6, 2015
Đăng ký:
Đăng Nhận xét (Atom)
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét