ASEAN sets pace of global integration
Vietnam has reaped substantial economic
benefits from its 20-year membership of ASEAN, which has provided
opportunities to participate in many regional and global economic links.
As Vietnam
marks its 20 year-membership within the ASEAN bloc, VIR examines the
political and economic benefits that the country has reaped during this
period. Joining this regional powerhouse paved the way for Vietnam’s
access to the World Trade Organization as well as its overall international
integration through several key trade and diplomatic partnerships.
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Former Minister of Trade (now the Ministry of Industry and
Trade) Truong Dinh Tuyen said that over the past two decades of relations
with ASEAN, Vietnam
had made huge strides in joining regional economic links, which had greatly
helped the country strengthen its international economic integration.
“Vietnam’s
entry into ASEAN in 1995 was a crucially political decision for its political
and economic benefits. Joining ASEAN enabled Vietnam to negotiate and gain
access to the World Trade Organization (WTO) for greater economic benefits,” Tuyen
said.
As an example, he pointed out that when Vietnam revised its laws in 2006, in order to
align with WTO standards before joining the organisation in 2007, many
foreign investors grabbed this opportunity to pour money into Vietnam.
Foreign direct investment (FDI) into the country soared from $12 billion in
2006, to $21.35 billion in 2007, and $71.73 billion in 2008. FDI occupied
nearly 22 per cent of Vietnam’s
total investment last year.
“Vietnam’s
access to ASEAN has helped enhance its prestige and position globally. The
access helped eradicate international isolation against the country. Without
the access, Vietnam
wouldn’t have been able to join international organisations and expand its
external and economic relations as it has done,” said Nguyen Son, deputy
director general of the Ministry of Industry and Trade’s Inter-agency
Steering Committee for International Economic Integration.
He said that because Vietnam
would join ASEAN on July 28, 1995, the US
wanted to establish normalisation with Vietnam at an earlier date, doing
so on July 11, 1995.
“The US
realised the importance of Vietnam’s
ASEAN membership, through which it could further economic and investment
relations with the whole ASEAN region more conveniently,” Son said.
Also commenting on Vietnam’s
access to ASEAN, Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs (MoFA) Le Hoai Trung said
that Vietnam
had been actively contributing to ASEAN development over the past 20 years.
“Many sectors and localities in Vietnam have been co-implementing
ASEAN shared activities. ASEAN’s increasing role and position has helped
expand Vietnam’s
foreign and economic integration policies,” he said.
However, according to Tuyen, it is difficult to accurately
assess all impacts of international integration on Vietnam’s
economic growth, because integration only helps create opportunities, and
whether such opportunities are utilised effectively depends on Vietnam.
“But it is clear that Vietnam’s
ASEAN membership has laid a firm groundwork for Vietnam to further enter the
world’s economy,” he stressed.
Vietnam has participated in 11 free trade agreements (FTAs)
including one with ASEAN and six between ASEAN and its partners (China,
India, South Korea, Japan, Australia and New Zealand), and four bilateral
FTAs with Japan, Chile, South Korea and the Eurasian Economic Union.
Vietnam is also negotiating further FTAs, including the Regional
Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), the Trans-Pacific Partnership
Agreement (TPP), the Vietnam-EU FTA and the European Free Trade Association
(EFTA).
According to the MoFA, the ASEAN Economic Community (AEC) is
scheduled to be established on December 31, 2015. The community will greatly
benefit Vietnam’s
economy.
“The AEC will bring big export opportunities to Vietnam via a
shared market with a population of over 600 million people, and total gross
domestic product of almost $3 trillion,” said a MoFA document.
The document said that ASEAN is now the world’s seventh
biggest economy, and is forecast to be ranked fourth globally by 2050. The
AEC would be the rendezvous of many bilateral and regional FTAs and act as a
crucial economic bridge towards the markets of China,
South Korea, Japan, Australia,
New Zealand and India via the
FTAs between ASEAN and its partners.
At the recent 26th ASEAN Summit in Kuala Lumpur, Prime Minister
Nguyen Tan Dung stressed that Vietnam would continue doing its best to
achieve positive progress in boosting the construction of the community,
while fine-tuning regulations at home to deliver on ASEAN commitments.
Over 93 per cent of the preparations for establishing the
community have been completed, with Vietnam having already met more
than 90 per cent of its commitments.
Dung said what had to be completed for such an accomplishment
was quite complicated, while time remained limited, “thus member states
should highlight their responsibility, harmoniously combine their national
interests with ASEAN shared interests, and further strengthen intra-ASEAN
solidarity and unity.”
By Nguyen Thanh, VIR
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