China has no waters at the Vanguard Bank

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It is obvious that China has no legal waters which could be the overlapping area, or in dispute w with Vietnam’s exclusive economic zone and the southern continental shelf, including the Vanguard Bank.

According to the East Sea (internationally known as the South China Sea) Chronicle Initiative, since July 3, 2019, Haiyang Dizhi 8, a Chinese geological exploration ship has been operating in the territorial waters belonging to the Vietnam’s special economic zone, near the Tu Chinh – Vung May (Vanguard Bank – Rifleman Bank).

The ship is escorted by at least three Chinese maritime surveillance vessels as discovered by satellites, including a 12,000 ton maritime surveillance ship, 3901 and a marine militia ship, Qiong Sansah Yu0014.

Satellite signals also dicovered the presence of three Chinese maritime surveillance vessels, Haijing 37111, Haijing and Zhongjing Zhongjing 46303.

Meanwhile, since June 18, 2019, a Chinese ship equipped with heavy weapons, 35111, has appeared 40 miles to the west of Vanguard Bank.

On July 12, the ship arrived at Fiery Cross Reef, then returned to its original location in the Vanguard Bank on July 14. This ship hasn’t directly joinef the escorting of Haiyang Dizhi 8, but has been present for the past month in Vietnam’s exclusive economic zone.

While Haiyang Dizhi 8 and escorted ships have been evading and operating for the last two weeks long in the Vietnamese special economic zone and the southern continental shelf in the Vanguard Bank area, on July 17, 2019, the Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Geng Shuang said the Vietnamese government should respect China’s sovereignty over some areas in the East Sea, and the Vietnamese side should also refrain from actions that will exacerbate the situation in the region.

However, there is a question for him: What territorial waters does China have in the Vanguard Bank area?

We can affirm that China has no legal waters which could be the overlapping area, or in dispute with dispute with Vietnam’s exclusive economic zone and the southern continental shelf in the Vanguard Bank.

The DK1 rig area, including the Vanguard Bank, is located within the 200 nautical mile exclusive economic zone from Vietnam’s baseline, and it is the southern continental shelf of Vietnam.

This is a marine area defined under the 1982 UN Convention on the Law of the Sea.

This is the Vietnamese territorial waters which are in no dispute with any other countries, including China.

China shows two factors for claiming its sovereignty over this area.

The first one is the Chinese drawn the nine dash line.

The fact that China draws a cow tongue line lapping over 60 percent of Vietnam’s territorial waters, turning the Vietnamese undisputed into disputed area, is completely illegal, not recognized by the international laws.

The ruling of the international arbitral tribunal in the Philippines case against China, an international legal document guiding, explaining the 1982 Convention, flatly rejected China’s cow-tongue claim.

Although China does not participate in the lawsuit and claims not to accept the Judgment, this legal document remains its value.

The judgment of the international arbitral tribunal in the case of the Philippines suing China, an international legal document guiding, explaining the 1982 Convention, flatly rejected China’s cow-tongue claim.

Although China did not participate in the lawsuit and stated it won’t accept the judgment, the legal document’s value still exists.

Once the cow tongue line has no legal basis, this means that it has no value for China to claim the right to exploit resources in the area.

In other words, China doesn’t have any waters in dispute with Vietnam in the DK1 area, including the Vanguard Bank.

The second factor reasoned by China is that it considers the sea as the adjacent area of Chinese islands illegally occupied by China in Truong Sa (Spratly Islands).

However, even if the islands that China is illegally occupying ‘belong to Chinese long-standing sovereignty’ as it says, it won’t be able to claim sovereignty over the surrounding waters, including waters in the Vanguard Bank.

- VNN
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Tracking apps gain traction among Vietnam parents after school bus death, despite concerns

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Mobile applications that allow parents to track their children’s location have become more popular in Vietnam after a six-year-old boy was found dead on a school bus in Hanoi last week, but experts warn picking the wrong app might only invite trouble.

A Hanoi first grader died on Tuesday last week after he had apparently failed to get off a van contracted by his school to transport students, and had purportedly been left inside the parked vehicle for hours.

Although his teachers had been aware of the boy’s absence from class for the whole day, his parents were not alerted to his disappearance until he was found lying motionless inside the school bus that same afternoon.

While investigators are still hard at work to determine the cause and circumstance of the six-year-old’s death, some Vietnamese believe the tragic incident would not have happened had the boy’s parents been able to monitor his exact location at all times.

Parents interviewed by Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper after the incident said they have started installing mobile applications advertised to be able to collect GPS information from their children’s wearable devices and send it to their smartphones for monitoring.

However, some of these apps and devices have turned out to cause more trouble than what they are worth.

Phuong, a mother in Ho Chi Minh City, said an app she had on her smartphone once showed her child’s location to be on a bridge, 500 meters from their apartment in Binh Thanh District, although the kid was actually playing in a neighbor’s apartment in the same building.

Easy-to-meet requirements for publishing apps on online app stores as well as a lack of government monitoring have rendered the technologically challenged in Vietnam especially vulnerable to installing low-quality or even scam apps on their smartphones.

“The approval process for the Google Play Store is very lenient,” said Ha Duc Trung, a programming expert.

An app could get approved for publishing on the Google-run app store after two rounds of review – one performed using automated tools and the other by a human team, a process that takes only a few hours.

“Google continues to look for and ban apps that violate company policies after they are published,” Trung said.

For Apple, he said, the process is more tedious as a team of reviewers must go through every aspect of the app to ensure that there are no errors, which could take days.

The number of downloads as well as an app’s star rating are good indicators that could give a general idea of whether the app is useful and reliable, said Ngo Tran Vu, director of Vietnam-based cyber security firm NTS.

It is also advisable to choose apps from trusted and well-known developers, he added.

Many applications require control of the device and access to users’ information, contacts, photos and cameras, which could be abused for ill intentions, Vu said.

“Such access could be used to steal personal information or bank details,” he warned.

Source: Tuoitrenews

Vietnam jumps 51 places in global cybersecurity rankings

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Vietnam ranked 50th out of 175 countries in cybersecurity in the International Telecommunication Union (ITU)’s 2018 survey, a big jump from 2017.
The 50th rank means it is classified as a country demonstrating deep commitment in all five pillars of the Global Cybersecurity Index (GCI), according to a report by the ITU.

The index reflects member countries’ commitment to legal measures, organizational measures, technology, capacity building, and cooperation.

Vietnam, a member of the ITU since 1951, saw its 2018 index rise to 0.693 from 0.245 in 2017, when it ranked 101st out of 195 countries.

Singapore was first in the 2018 list, followed by the U.S. and Malaysia.

Vietnam ranked 11th out of 38 countries in the Asia Pacific.

The Ministry of Information and Communications said last week on its portal that it is working on “synchronous solutions” to enhance Vietnam’s GCI so that it jumps 20 places this year.

It also said it would urge Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc to instruct government agencies to ensure information security at organizations as part of the efforts to improve the country’s ranking.

It said Vietnam suffered 3,159 cyberattacks in the first six months of this year, a 45.9 percent decrease year-on-year.

But government entities have not been doing well in cybersafety. A recent report by the ministry showed government agencies suffered twice as many number of attacks with malicious codes in the first six months compared to the same period last year.

Minister of Information and Communications Nguyen Manh Hung said at the 2019 Vietnam Security Summit in April that last year none of the country’s 90 ministries and departments had the highest cybersafety rating of grade A, only 17 percent had a grade B rating, while 70 percent were in grade C, and 13 percent in grade D.

None had grade E, the lowest, either.

Half of these organizations do not have a unit in charge of cybersecurity or engage a cybersecurity firm for the purpose.

Thus, when there is an attack, they do not know how to respond, he told the conference.

Source: Vnexpress

Vietnam & Denmark sign action plan for 2019-2020

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Latest plan follows on from earlier incarnations, starting in 2014.

The Embassy of Denmark in Vietnam and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA) signed a Joint Action Plan for 2019-2020 to implement the Comprehensive Partnership Agreement between the two countries established in 2013. Ambassador H.E. Kim Højlund Christensen and Director General of the Europe Department at MoFA, Mr. Dinh Toan Thang, signed the action plan on August 8.

The ambitious plan features 63 lines of action and continues the focus on five priority areas of cooperation: Politics and Diplomacy; Investment and Commerce; Climate Change, Energy, Environment, and Green Growth; Education and Research; and Culture and People Exchange.

The signing follows on from the Vietnam – Denmark Action Plan for 2014-2015, the Vietnam – Denmark Action Plan 2016, and the Vietnam – Denmark Action Plan for 2017-2018.

The first Vietnam – Denmark Action Plan, signed in 2014, aimed at implementing the “Joint Statement on Comprehensive Partnership” and was decided upon during the State visit to Denmark by then-State President Truong Tan Sang in September 2013.

The European Department at MoFA previously coordinated with relevant ministries and agencies to work with the Danish side to review the Vietnam – Denmark Action Plan for 2017-2018 and to formulate the Vietnam – Denmark Action Plan for 2019-2020. It also chaired these reviews.

Vietnam and Denmark established a “Partnership for Development” relationship in 2009 and became “Strategic Partners in the Field of Climate Change, Energy, Environment, and Green Growth” in 2011. Since the “Comprehensive Partnership Agreement” between the two countries was established in 2013, bilateral cooperation has been developing more effectively in many different fields.

Source: Vneconomictimes

In Vietnam, misconception drives parents to believe their children are all geniuses

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Misconception about raising children have caused consequences for the kids in Vietnam, as many local parents tend to consider their sons and daughters ‘prodigies’ of multiple talents and make them learn things they do not desire to at a very young age.

Le Thi Hoa, a resident in Ho Chi Minh City, forced her three-year-old son to learn to play the piano only because she realized that he is fond of watching music videos on YouTube.

The mother believes that her son is a “gifted musical talent,” for he knows and recognizes several music hits on YouTube.

But the boy only expresses strong opposition every time he attends the piano lesson as he is not really into the musical instrument.

Hoa also made him join art and English classes just because he could identify colors and name them in English, causing her to have the same misbelief that he would excel in these subjects.

The mother would even react negatively to others’ constructive advice on the path she prepared for her child, which many believe to be inappropriate for a kid that has just entered nursery school.

“I was only ‘awakened’ when he showed clear signs of emotional stress, having had to learn things he did not like,” Hoa recalled the biggest mistake of her life.

Another Ho Chi Minh City citizen named Hai set a strict weekly timetable for his daughter to study computing, chess, different forms of art and English out of his own belief that children best develop their ability between ages three and six.

As a result, the poor girl suffered from physical symptoms of stress and slight autism, prompting his family to consult a psychiatrist for her special treatment.

According to scientific proof, children develop their abilities of language or art from three to six years old.

But this period is also when children are mentally vulnerable, and any psychological trauma that happens to them during this time could lead to negative consequences in the future.

Children at this stage of life grow up better in mentally friendly environments where they get to enjoy social activities and experience self-exploration compared to those who are under parents’ auspices, according to experts.

Parents are advised to consult experts on child orientation when they discover a sign of special talent in their children to prevent them from getting into mental disorder, since compulsion is never the key to a child’s complete development.

Source: Tuoitrenews

Huawei unveils Harmony operating system

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(REUTERS) – Huawei Technologies unveiled last week its proprietary operating system for smartphones and other devices, as U.S. trade restrictions imposed in May threaten to cut the Chinese firm’s access to U.S. technologies such as Android.

Huawei said that for now it would stick to using Google’s Android for smartphones, and the new software will be gradually rolled out to support devices such as smartwatches, speakers and virtual reality gadgets.

The new OS is part of Huawei’s attempt to develop its own technologies from chips to software to reduce its reliance on U.S. firms amid an intensifying U.S.-China trade war.

President Donald Trump said on Friday that the United States was not going to do business with Huawei but that could change if there was a trade deal.

Huawei had previously given little information about the software, fuelling speculation about how quickly or effectively it could find an alternative to the Android system.

“Harmony OS is completely different from Android and iOS,” said Richard Yu, head of Huawei’s consumer business group referring to operating systems developed by Alphabet Inc’s Google and Apple Inc.

“You can develop your apps once, then flexibly deploy them across a range of different devices,” he told a developers’ conference held in Dongguan in southern China, where Huawei has built a lavish new campus modelled on European towns.

President Trump’s administration has warned that Huawei could be a vehicle for Chinese espionage and put the company on a so-called “entity list”, meaning that U.S. corporations that conduct business with the telecoms giant now require special licenses to do so.

Huawei’s Yu said the company has no updated knowledge on whether it can continue to use Android.

Attracting developers

Huawei is not the first major tech company seeking to develop a robust ecosystem around its own software. Its bigger rival Samsung Electronics has been using its own operating system called Tizen in smartwatches and televisions.

But attempts by the South Korean firm to grow Tizen to challenge Android in smartphones have been thwarted by lack of support from developers.

Marko Yang, an investor in developer studios who attended the conference, however, said he believed the size of the Chinese market would help Huawei overcome such a problem. Huawei says there are more than 800,000 developers in its product ecosystem.

“The Chinese market is huge, there are many users and they have many demands, and solving their demands will result in many apps, products, and when this happens it will, from the periphery, create a core ecosystem, and the Chinese market will go on to spur the overseas market,” Yang said.

Yu also said in order to attract developers, it was willing to cut its fee intake from app developers working for Harmony to as low as 10%-15%. Apple and Google take a 30% cut for revenue generated through their app stores.

Zhang Ping’an, president of Huawei consumer cloud service, told a briefing with Chinese media that Huawei plans to invest US$1 billion to support developers, and 80% of that would be spent overseas. Huawei confirmed his comment to Reuters and said the timeframe is within five years.

A new “smart screen”, or connected television product, to be unveiled on Saturday will be the first product using Harmony, called Hongmeng in Chinese, Huawei said. It also has roll-out plans for the OS in other devices till 2022.

Yu said Harmony will be open source and aims to be safer and more efficient than existing ones in the market.

Not an android rival

More than 4,000 Huawei developers have been working on Harmony, according to Yu. People familiar with its development at Huawei said Harmony was not being developed to rival Android, but was more like Google’s Fuchsia – an open source OS being developed at the American firm for gadgets that could include everything from smartphones to Internet-of-Things devices.

Yu mentioned Google’s Fuchsia multiple times during his speech, which was made to thousands of attendees in a basketball stadium in the city. VIP tickets for the conference were priced upwards of 4,298 yuan (US$608.90).

He also said it would be difficult for Huawei to meet its previous goal of becoming the world’s biggest smartphone maker by shipments this year due to the U.S. curbs imposed in May, but expects to be able to keep the No.2 spot.

The company would have been able to ship 300 million smartphones this year without such restrictions. It shipped 118 million units in the first-half.

Three people in Vietnam were struck to death by lightning

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Three members of a family in Vietnam’s northern Yen Bai province were struck to death by lightning,

The victims included a 57-year-old woman, her 25-year-old daughter-in-law and her four-month-old grandson. The two women were working on an upland field in Tram Tau district and using an umbrella to avoid rain for the trio when the lightning struck. Vietnam News Agency reported on Monday.

In the first seven months of this year, natural disasters in Vietnam left 34 people dead or missing, destroyed 156 houses, damaged over 3,000 other houses and 3,700 hectares of rice and other crops, causing economic losses of 239 billion Vietnamese dong (10.4 million U.S. dollars), according to the country’s general statistics office.

Vietnam is one of the countries most affected by natural disasters and climate change, according to the United Nations Development Program. It faces six or seven typhoons every year on average.

Opportunities and challenges in the world of digital media in 2019

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2019 will be a year of opportunities and challenges in the world of digital media.

The digital duopoly of Google and Facebook will face unprecedented regulatory scrutiny, as Amazon muscles its way into the digital ad space.

Meanwhile, pay-TV companies will continue to struggle as cord-cutting accelerates and TV consumption shifts to digital, and millennials and Gen Z will drive explosive growth in eSports.

Find out about these transformational trends and more in Business Insider Intelligence’s Top 10 Trends in Digital Media slide deck.

As a bonus, you will gain immediate access to our exclusive Business Insider Intelligence Daily newsletter.

To get your copy of this FREE slide deck, simply click here.

F88 issues US$4.3 million corporate bonds

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F88 has successfully issued corporate bonds totaling VND100 billion ($4.3 million) after just two weeks of being offered.

The non-convertible bonds have a term of two years, a fixed interest rate, and are paid in Vietnam dong (VND). Buyers were primarily reputable large domestic institutions and some individual investors. VNEeconomictimes reports.

The bond issuance was advised on by the Bao Viet Securities JSC (BVSC), a leader in issuing and managing risk in Vietnam’s financial market.

“Mobilizing capital in the domestic bond market is part of the company’s long-term capital strategy, with it applying successful lessons from leading mortgage companies in the US (First Cash), Thailand (Srisawad), and Singapore (Maxicash).” said Mr. Phung Anh Tuan, Chairman and CEO of F88.

“This successful bond issuance helps F88 supplement necessary capital to meet growth in mortgage lending,” he added. “The result confirms the interest of investors in the company’s efficiency and reputation.” he added.

As at June 30, F88 was the leading company in the market, possessing an impressive financial services chain. Its transaction offices around the country have risen to 84 – nearly double that in 2018 – of which 41 are in Hanoi, 38 in Ho Chi Minh City, and five in northern provinces.

According to VNEeconomictimes, F88 is expected to reach its target of 100 transaction offices this year and 300 by 2021. It will continue to expand channels for domestic and foreign capital mobilization, including the corporate bond issuance.

Unlike other business models in the field of finance, F88 is a pioneer in asset mortgage lending, ensuring fast, friendly, safe and confidential products, including lending with motor cars, motorbikes, phones, and computers pledged as collateral.

F88 is also actively investing in its technology network to conduct asset valuations and risk management in the best possible manner. It currently uses an ERP system and Business Intelligence (BI) to have information transmitted immediately and accurately and focuses on key measurement indicators to support and make business decisions.

Food and beverage sector in Vietnam draws foreign firms’ interest

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Vietnam has become an increasingly attractive destination for international enterprises in the food, beverages and packaging industry thanks to its rapid economic growth and rising consumer demand.

Chairwoman of the Food and Foodstuff Association of HCM City Ly Kim Chi told media that, the food and beverage sector accounts for 15 per cent of Vietnam’s GDP and is growing at 7 per cent annually on average.

Related: Setting-up foreign invested company in Vietnam

“Vietnamese spend a third of their income on food and beverages,” she told a B2B event held in HCM City last week that attracted the participation of 49 Indian companies who exhibited their products at the recent Vietfood and Beverage-Propack exhibition.

Indian consul general in the city, Dr. K Srikar Reddy, said Vietnam is a major producer and exporter of food and agricultural products but “is also a major food importer and consumer.

“Agricultural products form a significant portion of the total bilateral trade between the two countries. India is among major suppliers to Vietnam of food products like seafood, meat, cereals, and fresh and processed vegetables and fruits.”

Mohan Ramesh Anand, chairman of the Indian Business Chamber in Vietnam, said with a population of over 95 million and increasing demand for food and beverages, Việt Nam is a large food and beverage market, making it attractive to local and international investors, including Indian.

He believed Indian investment in Vietnam would increase in future.

Polish firms

Many leading Polish businesses that produce beef, poultry and pork meat, meat-based products, fresh and frozen fruits and vegetables, fruit concentrates and preserves, and other food products are looking to enter the Vietnamese market.

Speaking to the media on the sidelines of the Việt Nam-Poland B2B meeting in the food sector in HCM City last week, Piotz Ziemann, vice president of the Association of Butchers and Producers of Processed Meat of the Republic of Poland, said his country’s advantage is that it produces beef at 17 per cent less cost than the rest of the EU but tops them in quality.

Of its beef production 85 per cent is meant for export, and it is 55 per cent for chicken and 47 per cent for pork, he said.

“Poland’s foods not only have high quality, but also are safe and tasty.

“With fast economic growth and improving living standards, Vietnamese tend to choose food products that have higher quality, safer and tastier. This offers good opportunities for Poland companies in the sector.”

Poland’s pork has appeared in the Vietnamese market, but beef and chicken are still new to Vietnam though they are popular in fastidious markets such as South Korea and Japan, he said.

He hoped the new EU programme titled “Tasteful Europe – Tradition and Quality” that was recently launched in Vietnam and will be carried out from 2019 to 2022 would yield positive results, with more Vietnamese customers knowing about and using Polish meat products and fruits and vegetables.

The programme seeks to promote products like fresh, chilled and frozen meats, meat products, and high-quality poultry and fresh and processed fruit and vegetables in Việt Nam and other Asian markets.

It would provide Vietnamese consumers with knowledge about the uniqueness of European food production and convince the unconvinced that values such as production safety at every stage from field to table, and the resulting quality, sustainability and flavour combined with tradition would bring about a unique culinary experience, Ziemann said, who is also the head of the project.

The EU-Vietnam Free Trade Agreement would offer opportunities to enhance investment and trade ties between Việt Nam and Poland, he added.

- VNS

Prudential to extend and enhance its partnership with PVcomBank

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This agreement aims to extend and enhance their highly successful partnership, which debuted in 2015.

Under this agreement, Prudential Vietnam will offer its comprehensive financial protection and wealth management solutions through PVcomBank’s extensive network of 117 branches, giving consumers greater access to insurance and wealth management that fits their needs.

2018 marked a successful year for the co-operation between Prudential and PVcomBank, with revenue growth jumping by eight times against 2017.

“Recognizing the growing need across Vietnam for comprehensive insurance and wealth solutions, Prudential Vietnam has extended its alliance with PVcomBank to provide consumers with best-in-class offerings that help them protect their families and their health, as well as grow their wealth. Our solutions will leverage the latest innovations and digital technology to support consumers as they progress in life,” said Clive Baker, CEO of Prudential Vietnam.

Prudential Vietnam, in the long-term partnership with PVcomBank, again emphasises its pioneering in this business model.

So far, Prudential Vietnam – a member of Prudential Plc., a leading global financial group headquartered in the UK – has partnered with six banks, including both regional and local entities. The new business revenue of bancassurance channel in 2018 increased more than 150 per cent against 2017.

According to research by the World Bank, Vietnam’s middle class has been expanding rapidly, adding 1.5 million people each year. Entering the middle class is typically the trigger for individuals to consider protecting both their wealth and health. Fuelled by solid economic growth, demand for wealth savings and investment products is also on the rise.

This is the greatest paradox of wealth – most people fail to recognize it: Self-made millionaire

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Change is a constant and continuous process in life. As we grow older, we change how we dress, what we eat, where we live and who we become friends with.

Yet when it comes to how we use our time and money ― especially for high earners and wealthy individuals ― we tend to be more resistant to change. Ramit Sethi said on CNBC.

Here’s a little scenario to illustrate my point: I have a friend who earns more than $750,000 a year. He loves his job, but if you asked him how he’s doing, his biggest complaint would be: “I’m so busy.”

So imagine my surprise when I visited him one day and pointed to the bags sitting on his kitchen counter.

“Oh, I just got back from the grocery store,” he said.

After a quick pause, I asked, “Have you ever considered having someone else do your grocery shopping?”

He looked at me like I was crazy. Pay to have someone do his grocery shopping? What kind of elitist would do that?

Here was an adult earning $750,000 a year, but behaving as if he still earns $50,000.

The hidden paradox of money vs. time

The concept of buying back your time is one of the most powerful productivity concepts I’ve learned as a business owner.

Buying back your time is all about convenience: By spending on things like Lyft rides, pre-cooked meals or a housekeeper, you’re actually saving money because you get back the hours that you’d normally spend doing things that don’t make you happy.

Most high earners fail to recognize the effectiveness of buying back time. Maybe it’s because growing up, their parents didn’t have more money than time, which changes the calculus of how they make decisions. As a result, those high earners never end up changing their approach to work and their personal lives.

This is a huge paradox of earning more money: Many people claim they value time over money, but if you look at their calendars, you’ll find that the opposite is true.

Buying back your time isn’t an act of arrogance

I used to scoff at people who flew first-class and think, Why would anyone spend an insane amount of money something so pointless? We’re all getting to the same destination.

But more often than not, those people were not stupid. They were high earners who understood value in a different way than I used to.

If you earn $40,000 a year, for example, spending $5,000 on a first-class flight is crazy. But if you’re a CEO who earns $450,000 a year, it makes perfect sense.

In business, misaligned beliefs on time and money can cost you dearly ― while getting aligned can become a force multiplier.

Sometimes, people who buy back their time are seen as showing off. But guess what? Many of us already do it:

  • Eating at a restaurant instead of cooking at home
  • Getting the car oil changed instead of doing it yourself
  • Taking an Uber instead of walking or taking public transportation
  • Paying retail price instead of looking for a good deal

I’d bet that some of you do these things every week and don’t consider it as “buying back your time.” But you actually are because you’re spending on convenience so you can focus on getting results and move on to more important things.

I’m really into fitness, for example, and Theoretically, I could read a ton of material on bodybuilding, structure my diet and fitness routine ― and stick to it.

But I know I’ll never be as efficient as my trainer, who lives and breathes fitness. By paying him, I can trade money for time and get the best results. (Again, I could be doing it all on my own, but I don’t have to; I’d rather spend that time on my business and with my family.)

Give it a shot―it might change your life

I still find it difficult to know when it’s “right” to spend money or time on something ― and I’m not alone.

Think about all the wealthy and successful people, like my friend who earns $750,000 per year, who are uncomfortable with the idea of delegating tasks to others. But if you’re working hard, you should be able to buy back your time.

The key is to ask yourself: What do I get out of it?

What do you get if you got three hours of your time back every week? Do you get to fly your parents out and put them up in an amazing suite? (If you’re Indian like me, the answer is no: They’ll be staying with you.) Do you get to do things you really enjoy, like cooking your own meal or composing music?

If you’re making more money than ever, aim to save at least one hour per week. Think about all the responsibilities that you hate (e.g., doing the laundry, grocery shopping, managing your finances) where there are great solutions available to outsource or systematize the work.

Then, as you get more advanced, you can tackle trickier topics like scheduling, email management and entire project management.

By Ramit Sethi, author of the New York Times best-seller “I Will Teach You To Be Rich,” has become a financial guru to millions of readers in their 20s, 30s and 40s. He became a self-made millionaire at a young age thanks to his website (which he started as a Stanford undergraduate in 2004), book and personal finance courses.

First foreign pharma firm licensed to directly import drugs in Vietnam

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Sanofi Vietnam has announced that it has received a licence to directly import drugs, becoming the first multinational corporation with such rights in the country.

Sanofi Vietnam, which is said to hold about 4 per cent of the Vietnamese pharmaceutical market, has met the business conditions for drug imports outlined in Decree No.54/2017/ND dated May 8, 2017, guiding the implementation of the 2016 Law on Pharmacy.

After getting the license, Sanofi Vietnam directly imported the first batch of meningococcal meningitis vaccines.

The move is expected to leverage more foreign investment in the lucrative local pharmaceutical industry, especially when the EU-Vietnam Free Trade Agreement (EVFTA) takes effect, while increasing access to qualified drugs among the locals.

Industry insiders, however, raised concerns that the import duty on drug imports will be reduced when the EVFTA comes into force, thus putting more pressure on local pharmaceutical firms.

Sanofi Vietnam has three factories in the country, supplying 80 per cent of its products sold in Vietnam.

According to the Vietnam Drug Administration (VDA), the pharmaceutical industry will continue to enjoy double-digit growth in the next five years, with the market scale reaching $7.7 billion in 2021.

Source: VIR

58 held in Da Nang karaoke parlor drug bust

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Police detained 58 who tested positive for drugs after a Da Nang karaoke parlor raid early Saturday and are planning to admit some of them to rehab centers.
The raid at 1:15 a.m. found one man, 28-year-old Dang Van Ny, in possession of 54 pills suspected to be ecstasy and nine packets containing white powder suspected to be ketamine, police said.

They took 67 customers to a police station and 58 of them tested positive for banned substances.

Police said they would either be fined or put in rehab centers.

Da Nang, considered the third most important city in Vietnam after Hanoi and HCMC, is a popular travel destination.

The city has seen several drug busts in recent months, especially in karaoke parlors, dance floors and other entertainment sites. Last month, a karaoke parlor in the city was busted with 32 customers using drugs.

Synthetic drug users account for 86 percent of all drug addicts in Vietnam, according to official data.

Vietnamese authorities deal with around 20,000 cases involving drugs every year and arrest around 30,000 people. The country has some 250,000 registered addicts, but the actual figures are thought to be much higher.

After local and international criticism of an approach based on treating drug addiction as a “social evil” to be dealt with by forced abstinence and re-education, the government began a program in 2013 to gradually replace compulsory detention centers with community-based, voluntary treatment regimens.

Around $44.6 million is spent on running rehab facilities in Vietnam every year.

Source: Vnexpress

Vietnam’s taxis among cheapest in world

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Fares in Vietnam five to ten times cheaper than in Japan and Europe, according to Taxi2Airport report.

Vietnam was named among the top 10 countries and territories with the cheapest taxi fares in the world in a recent report from Taxi2Airport, a global cab-hailing system operating in some 130 countries and territories.

The report compares taxi fares for a 5-km journey, with most of the cheapest countries being in Asia.

Vietnam was tenth on the list, with a 5-km ride averaging $2.80. In addition to dozens of taxi companies with thousands of cars in the country, the presence of ride-hailing apps such as Grab makes it easy and convenient to catch a taxi in Vietnam, especially in big cities.

Hanoi was ranked as having the tenth-cheapest taxi services in the world in 2017 in the Taxi Price Index from Carspring, a UK-based online car sales website. The index ranked 80 of the most visited cities globally by how much it costs to get around by taxi, based on the standard price for a 3-km ride. It also researched the cost of hailing a taxi, the cost per kilometer, waiting times, and typical fares for a taxi from the airport to the city center.

Top of the Taxi2Airport list was Egypt, at only $0.90, followed by India with $1.40 and Thailand $1.60. Other countries on the list include Indonesia, Malaysia, Turkey, China, Mexico, and Argentina, with fares ranging from $1.90 to $2.70.

The report also determined the most expensive taxis, with Switzerland leading the way at $25.70 for a 5-km ride, followed by Japan with $17.70 and Germany $13.80. Other countries on the list were mostly from Europe, with rates ranging from $11 to $17.50, including the Netherlands, Belgium, Austria, Great Britain, France, and Sweden, as well as New Zealand.

The difference in fares is explained by there being more personal motor vehicles in Asia, particularly motorbikes, while metro line systems as well as other means of public transport are popular and favored by passengers in Japan and Europe.

Taxi2Airport also gave some tips on saving money when hailing a taxi, including asking the driver in advance about fares in taxis with no meters and asking local people about prices.

Source: Vneconomictimes

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