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Change for growth (20/6)
20/06/2016 - 16 Lượt xem
Over the years the most populous city of the country has repeatedly proposed a separate mechanism to unlock its huge potential.
If it continues to be
bound by the same rules applicable to other cities and provinces in the
country, its development path would be obstructed.
In an interview with Sai
Gon Giai Phong in late April, the chairman of the city, Nguyen Thanh Phong,
admitted the city’s economic growth is not proportional to its leading role.
Meanwhile, the quality
of growth and the competitiveness of the city remain poor. Given the nation’s
broader and deeper international integration, the application of the same
development policies and regulations to different cities and provinces
irrespective of their development levels and conditions is impeding the city’s
growth.
According to Phong, the
city wants greater access to ODA capital to fund its major projects and more
help to raise capital for development projects.
In addition, it wants
Government Decree 93/2001/ND-CP on decentralization to be revised in some
respects so that the city could have more authority to issue legal documents to
increase the efficiency of its management.
At a meeting with Deputy
Prime Minister Vuong Dinh Hue last month, the city government put forth a host
of proposals including a special financing mechanism.
In particular, the city
needs to retain 8-12% of export-import tax revenues and retain funds raised
from equitization of State-owned enterprises and divestment of State capital
from non-core business operations.
HCMC Party chief Dinh La
Thang said the city holds great potential to achieve double-digit growth but
there exist certain ceilings which the city have not been able to break
through.
According to him, the
city has been plagued by a lot of problems.
There is no special policy
for the city. Many important projects are in dire need of finances but the
current laws and regulations have tied the city’s hands.
Hanoi City has enjoyed
all sorts of priorities to develop and upgrade its roads and bridges while HCMC
has got no such treatment.
HCMC is responsible for
around 30% of the nation’s budget revenues but can retain only 23% of its
annual budget revenue and the remainder must go to the central State budget.
In 2014, the city’s
budget revenues amounted to VND252 trillion. Meanwhile, Hanoi contributes less
to the central State budget but enjoys a much higher percentage, 43%.
At a meeting with the
National Assembly Financial and Budgetary Committee early this week, the HCMC
government once again asked for a special financing mechanism to stimulate its
growth.
Thang made clear the
city’s viewpoint that its proposed special financing mechanism is for the
benefit of the entire country, not the city alone.
He described the city’s
development as a cake, saying the current cake is too small, so the city needs
a special mechanism to enlarge the cake so as to earn more and contribute more
to the country.
HCMC has long been
regarded as the locomotive of the rest of the country but its current status
does not match that point. Its economic growth could not rise at a double-digit
pace of a breakthrough mechanism is absent, Thang said.
Speaking at the meeting
with Deputy Prime Minister Hue, Thang said the city urges the Government to see
a special mechanism for the city as what the Government needs to do to fuel
growth.
Nguoi Lao Dong quoted
Associate Professor Tran Dinh Thien, director of the Vietnam Institute of
Economics as saying that in the current circumstances it is critical to grant
HCMC a special mechanism since the city as the economic hub needs to address
integration challenges. If things remain unchanged, the city would be unable to
compete.
It is a must to develop
the city into a center for integration of the country.
Vietnam has signed a
series of free trade agreements which are not just about tariff cuts and
exemptions but improvement of competitiveness, Thien added.
A positive sign is that
Deputy Prime Minister Vuong Dinh Hue told the HCMC government last month to
propose a breakthrough mechanism for submission to the Government.
If a new mechanism for governance is adopted to unlock the city’s potential, the city would certainly achieve higher growth in foreseeable future./.
Source: Vietnamnet
