New
World Bank report casts doubt on
Local economists
have advised the government to be extremely careful with spending because its
public debt has reached a dangerously high level.
They raised their concerns after the World Bank early
this week reported that
Economist Do Thien Anh Tuan said the government had its
own criteria when calculating public debt, so he was not surprised to see the
huge mismatch.
The lecturer of the
Ho Chi Minh City-based Fulbright Economics Teaching Program said what really
worries him is the government's ability to deal with its huge public debt.
In its latest report to the National Assembly, the
country's legislative body, the Ministry of Finance said public debt will hit
the assembly's limit set at 65 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) in
2017. But after that the government will try to lower the ratio to 60.2
percent by 2020.
However, Tuan doubted that the debt will ever reduce.
"Even in the best scenario where the economy grows
in a stable manner,
Tuan said to reduce public debt, the government will
have to be able to deliver a budget surplus and save an amount of at least 1 percent of GDP every year.
This is a
"very difficult" task, considering that the state budget is always
in deficit, he said.
The government in fact often asks the National Assembly to
let it overspend its revenues.
In 2013 its budget
deficit was equivalent to 6.6 percent of GDP, even higher than the limit of
5.3 percent previously approved by legislators.
Economist Nguyen Tri Hieu also forecast that with its
"current situation"
The ratio was about 60.3 percent at the end of last
year, according a government report.
Lack of fiscal
discipline
Vo Tri Thanh, deputy chief of the Central Institute for
Economic Management, said the amount of public debt is not as important as a country's
capacity to repay debts and how effectively it could spend the borrowed
money.
He said the government's inefficient use of loans was
reflected in the fact that its public spending has been exceeding targets
since 2012.
On the other hand, the government has been issuing bonds
overseas to refinance existing loans, which is a good solution in a short
time, but will become risky in a long term, according to Thanh.
When new loans brought through bonds are not used
effectively, the government will lose creditors' trust and its future loans
will face higher interest rates, he explained.
Last November the government issued 10-year sovereign
bonds worth $1 billion in the global market for the first time in more than
four years, at a yield of 4.8 percent. In April this year, the finance
ministry advised the government to issue more bonds next year.
Tuan also agreed that refinancing with new bonds could
cause problems in a long term, saying that it showed a government's previous
loans were not planned and used carefully, and that the government was having
financial difficulties.
Both Tuan and Hieu advised the government to reduce its
role in public sectors, particularly in airports, seaports and railways, and
boost private investors' participation.
The World Bank report showed that
Interest payments alone now account for an estimated 7.2
percent of total budget spending, crowding out other more essential spending,
it said.
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Chủ Nhật, 26 tháng 7, 2015
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