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Trade deal technical barriers could prove insuperable for Vietnam (21/10)
21/10/2013 - 15 Lượt xem
Many are anxious since foreign investors
with deep pockets are planning to set up operations in the country to take
advantage of the lowering of import taxes by many large economies that will
sign up for the trade deal.
For instance, import tariffs in the US,
the biggest customer for Vietnam’s leading export, textiles, will be cut from
17-32 percent now to zero.
Many textile and garment companies in the
region have already begun to move to Vietnam.
Texhong Corporation of Hong Kong, which
set up a dyeing factory in the southern province of Dong Nai in 2006, recently
opened another one in the northern province of Quang Ninh with an investment of
US$300 million.
One of Hong Kong’s leading textile
companies, TAL Apparel, has plans to set up a second textile-dyeing -apparel
factory worth hundreds of millions of dollars. It has eight factories
worldwide, including one in Vietnam’s northern province of Thai Binh since
2004.
Unisoll Vina, owned by South Korean
Hansoll Textile Ltd, has also got a license to build a $50-million factory to make
fur and leather clothing and accessories.
According to the Ho Chi Minh City
Association of Garment, Textile, Embroidery and Knitting, Japanese companies
Toray International and Mitsui, Austria’s Lenzing, and China’s Sunrise are also
exploring investment opportunities in the country.
Vietnamese companies are meanwhile trying
to enlarge their limited feedstock production capacity to comply with TPP’s
regulations on origins – for instance apparel has to be made using yarn and
other materials produced in member countries.
The Vietnam National Textile and Garment
Group (Vinatex) has opened three yarn factories this year in Hanoi and the
central provinces of Ha Tinh and Thua Thien-Hue with an annual capacity of
1,270 tons.
It started work on 11 others in the first
half of the year.
Figures from the Vietnam Textile and
Apparel Association (Vitas) showed that 70 percent of more than 3,700 textile
factories in the country make apparel; only 6 percent produce yarn and 17
percent make cloth while 4 percent dye.
Local producers depend largely on fabric
imported from China.
Insiders said a yarn factory costs tens
of millions of dollars, a sum most Vietnamese businesses cannot afford.
Pham Xuan Hong, deputy chairman of Vitas,
said unless the government helps by making cheap loans available for yarn
projects, the industry would not benefit from the TPP at all.
The government also needs to zone certain
areas for dyeing plants since they are shunned everywhere due to pollution
concerns, Hong said.
Foreign competition
The trade deal will cut import tariffs on
beer and nonalcoholic beverages from 45 percent and 30 percent to zero, but the
benefits will have to be shared around with foreign investors who are major
shareholders in local companies.
Hanoi-based Southeast Asia Brewery Ltd.
exports its Halida beer to the US, UK, Australia, France, Germany, Russia,
Japan, Taiwan, Singapore, Angola, and other countries.
Saigon Beer Company (Sabeco) exports its
Saigon beers to Europe, Japan, Taiwan, Australia, and Cambodia.
Hanoi-based Dai Viet Beer also exported
its first consignment to the US earlier this year.
Denmark’s Carlsberg owns 55 percent of a
brewery set up along with Hanoi Beer Company (Habeco) in Ba Ria-Vung Tau
Province as well as 60 percent of Southeast Asia Brewery.
Besides, it owns 17.23 percent in Habeco
itself and has announced plans to raise its stake to 30 percent.
Some long-established beverage companies
in Vietnam have also been taken over by foreigners.
Tribeco, which exports tea and soft
drinks to China, the US, India, Cambodia, and Singapore, was acquired by
Taiwan’s Uni President Enterprises.
Interfood, which exports soymilk and tea
to the US and Asian markets, has been taken over by Japan’s Kirin Holdings.
Vietnamese entrepreneurs said while there
is already competition with foreigners, it would become “intense” when the TPP
kicks in.
Nguyen Dang Hien, director of Ho Chi Minh
City-based beverage company Bidrico which exports to 15 countries and
territories, said: “If Vietnamese companies are not prepared with strategies,
they can easily lose right on their home turf.”
Experts warned that the TPP is even worse
news for agricultural products since many technical barriers related to labels,
packaging, and chemical traces need to be surmounted to enjoy the tax breaks.
Van Duc Muoi, chairman of the Ho Chi Minh
City Food Association, said the barriers could leave a lot of Vietnamese
agricultural produce with no actual benefit.
“We will face difficulties in exporting animal products to the US, Australia, and New Zealand… We are not competitive in this area due to limited technologies and frequent disease outbreaks,” he said.
Source: ThanhnienNews
