Despite concerns from economic experts about the undetermined scale
and scope of
Despite concerns from economic experts about the undetermined scale
and scope of
In
its latest move, the Ministry of Planning and Investment (MPI) is expected to
finalise and submit to the Prime Minister’s Office a scheme on underground
economic sectors today. Under the direction of Deputy Prime Minister Vuong
Dinh Hue, the report details the sectors’ structure and statistics, based on
the General Statistics Office’s (GSO) findings.
Vo
Tri Thanh, former deputy director of the Central Institute for Economic
Management (CIEM), said that since 1990, the GSO estimated the size of the
underground economy to be more than 10 per cent of GDP.
About
10 years ago, reports of evaluations conducted by other agencies and
organisations measured the amount of cash outside official circulation. The
results showed that the value of this area was about 30 to 35 per cent of
GDP.
However,
economic experts raise questions on the authenticity of the data.
Nguyen
Duc Thanh, director of the Institute for Economic and Policy Research (VEPR),
said that a re-calculation of the informal economy was necessary for the
Government to grasp specific data and set out a suitable development
strategy.
However,
he argued that the underground economy should not be included in GDP to
increase the size of the economy. If the informal economy was calculated, the
total GDP of Viet Nam would increase. When GDP increases, it changes many
numbers, such as budget overspending, while the ratio of public debt to GDP
naturally decreases.
Luu
Bich Ho, former Director of the Development Strategy Institute under the MPI,
said that statistics of the unregulated sector or underground economy had
been around for a long time. The problem was their accuracy and purpose.
Ho
said that if fully observed, there were reliable data that could sum up
underground economic activities into the overall GDP, increasing the latter’s
scale. Therefore, the public-debt ratio could fall from 64 per cent to 61 or
62 per cent.
The
economic expert added that additional statistics, as required by Deputy PM
Hue, were needed. But policymakers needed long-term restructured measures for
a more accurate national growth model.
‘Indeed,
we can gain about five to 30 per cent more of the State budget’s tax from
these economic transactions. The most important thing now is how the
Government can statistically manage such underlying profit,” Ho said at a GSO
meeting.
Nguyen
Bich Lam, GSO director deneral, said it was highly unlikely that the non-observed
economy could be as large as 30 per cent of
Lam
said that the underground economy, or black economy, were economic activities
not measured by conventional methods and reflected in official data. This
whole could be divided into several main sectors of illegal economy -
unreported, unrecorded and informal.
According
to the GSO, these were purposely hidden activities to avoid tax or evade
State management regulation - drug production and trading, prostitution,
casinos and unreported data and statistical errors or inaccurate information
provided by businesses and agencies.
‘There
are difficult elements for the GSO in collecting information for
calculations. Particularly underground and illicit economic activities cannot
be gleaned in a formal way, and thus cannot be taken into the same categories
as formal ones,’ he added.
This
meant they were difficult to quantify, and Lam demanded that calculation
methodologies be reviewed.
When
data from the informal economy was officially accounted for in the country’s
economic performance, the GDP scale would be adjusted, which would be
followed by the tax rate, public-debt ceiling and government-spending
adjustments, Lam said, adding that these changes would not affect the growth
rate.
According
to the Government Office’s statistics, should the unofficial economy be
incorporated, the country’s GDP would instead have so large a multiplier that
public sector debt would be significantly greater to finance development
needs.
Ho
named several factors that could influence
For
example, regulations stipulate that when the number of staff exceeds 10,
business establishments and organizations must register as enterprises and
pay the corresponding (i.e. higher) taxes. However, many businesses, though
exceeding this number, have been hesitant to become anything larger than
extra-small enterprises, thus keeping overall business growth rate stagnant.
Another
reason, according to Ho, is that businesses in local, remote wards and
communes are protected by local governments, leading totax evasion by these
households - and eventually state budget revenue loss.
Dau
Anh Tuan, head of the legal department of the Vietnam Chamber of Commerce and
Industry (VCCI), said that according to a study by the International Finance
Corporation (IFC) in 2003,
Tuan
said the underground economy would greatly restrict the opportunities and
scale of other businesses, making them less competitive at the national level
and less able to integrate into international trade.
Economic
expert Le Dang Doanh said that all countries had an informal economy, but the
rates were different. The best way to manage underground business was to use
public e-government.
“The
best solution is to create favorable conditions for the Government, but also
to be transparent for businesses with good brand names,” Doanh said.
VNS
|
Thứ Ba, 30 tháng 1, 2018
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