Vietnam grows more attractive to foreign investment
China has lost its competitive edge as a low-cost manufacturing hub
with producers of everything from handbags to clothing to basic electronic
components relocating to Vietnam
economists at Savills said recently in a research report.
Quoting research by the
Standard Chartered Bank, Savills said there has been a shift of FDI away from
China to ASEAN member
countries such as Vietnam
to best position to take advantage of the Vietnam-EU and the Trans-Pacific
Partnership (TPP) free trade accords.
Vietnam is one of the 12 countries
participating in the TPP, a landmark 12-nation free-trade deal whose
negotiations concluded earlier this week.
The accord, if ratified, would let Vietnam ship many products
tariff-free to countries that constitute two-fifths of the world's trade.
The shift is best illustrated by
the waning foreign direct investment (FDI) into China,
which has alternatively been flowing into manufacturing companies operating
in countries like Vietnam
and Thailand.
Vietnam’s Foreign Investment Agency
(FIA) tallied newly-registered and supplemental FDI for the eight months
leading up to September at US$13.3 billion, a year-on-year 30.4% surge,
Savills underscored in its report.
Cost savings drive FDI
The impetus for the healthy FDI
figures appear to be a combination of cost saving benefits from the
Vietnam-EU and TPP trade deals in tandem with lower labour costs in Vietnam,
Savills underscored in its report.
Notably, both trade deals contain
rules of origin provisions requiring high percentages of clothing and textile
industry exports to originate within member countries and this in turn has
been driving investment dollars into the industry’s supply chain.
By relocating their supply chains
to Vietnam
the multinational corporations are better posturing to maximize their profits
and take full advantage of lower labour costs and potential reduced tariffs
afforded the trade agreements.
In reality FDI in Vietnam is
dominated by a few large corporations and over three-fourths of it has flowed
into manufacturing companies in the clothing and textiles industry Savills
said in its report.
So far this year, three textile
plants operated by Polytex Far Eastern Co Ltd, Hyosung Istanbul Tekstil and
Worldon Vietnam Co Ltd of Hong Kong have registered FDI of US$1.24 billion.
Industrial zones attract
foreign investment
Additionally, Microsoft had earlier
this year announced it will relocate two Nokia plants from China to Vietnam in the near future.
Microsoft also said it plans to
invest US$210 million in the Vietnam-Singapore industrial zone in Bac Ninh,
which will increase the number of its jobs in the zone threefold.
Meanwhile Samsung Display Vietnam had earlier this year committed to
increasing its FDI in Bac
Ninh Province
by US$3 billion.
The Regional Comprehensive Economic
Partnership (RCEP) and ASEAN Economic Community (AEC) have also contributed
greatly to creating favourable conditions for investment in Vietnam Savills
reported.
The Vietnam-Singapore industrial
zone located in Quang Ngai province has attracted US$7.8 million of FDI since
it first opened in late 2013.
Recently, the Mapletree Group based out of Singapore pledged another US$1
billion of FDI to construct manufacturing facilities in it.
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