Agriculture: It’s
not just rice anymore
Leading economists have forecasted
that
The country has benefited economically
from lower wages than other Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)
members, and its demographics have been more promising with relatively high
literacy rates – producing a workforce with the drive and skills for factory
labour.
The country is widely known for
building its civilization on thousands of years of agriculture in general and
rice in particular. But now, the face of agriculture has been changing and
the nation is rapidly becoming a major producer and exporter of a variety of
other agriculture commodities.
Hoang Anh Gia Lai (HAGL) is a
typical example, having shifted its focus from the real estate industry to
more sustainable technological agriculture growing plants such as sugar,
rubber, palm oil and corn in addition to dairy and cattle farming.
On June 9, HAGL, JSC
Nutrition Food JSC and Vissan Limited Company formed a joint venture to get
into the dairy and cattle farming business.
According to the parties agreement
the trio will invest US$300 million for building dairy and beef cattle farms.
Once completed, they will have a total of 236,000 head acquired in
Nutrition Food JSC will begin
constructing a US$238.09 million milk processing plant in the Tra Da
Industrial Park in September 2015 with the capacity to produce 290 million
litres of fresh milk per year in the first phase rising to 500 million litres
in the second phase.
The factory's equipment will come
from
Meanwhile, Vissan Company will
erect a US$95.238 million meat packing plant in southern Long An Province,
with an annual capacity to process 100,000 metric tons of beef to be supplied
by HAGL.
In fact, average
After
The country has also been
benefiting from the renormalization of trade with the
Subsequent preferential trade
agreements have led to tariff reductions that have only recently begun to
take effect.
Today,
The Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP)
agreement is viewed as important to the long-term economic strategy for
Regarding meats,
Vietnamese demand for chicken is
also rising, with growing production of corn and cassava used as feedstuff.
According to leading economists,
the government’s rapid privatization of major state-owned enterprises,
initiated last year, is having a major effect on agriculture.
The government has plans to
withdraw US$151 million from 167 businesses owned by the Ministry of
Agriculture and Rural Development, paving the way for the new face of
Vietnamese agriculture.
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Thứ Hai, 21 tháng 9, 2015
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