US, EU investors still hesitant: experts
Unresolved issues in Vietnam’s
regulations and the business environment have resulted in relatively low FDI
inflows from US and European multinational companies, experts say.
According to the Foreign Investment Agency (FIA) under
the Ministry of Planning and Investment (MPI), as of July 2017, US companies
had invested US$9.3 billion in Vietnam and the major EU nations of France and
Germany registering US$2.8 billion and US$1.6 billion, respectively.
The US stands at number nine on the list of countries
and territories investing in Vietnam, way behind the number 1 investor, the
Republic of Korea, at US$55.3 billion, or Japan at number 2 with US$46.5
billion and Singapore at number 3 with US$41.6 billion.
The FIA said that regardless of projects, be it direct
investments or mergers and acquisitions, the level of capital flow coming
from Asian companies into Vietnam was much higher than the US or the European
Union.
Nguyen Van Toan, Vice Chairman of the Vietnam’s
Association of Foreign Invested Enterprises (VAFIE), said he believed there
was potential for higher FDI from these two regions, but this was yet to be
tapped despite numerous bilateral and multilateral free trade agreements.
Toan felt a lack of transparency in trade relations and
administrative regulations, and Vietnam’s limited capacity to accommodate
investment flows, arising from limited technological advances and a workforce
that is still developing.
He also said Vietnamese authorities were yet to pay due
attention to protecting intellectual property rights, a factor that makes US
and EU investors hesitant.
Agreeing with Toan, Jonathan Moreno, Chairman of the
Manufacturing Committee under the American Chamber of Commerce in Vietnam,
said that until Vietnam clears up its business environment, especially in
newer sectors like clean energy, there would be little change to capital
inflows from the US into Vietnam.
According to the European Chamber of Commerce in
Vietnam, in the first quarter of 2017, the country’s Business Confidence
Index dropped seven points from the fourth quarter of 2016 to 78 points.
Speaking at the 2017 Vietnam M&A Forum earlier this
month, Tran Thanh Tam, Director of KPMG’s Markets Group, said Asian investors
were more interested in smaller Vietnamese projects as a direct effect of
signed trade agreements and higher degree of familiarity with Vietnamese
regulations than US and EU investors.
VAFIE Chairman Nguyen Mai said that the government must
act soon and issue more open and facilitating policies to attract investors
from the US and the European Union, failing which significant change in the
current situation was unlikely.
VNS
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Thứ Tư, 23 tháng 8, 2017
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