After 10
years, each Vietnamese burdened with additional $1,200 public debt
In 2006, each
Vietnamese shouldered about VND3.5 million of public debt, and 10 years later
the burden has increased to nearly VND30 million.
The debt
burden of Vietnamese people increases annually. In 2006, the country’s total
public debt was about $13.8 billion. If total population of 83.3 million
people at that time, each person would bear approximately $165.7.
However, 10
years later, the per capita debt has risen to approximately $1,384. The
figure is calculated based on GDP and population.
Specifically,
public debt accounted for 62.2% of GDP in 2015, or about $126.9 billion. The
debt is divided to the population of about 91.7 million people to have the
per capita debt of $1,384. The number increased 8.5 times compared to that of
2006.
In 2015,
the per capita income of Vietnamese people was about VND45.72 million
($2,200). Thus, the per capita debt in 2015 accounted for 65% of the total
income of Vietnamese people.
In 2006,
according to data from the General Statistics Office, Vietnam’s public debt
was 22.7% of GDP, equivalent to $13.8 billion. In 2015, it accounted to 62.2%
of GDP, equivalent to $126.9 billion dollars.
According
to the World Bank, in 2016 the public debt will increase to 63.8% of GDP and
in 2017 it will be 64.4% of GDP and 64.7% of GDP in 2018. Thus, by 2018,
public debt will reach the 65% safe ceiling rate set by the Ministry of
Finance.
The
structure of public debt
According
to the bulletin of the Ministry of Finance, in the structure of public debt,
government debt (including bonds, bills, ODA loans, commercial loans from
bilateral and multilateral partners) accounts for 80%.
The
remaining 20% is debt guaranteed by the government (bonds issued by the
Vietnam Development Bank (VDB) and the Bank for Social Policy) and the debt
of local governments.
Vietnam’s
public debt includes foreign debt and domestic debt.
Foreign
creditors are usually bilateral partners, such as the World Bank (WB), Asian
Development Bank (ADB), and the countries providing ODA loans to Vietnam as
Japan, South Korea, China ..., the institutions buying government bonds,
countries and other international organizations granting commercial loans to
Vietnam.
Domestic
creditors are also diverse, including organizations and individuals. The
organizations may be commercial banks and the individuals are Vietnamese
people who purchase government bonds.
US$1 =
VND22,300
Na Son, VNN
|
Thứ Tư, 4 tháng 5, 2016
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