Vietnam has recorded upbeat growth despite disadvantages brought about by the withdrawal of the US from the Trans-Pacific Partnership, according a recent article published on the East Asia Forum.
In his article for the Forum’s special feature series on 2017, Suiwah Leung, Honorary Associate Professor of Economics at the Crawford School of Public Policy, the Australian National University, highlighted that the global economy’s broad recovery throughout 2017 has assisted Vietnam’s development.
In the article named “Vietnam’s economy stays its course despite external headwinds”, Leung noted that Vietnam’s GDP growth recovered to nearly 6.8% last year, driven mainly by growth in domestic demand, manufacturing and exports.
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He mentioned moderate inflation at 3%, hence the State Bank of Vietnam cutting its benchmark interest rate by 25 basis points to 4.25%. The bank also raised its annual credit growth target to 20–21%, and actual credit growth remained high at 18.5%.
The article said continued strong growth in goods and service exports resulted in a small current account surplus and international reserves rising to just below 3% of imports. The nominal exchange rate has remained relatively stable with a small devaluation of about 1.4%. This helped stem the continued appreciation of the real exchange rate and improve competitiveness for the domestic sector.
The article also pointed to challenges facing Vietnam, with budget deficits exceeding 6% of GDP in the past five years. Public sector debt has resultantly come close to the 65% of GDP limit set by the National Assembly.
The author suggested that the government continue to pursue structural reforms in order to raise productivity growth.
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He stressed that domestic firms must proactively improve corporate governance, technological capabilities and workforce quality in order to participate more deeply in global supply chains. “Vietnamese enterprises cannot enter the supply chains of multinational corporations unless they meet required standards,” Cuong said.
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The article described Vietnam as strategically positioned along major regional maritime routes, including the East – West corridor linking the Americas, the Middle East, India and Europe, and the North – South corridor connecting China and Southeast Asia, helping make the country a gateway for international trade.
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