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Update: 16:32 GMT - thứ tư, 6 tháng 7, 2011

Foreign firms to keep lead in exports

12:00 | 11/10/2017

The foreign-invested sector, with electronics taking the lead, is expected to continue occupying the lion’s share of Vietnam’s exports over the next few years.


Do Thang Hai, Deputy Minister of Industry and Trade, told VIR that Vietnam may reach a record export turnover of $202-205 billion this year, up from last year’s $176 billion.

“Electronics items, especially those made by Samsung, will continue taking the lead in the country’s export structure,” Hai said.

It is likely that Samsung will hit an export turnover of over $50 billion this year, accounting for more than 20 per cent of Vietnam’s total export turnover. In this year’s first nine months, Samsung’s export turnover grew 45 per cent year-on-year, according to Mai Tien Dung, Minister and Chairman of the Government Office.

Also in this year’s first nine months, Vietnam’s total export turnover hit $154 billion, up 19.8 per cent year-on-year, with the local economic sector fetching $43.2 billion – up 16.8 per cent year-on-year – and the foreign-invested sector raking in $110.8 billion (including crude oil exports) – up 21 per cent year-on-year, according to the General Statistics Office.

Vietnam earned $49.5 billion from exporting electronics items, accounting for 32.14 per cent of the country’s total export turnover.

“I think the foreign-invested sector, especially foreign electronics makers, will continue dominating Vietnam’s exports over the next few years,” Hai said. “It is because even though local firms’ exports are improving, they remain less competitive than foreign firms’ exports. Vietnam is now becoming a big electronics production base for foreign firms like Samsung and LG.”

Two weeks ago, economists from Spain-based FocusEconomics, which provides in-depth economic analysis around the world, forecast in a report on Vietnam’s nine-month economic situation that the country’s export turnover would rise to $202 billion this year, $230 billion next year, $257 billion in 2019, $288 billion in 2020, and $322 billion in 2021. The majority of these figures will continue to come from foreign firms, especially electronics ones.

HSBC has also forecast that the export picture of Vietnam will continue to shine, relying heavily on electronics exports.

“Vietnam has fared better than most of its peers, partly due to the strength of its electronics export industry,” said an HSBC update on Vietnam’s economic situation released in mid-August. “Electronics shipments continue to be the key driver of Vietnam’s exports.”

According to Canada-based world-class market research firm Electronics.ca Publications, Vietnam is becoming a global exporter of electronics, and it is on the radar of many foreign electronics firms with plans to implement big projects in the time to come.

“Production of Vietnam’s electronics industry was estimated at $40.4 billion in 2016, significantly higher than the $2.6 billion reported nine years earlier,” Electronics.ca Publications said in a document released last month. “This has been achieved on the back of explosive growth in the production of mobile phones, computing, LCD TVs, and semiconductors, as foreign companies invest in the country to take advantage of lower costs.”

BMI Research last week wrote in an optimistic report on Vietnam’s economy: “Vietnam has gradually been transforming itself into a more open, more market-oriented economy and is beginning to enjoy the dividends of its steady integration into the global economy.

“According to official figures, the overall manufacturing sector grew by 12.8 per cent year-on-year for the first nine months of 2017, while exports surged by 19.8 per cent year-on-year, underpinned by the production of electronics products and components, smartphones, and computers which surged by 25.1 per cent year-on-year, and metal production which increased by 21.4 per cent,” the report said.

According to the Asian Development Bank, Vietnam’s export performance is expected to remain strong with continued support from new foreign-invested factories and an upturn in commodity prices. The free trade agreement with the European Union that is expected to come into effect in January 2018 should boost export prospects.


Nguyen Thanh


VIR

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