Vietnam
growth surge masks weak local firms in 2-speed economy
Vietnam’s
export-driven economy is set to grow at its fastest pace in eight years in
2015 and it’s foreign firms in the country that are riding the wave, leaving
local companies lagging far behind.
Foreign-owned businesses shipped 70
percent of Vietnam’s total exports so far this year, up from 44 percent five
years ago, raising risks for the economy should any of those companies pull
out. While the foreign sector posted exports growth of 21 percent in the
third quarter from a year earlier, domestic companies saw a 10 percent
decline, figures from Vietnam’s customs department show.
The divergence in export success
between foreign and domestic firms is creating a two-track economy that would
be vulnerable to a slowdown should foreign companies move their operations
elsewhere in search of cheaper labor. The dichotomy is similar to that
experienced by some of Vietnam’s neighbors in the early years of their
industrialization drives. It is also complicated by a banking restructuring
aimed at lowering bad debts, which has left many Vietnamese companies without
access to capital, making it harder for them to compete internationally.
"The hollowing out of domestic
firms is a worrying sign for Vietnam’s future, as its main competitive edge
remains cheap labor and land," said Trinh Nguyen, Hong-Kong based senior
economist for emerging Asia at Natixis SA. "It will hurt long-term
growth. This is the easy way out and if the government is not taking steps
now to improve productivity then when wages rise, Vietnam will lose out."
Two-track economy
Vietnam Prime Minister Nguyen Tan
Dung last month raised the forecast for GDP growth in 2015 to at least 6.5
percent from a target set in November 2014 of 6.2 percent. If realized,
growth will be the fastest since 2007.
The country’s exports are led by
computers, electronic products, garments and footwear. Foreign companies,
including Samsung Electronics Co., dominate these sectors and accounted for
99 percent of the $34.3 billion in exports of computers and electronic goods
between January and September this year. They also contributed 67 percent of
garments, textiles and footwear exports worth $25.7 billion in the same
period.
Vietnam’s local companies posted a
stronger share of agriculture and seafood exports, but these industries have
been stymied by plunging commodity prices. The Bloomberg Commodity Index of
22 raw materials dropped in August to its lowest since 1999.
“Vietnamese companies are seeing
export difficulties as the international prices of commodities, agricultural
and seafood products have fallen,” said Nguyen Van Nen, chairman of the
government office, at a briefing Oct. 29. Intensified competition in
international markets also hurts domestic businesses’ exports, he said.
Countries like China and Malaysia,
which developed manufacturing bases before Vietnam, show that local companies
can catch up over time.
“China relied on FDI companies for
quite some time, and then, starting in the late 1990s-early 2000s its
domestic sector was picking up and over time has become more and more
important to the economy and to exports,” said Sandeep Mahajan, the World
Bank’s lead economist in Vietnam.
TPP winner
For now, Vietnam is seen as the
biggest winner of the recently signed Trans-Pacific Partnership deal, which
could boost the nation’s gross domestic product 11 percent, or $36 billion,
in a decade and push up exports by 28 percent over the same period. Vietnam’s
economy is forecast to grow at a faster pace than the average for countries
in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations through 2017, according to the
World Bank.
Vietnam’s medium-term growth
prospects will be significantly enhanced if the TPP is ratified by
participating countries, according to Fitch Ratings Ltd., which affirmed
Vietnam’s BB- rating last week.
"It’s a pretty enviable
position for a country of Vietnam’s development level," Andrew Fennel,
associate director of sovereign ratings at Fitch in Hong Kong, said of the
TPP benefits. "This export-led model is a model many countries have
pursued. Just because the domestic supply chain at the moment in Vietnam is
not strong enough, that doesn’t mean long-term it wouldn’t be. It’s probably
going to take some time."
Samsung investment
Samsung Group is Vietnam’s biggest
foreign investor, having spent $14.2 billion in the country as of August,
according to a report by Dau Tu newspaper posted on the Foreign Investment
Agency’s website. Samsung accounted for 18 percent of the nation’s exports in
2014, according to a government website.
“Foreign companies invest in Vietnam
to take advantage of cheap labour," said Trinh. "When a lot of
firms invest, eventually it puts upward pressure on wages. When wages rise
and Vietnam doesn’t have other comparative advantages, these labor intensive
manufacturers will go to countries that offer cheaper wages.”
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Thứ Hai, 9 tháng 11, 2015
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