Vietnam’s
deficit with China rises 12.5% to $32.3bn
A
kid holds a made-in-China toy box at a store in Ho Chi Minh City.Tuoi Tre
Vietnam suffered a massive
US$32.3 billion trade deficit with China, where it imported from a needle to
an elephant, in 2015.
Last year imports
from China reached nearly $50 billion, while Vietnam’s exports to its
northern neighbor were only some $17.7 billion, according to data by the
General Statistics Office.
The $32.3 billion
deficit in 2015 is 12.5 percent higher than that of one year earlier, and is
the highest-ever negative trade balance Vietnam has had with China.
Vietnam logged a
$23.7 billion and $28.9 billion deficit with China in 2013 and 2014,
respectively.
The massive deficit
in 2015 was largely due to the rising imports of steel, metal, cars, car
components, and raw materials for footwear and textile production, according
to the General Statistics Office.
What is most
worrying is that Vietnam still bought a huge volume of agro-products from
China, despite being an agriculture-exporting country itself.
In the Jan-Nov
period in 2015, the Southeast Asian country imported $165 million worth of
fruits and vegetables from China, up 21.2 percent from a year earlier,
according to customs data.
There was, however,
a huge amount of Chinese produce brought to Vietnam across the border, which
was not included in the data.
Vietnam even
imported products that can be grown locally, and thus domestic produce has
eventually lost its home market to the Chinese imports.
Price really matters,
as Chinese fruits and vegetables are 30 to 50 percent cheaper than the
Vietnamese-grown products, according to industry insiders.
“Customers have real
demand for Chinese products, so we just cannot stop sourcing them,” said Do
Thi Lanh, a small trader at An Suong Market in District 12, Ho Chi Minh City.
Lanh said Chinese
fruits and vegetables can always find buyers easily thanks to their much
cheaper prices compared to the Vietnamese produce.
“Chinese cabbages
fetch only VND8,000 [$0.39] a kg, compared to VND40,000 [$1.79] a kg for
those grown in Da Lat or Hanoi,” she said.
Upon being imported,
Chinese fruits and vegetables are distributed to wholesale markets in
Vietnam, from where they will be transported to smaller markets, supermarkets
and especially those restaurants, eateries and firms that supply meals in
large quantities to factories, hospitals or schools.
“Chinese products
are always available no matter how many of them you want to source,” said
Hung, who sells spices at the Hoc Mon wholesale market in Ho Chi Minh City.
“The domestic
products are more expensive and are of varying quality, so people prefer
Chinese ones.”
Hung added the
Chinese garlic or chili will be ground and sold to restaurants to make
sauces, so “no one knows whether they are eating Vietnamese or Chinese
spices.”
Besides fruits and
vegetables, Vietnam also bought different seafood products from China.
In 2015 the country
imported $54.6 million worth of seafood products from mainland China and Hong
Kong, a massive 42.2 percent year on year increase, according to the Vietnam
Association of Seafood Exporters and Producers.
Deficit will continue widening
Vietnam’s trade
deficit with China is expected to continue widening in the coming years, as
the Southeast Asian country still has to rely heavily on Chinese raw
materials for several sectors, including rubber, footwear, and textile and
garment production.
For instance,
Vietnam last year spent more than $1 billion importing plastic products,
because “no domestic firms are able to produce these materials,” said Tran
Viet Anh, deputy chairman of the Ho Chi Minh City Rubber Plastic Manufacturer
Association.
“We will have to do
so in the next ten years, as there are no domestic suppliers for the
materials,” he said.
Diep Thanh Kiet,
deputy chairman of the Vietnam Leather, Footwear and Handbag Association
(Lefaso), said the footwear industry is much too reliant on imported
materials.
“While the industry
needs 210 million square meters of faux leather a year, domestic supply can
only cover 4.2 percent of that,” he said.
“Similarly, only
12.5 percent of the annual demand for 92 million square meters of nonwoven
fabrics can be met domestically.”
Vietnam therefore
has to import most of the needed materials, and it is difficult to find other
suppliers than China, Kiet admitted.
“There is no nation
that can supply the materials in huge quantities, at cheap prices and with diverse
designs and patterns like China,” he explained.
The Lefaso official
added that the heavy reliance on Chinese materials “may persist in dozens of
years to come,” if Vietnam’s policy to develop supporting industries remains
ineffective.
TUOI TRE
NEWS
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Thứ Hai, 4 tháng 1, 2016
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