Lawmakers adopt 5-year economic plan
HÀ NỘI - State budget overspending will be
reduced to below 3.5 per cent of GDP by 2020, while public debts, government
debts and the country’s foreign debts will not exceed 65 per cent, 54 per
cent and 50 per cent, respectively, of GDP annually in 2016-2020.
These goals were set in a resolution on the economic restructuring plan in 2016-2020 adopted by 82.39 per cent of National Assembly deputies during their plenary session yesterday. Existing non-performing loans in the national economy will be curbed to below 3 per cent, while the capitalisation of the stock market and the bond market will make up 70 per cent and 30 per cent of GDP. At least 1 million businesses will be set up by 2020, among other goals. The resolution stresses the need to adhere to Party guidelines and policies, especially the 12th Party Central Committee Resolution dated November 1, 2016, to build a growth model measured by labour productivity and the quality and competitiveness of the national economy, and to mobilise, allocate and use resources efficiently based on market signals and rules. Internal resources should be fully tapped in combination with attracting and efficiently using external resources. Macro-economic stability must be maintained and economic growth must go along with social advancement, progress and justice, the safeguarding of defence, security and ecology, scientific and technological applications, human resource quality and workforce restructuring, the document stressed. The implementation should keep abreast with the market life, and the development of the private sector should be regarded as an important driving force in economic development. Economic restructuring should be coupled with reshuffling the administration, stepping up administrative reform, and improving the quality of public service.
The
country’s free trade agreements should be soundly implemented to make the
best use of international integration and the fourth industrial revolution to
ensure economic growth is well associated with environmental protection and
recovery and climate change adaptation, the resolution emphasised.
Key tasks include restructuring public investment, state-owned enterprises and credit organisations; rearranging State budget and the public sector; promoting the development of the private sector and reeling in foreign direct investment; modernising the planning and structuring of sectors and economic zones with regard to increasing productivity, quality, and efficiency and speeding up international economic integration; forming and developing various markets, including the finance market, the land use right market, the labour market and the science and technology market in a uniform fashion.
Earlier in
the morning, NA deputies discussed amendments to the 2005 Law on Tourism.
They agreed that there remain many problems in the development of tourism in
Việt Nam, making it unable to achieve its high potential, and that the law
includes outdated and impractical provisions.
Most NA
deputies shared the view that tourism should be turned in to a key industry
given that Việt Nam is home to many beautiful landscapes and unique cultures.
However, its current contribution of 6.6 per cent to the national gross
domestic product is regarded as far too little.
“Việt Nam
yields to none in terms of tourism potential. However, many problems have
emerged in tourism development. If we do not change our philosophy and
mindset, they will not be solved,” said deputy Trương Trọng Nghĩa from Hồ Chí
Minh City.
Not
directly naming which philosophy and mindset that Việt Nam should adopt,
Nghĩa instead emphasised the correlation between exploitation and
preservation, quantity and quality, and short-term and long-term benefits.
He said the
tourism sector is only focussing on exploiting the country’s beautiful
landscapes and important historical relics to earn immediate funds, while
neglecting the important task of preservation.
“Tourism is
not about earning ‘hot money’ for a term [of state officials] or a
generation,” he said.
Minister of
Public Security Tô Lâm, a deputy from Bắc Ninh Province raised the problem of
inadequate tourism services which hold back profits for the nation’s tourism
sector. He compared Việt Nam to Thailand, one of its main competitors in
Southeast Asia in terms of tourism.
“Although
the tour price in Thailand is cheap, no tourist goes there without at least
US$500 – $1,000 in their pockets to buy products and services. Meanwhile,
when visiting Việt Nam, they can hardly find anything to buy. We still have
very few products to offer,” he said.
Some
deputies voiced their disagreement on a regulation that grading of hotels, or
the ‘star’ system of hotel classification, is done on a voluntary
registration basis.
Deputy
Nguyễn Văn Chiến from Hà Nội noted the fact that localities and hotels raise
the number of stars at their will in order to raise prices and compete with
others.
Deputy
Dương Minh Ánh, also from Hà Nội, said the task of granting ‘4-star’ and
‘5-star’ ratings to hotels should be given to the Việt Nam National
Administration of Tourism, while those of ‘3-star’ and below are done by
provincial departments of tourism.
This is to
prevent the current disorder in the hotel grading system and improve the State’s
control on the issue, according to Ánh.
Ánh and
some other deputies also suggested regular inspections undertaken by
responsible authorities to ensure that hotel investors maintain the initial
quality as previously rated.
Water irrigation
The planning
of the national irrigation system was another topic of discussion yesterday,
as the draft law on water irrigation was put on the table.
Deputies
said that the planning of the irrigation system should be in line with the
agricultural restructuring plan, taking into account characteristics of each
region and locality.
Mentioning
the recent drought and saline intrusion in the Mekong Delta which caused
serious damage, deputy Bố Thị Xuân Linh from Bình Thuận Province said the
government needed policies to encourage hydropower plants and irrigation
systems to prevent these natural phenomena.
Linh also
pointed out that the draft law fell short of a regulation on compensation
responsibility of organisations and individuals for damages caused during the
operation of irrigation systems and hydropower plants.
A detailed
compensation plan for certain cases should be added to the draft law, she
said.
Relating to
this issue, deputies Lê Thị Thủy, Vũ Trọng Kim from Hải Dương Province, and
deputy Hồ Thanh Bình from An Giang Province all expressed concern about the
operation of dams in hydropower plants.
The
deputies mentioned recent accidents relating to dams in hydropower plants in
the central provinces of Quảng Nam and Hà Tĩnh provinces which caused loss of
life and property.
They asked
to have very specific regulations regarding their operations and
responsibilities of related parties to ensure the safety of people living in
downstream areas.
Meanwhile,
a road map to change the irrigation fee received concurrence from many
deputies. According to the draft law, the construction, exploitation
and management of irrigation projects will be conducted in the form of
public-private partnerships. The current irrigation fee – which received huge
State subsidy, will be gradually changed to a service charge model.
Deputy Ngô
Đức Mạnh said the new mechanism would help improve peoples’ awareness on the
value of water and encourage them to use water more efficiently.
However, he suggested the draft law should set forth concrete calculation
methods to define irrigation prices. - VNS
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Thứ Tư, 9 tháng 11, 2016
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