Vietnam's
public debt rises to 61.3 percent of GDP: report
Vietnam's public
debt was equivalent to 61.3 percent of its gross domestic product at the end
of last year, up 60.3 percent in 2014, local media reported on Wednesday,
citing new figures released by the finance ministry.
Regardless of the increase, it was within the safe limit
of 65 percent set by the National Assembly, and the government completed its
payment obligations on time, the ministry's debt management department
was quoted as saying.
The Vietnamese government spends 13-14 percent of its
annual revenue on debt service costs, an allowable ratio, it said.
The country's foreign debt dropped to 41.5 percent of
GDP last year from 46 percent the year before.
Around 94 percent of Vietnam's external debt was
official development assistance loans (ODA) with long maturity and low
interest rates, according to the department.
A total of US$5.8 billion in ODA loans was disbursed
last year, it said, adding that 31 percent of the money was on-lent to local
governments and state-owned enterprises.
Vietnam's economy expanded nearly 6.7 percent to
VND4,484 trillion ($199.98 billion), and is expected to see a similar growth
this year.
In a previous forecast, the finance ministry said
Vietnam's public debt will reach 62.3 percent of GDP at the end of this year.
It will hit the limit in 2017, before falling to 60.2 percent in 2020, the
ministry said.
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Thứ Năm, 21 tháng 1, 2016
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