Viện Nghiên cứu Chính sách và Chiến lược

CỔNG THÔNG TIN KINH TẾ VIỆT NAM

Tin mới

Vietnam Prepares for a Year of Transformation (18/01)

18/01/2012 - 11 Lượt xem

Spiritually, Vietnamese people believe that the dragon is a symbol of the country's revival, rise, resilience, impetus and growth. This belief has strengthened throughout the history of the nation.
Here in Vietnam, the dragon is considered as a sacred animal. Vietnamese people worship, respect and do whatever they can to protect it.
On the threshold of the Year of the Dragon, the Vietnamese people are highly optimistic about their capability to overcome any challenges and achieve further successes. They strongly believe in a brighter future.
Good-bye to the Year of the Cat!
In 2011, the Year of the Cat, galloping inflation created macroeconomic instability in the first half of the year. Tens of thousands of small and medium-sized businesses came to a standstill or went bankrupt. The securities market was desolate and the real estate market gloomy.
The year also saw many natural disasters including storms, tsunamis and floods in many places around the world. It marked the outbreak of the European public debt crisis which also adversely affected Vietnam.
For Vietnam, however, the year 2011 was not so bad despite numerous risks which occurred in the early months of the year. In 2011, Vietnam obtained an economic growth rate of about six percent, the highest in the Southeast Asian region. Notably, the country saw a record increase in its export revenue which was almost triple the National Assembly-set target while the trade deficit accounted for only 9.89 percent of the total export value, much lower than the National Assembly target of 18 percent. An important reason for this spectacular result was the 30 percent increase in the export value of agricultural, forest and aquatic products, with Vietnam exporting a record volume of 7.2 million tonnes of rice worth US$3.7 billion in 2011, up 17 percent compared to 2010.
In 2011, Vietnam welcomed more than six million foreign tourists, exceeding the annual target and up nearly 16 percent compared with 2010.
Of the recently announced top 500 businesses throughout the country, private companies accounted for 37.4 percent of the total, compared with 24 percent in 2008 and 30 percent in 2009. In 2011, an additional 12 Vietnamese businesses joined the World Economic Forum's community of Global Growth Companies (GGCs). Those selected included the Vietnam National Oil and Gas Group, Vietnam Airlines Corporation, Joint Stock Commercial Bank for Foreign Trade of Vietnam (Vietcombank), Vietnam Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development (Agribank), the Tan Tao Group and the Vincom Corporation.
In circumstances when the global economy slowed in growth and was faced by the risks of a new crisis, foreign investors kept on investing in Vietnam. The disbursement of Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) of over US$11 billion was up on 2010. Notably, of the nearly US$13 billion of FDI registered in 2011, more than US$3 billion were increases in the capital of 320 ongoing projects which wanted to expand production and business activities, up nearly 50 percent compared with 2010. This reflects the attractiveness of the investment and business environment in Vietnam to foreign investors. The disbursement of Official Development Assistance (ODA) throughout the country reached an estimated US$3.5 billion, a good result compared with the previous years. This marked a historic achievement for Vietnam, as thanks to its effective use of ODA capital the Thu Thiem Tunnel in Ho Chi Minh City was put into use. This engineering feat made the tunnel the longest underground cross-river tunnel in Southeast Asia.
State revenue losses have been an everyday concern for the governments of many countries in the current period of galloping inflation. In 2011, although the Vietnamese Government applied policies which offered producers and businesspeople a tax exemption or reduction, State budget revenues exceeded the plan set for the year and were higher than 2010; foreign currency reserves also increased considerably. But perhaps one of the most impressive results of 2011, a year that marked a series of major political events, including the 11th National Congress of the Communist Party of Vietnam and the election of the National Assembly (13th legislature), was that State budget was curtailed below 4.9 percent of the country's Gross Domestic Product (GDP) for the first time.
In 2011, Vietnam achieved good initial results in implementing the most important tasks of the year: curbing inflation, stabilizing the macro-economy and ensuring social security. The Year of the Cat, opened a new decade in the development process of Vietnam, marking the emphasis placed on economic restructuring and the renovation of the nation's growth model.
Economic vision for 2012
The practical lessons drawn in 2011 serve as the basis for Vietnam to be optimistic and confident about its prospects for a bright socioeconomic future in 2012, despite pessimistic predictions for the world economy this year due to ongoing complications related to the European public debt crisis and the current stagnation in the world's two leading economies of the US and Japan.
The National Assembly and the Government expect that in 2012, the Vietnamese economy will grow by 6-6.5 percent; export revenue will increase by 13 percent and trade deficit will remain or be lower than that of 2011; State budget revenues will be higher and State overspending should be curbed further.
"In 2012, Vietnam will continue to tighten fiscal policies in an effort to reduce overspending from the State budget to below 4.8 percent, with an emphasis of lowering it further in the following years; public debts will be kept within safe limits and inflation in single-digits in order to reduce interest rates," Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung said at a recent meeting of the National Assembly.
The Prime Minister added, "The Government will take prompt action to make institutional improvements and create favorable conditions for all economic sectors to invest in infrastructure development in the form of BT (Build-Transfer), BOT (Build-Operate-Transfer), BTO (Build-Transfer-Operate), and the PPP (Public-Private Partnership) in order to create a breakthrough in the development of some large-scale infrastructure projects. The Government will not encourage labor or energy-intensive investment projects and those that do not ensure an efficient and renewable use of the nation's natural resources." Special attention will be paid to promoting investment in hi-tech agriculture because "Agriculture and rural areas always have an important strategic position in the country's development cause," affirmed the Prime Minister.
In 2012, Vietnam must achieve good results to pave the way for its stronger, higher quality growth in the following years so that it can realize the objective of becoming a modernized, industrialized country by 2020.
To realize the above objective, Vietnam must simultaneously implement three strategic tasks: making institutional improvements, developing infrastructure and developing highly-qualified human resources, throughout the 2011-2020 period. In 2012, Vietnam must boost the restructuring of investment with attention focused on public investment, the restructuring of State-owned enterprises, focusing on groups and corporations, and the banking system, focusing on commercial banks. Vietnam must consider 2012 as the opening year of its growth model renovation cause if it doesn't want the national economy to fall into the middle-income trap and face the risks of a public debt crisis like the one currently facing Egypt.
Turning potential into real strength
With its natural as well as human resources and cultural richness, Vietnam has great potential for development. However, its potential cannot be awakened if Vietnamese people do not bring into full play their intellectual strength to contribute to the country's development.
In order to eradicate hunger and alleviate poverty to build a prosperous, civilized society and reduce the gap between it and neighboring economies such as Thailand, Malaysia and Singapore, Vietnam must make the most of its potential, especially the intellectual strength of Vietnamese people.
There is no reason to doubt Vietnam's regulations and policies because these are the products of long-standing consultation with leading Vietnamese and foreign experts. Will those regulations and policies come into life and bring happiness to people? - This very much depends on the enforcement capability of the Government. It will be no paradox to say that improving the quality of human resources is synonymous with improving the Government's performance.
An institution with perfect policies can be considered to offer invaluable potential. But it will remain 'idle potential' if its policies are not enforced perfectly. With such thinking, one can emphasize the affect the resolutions of the 11th National Congress of the Communist Party of Vietnam and the second session of the National Assembly, 13th legislature, will have on the country's socioeconomic life if they are thoroughly grasped and effectively enforced.
The Year of the Dragon, 2012, will see how the Vietnamese people, from every individual to each organization and business, will overcome the challenges we face and strive to transform the country's potential into its real strength and create a new impulse for its development.
A new spring has come, offering Vietnam the opportunity to grasp the new achievements it desires./.

Source: VEN.