
WTO: now the hard work begins (17/11)
06/08/2010 - 180 Lượt xem
How could they define long-term business strategies if they frequently had to confront puzzling laws? How could they understand their competitors if they had to keep guessing what preferential treatment the government would grant to state-owned enterprises whenever problems arose?
But, WTO membership means
From a wider view, WTO rules will act as a mirror for the country to look at itself and understand its position so as to make rational adjustments and get ready for competition in a brave new world where integration prevails and becomes indispensable.
WTO membership, which Vietnam has laboured hard to attain after almost 12 years, should ultimately benefit Vietnam’s economy and its people by increasing access to foreign markets, raising foreign investment and strengthening the country’s ability to defend its interests in trade disputes.
will have to undertake painful restructuring and adjustments. Service sectors such as telecom, banking, insurance, distribution and retail, where foreign corporations with great expertise and financial strength were previously kept out, will pose the greatest challenges to domestic companies.
But, these painful changes now should help
“This is a very exciting time.
At the heart of this message is that
Being a member of the WTO is an outcome of the nation’s two-decade long reform process, a milestone of this process, not a destination. To what extent WTO adhesion will build up a story of development success for
ADB country director Ayumi Konishi recently called
“Despite having written extensively about
Markets are bursting with goods. Small businesses are springing up everywhere. Bikes are being traded in for BMWs and local consumption thirst, largely due to disposable income increases, is giving rise to luxury villas and shopping complexes.
Notably, over the past two years, the Vietnamese government has made a host of breakthrough laws to bring itself in line with WTO rules. There are new investment and enterprise laws that treat foreign and domestic companies equally, anti-corruption laws that include rules obligating state officials to declare assets as an instrument to crack down on corruption, and intellectual property rights law.
While the potential concern is how these laws will be enforced, as ‘words often speak louder than action’, the government’s willingness to head for changes even in the most sensitive areas, like asset declaration, denotes that there will be no steps backward.
WTO membership can help
But improving social equality in the post-WTO era, like anywhere else, will be a great challenge for Vietnamese leaders and policy makers.
As the former UNDP resident representative Jordan Ryan said, beyond economic gains, the true objective of development is the creation of a society committed to equality and social justice, one that gives every Vietnamese person the space they need to realise their full human potential.
Source: Vietnam Investment Review
