Vietnam is the tenth best country for expatriate employees to live, work and raise a family, with Switzerland, Singapore, and Canada taking the top three spots, a new survey by HSBC shows.
The other countries in the top ten are Spain, New Zealand, Australia, Turkey, Germany, and the United Arab Emirates, according to HSBC’s Expat 2019 Global Report, which was released on Thursday.
The annual survey gathered data from 18,059 overseas workers in 163 locations, and broke the findings into three sub-categories, namely living, career opportunity, and family life.
The respondents ranked Vietnam twelfth, third, and 20th in these categories, respectively.
Notably, they considered that the Southeast Asian country offers living fulfillment, ease of settling in, economic stability, and work/ life balance better than 157 other locations.
Vietnam also won the expats’ hearts for cultural, open and welcoming communities (ranked #9), disposable income (#7), allowing foreign workers to reach career potential (#8), and ease to make friends (#4).
“The appeal of Vietnam has expanded greatly in the last few years and in particular, serial expats are setting their sights on the magnificent landscape, lively culture and positive work life balance,” HSBC commented in its report.
“This has seen Vietnam rank as one of the most popular choices for expats who already have experience living abroad.”
According to HSBC, Vietnam is an also attractive destination for entrepreneurs looking to set up new ventures, and the Vietnamese government is trying to change legislation to make this easier.
Meanwhile, in the global scale, HSBC’s expat report saw a noticeable ‘downfall’ this year.
For the first time in four years, Singapore lost the title of “the best destination for expatriate workers” to Switzerland, which tops the list thanks to fast career progression, good pay, and “stunning scenery.”
State intervenes after Big C’s strategy change enraged local textile producers
A Vietnamese official said Thursday that Central Group will stop sourcing garments within the country for 15 days as some local suppliers had not met regulations and commitments agreed, in a move to clarify the Thai retail conglomerate’s actions over the last few days.
Central’s subsidiary in Vietnam sent a letter to local suppliers on Tuesday, stating that Big C in Vietnam would stop purchasing garments immediately due to what it called “a change in strategy of development of our soft-line concept,” without stating when the suspension would end. This led to protests at its Ho Chi Minh office on Wednesday by suppliers and their employees. Nikkei Asia reports.
On Thursday afternoon, Deputy Minister of Industry and Trade Do Thang Hai spoke to media after his department called an urgent meeting with Central Group’s supermarket chain Big C and the Vietnam Textile and Apparel Association earlier in the day.
According to the Domestic Market Department under the ministry, Central said that some Vietnamese suppliers had failed to comply with regulations and had not fulfilled commitments they had agreed to.
“We protect and respect the interests of foreign investors, but also firmly protect the interests of Vietnamese businesses and consumers,” said a spokesperson from the Ministry of Industry and Trade.
According to Hai, Big C promised after the meeting to continue ordering from 50 local businesses and another 100 in the following weeks.
Dozens of Vietnamese garment suppliers and their employees gathered outside Central’s subsidiary office to protest on Wednesday, holding up placards. One read: “Central Group: unethical in business.”
Big C in Vietnam had then released a statement, saying that the company was “in the process of reviewing with more than 200 garment suppliers to develop products with the best quality to meet the conditions not only for the domestic market, but also toward exporting to other countries.”
Dozens of Vietnamese garment suppliers and their employees gather outside Central’s Ho Chi Minh City office to protest after Big C suddenly stopped ordering their products. (Photo by C.T)
Central Group did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Central Group is the largest retailer in Thailand, run by tycoon Tos Chirativat. Its Vietnamese subsidiary was established in 2011. Central operates a range of businesses including electronics chain Nguyen Kim and stationary chain LookKool in Vietnam. But Big C is at the heart of its expansion plans.
Central Group bought the chain’s operations in Vietnam from France’s Casino Group in 2016 for 920 million euros ($1.04 billion), beating another Thai conglomerate TCC Group as well as other local and international peers.
“The size of the economy in Vietnam is smaller than us [Thailand] but it’s growing at a fast rate,” Tos told reporters back in 2016. “In the coming five years, it will be growing and growing,” he added.
Thailand’s economy, on the other hand, has been sluggish, leading Thai companies to seek growth overseas. Analysts said how Central deals with this crisis will have a real impact on its prospects in Vietnam.
Samsung faces lawsuit over water resistant smartphone claims.
Samsung is in trouble in Australia over ads that suggested its Galaxy smartphones could be used while swimming. CNN reports.
The country’s competition regulator filed a lawsuit against Samsung, alleging that the ads were misleading. Samsung touted its devices as being water resistant up to 1.5 meters deep for 30 minutes, and showed them being used in oceans and swimming pools, the regulator added.
“Samsung’s advertisements falsely and misleadingly represented Galaxy phones would be suitable for use in … all types of water, including in ocean water and swimming pools, and would not be affected by such exposure to water,” Rod Sims, chair of the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, said in a statement on Thursday.
Samsung, the world’s biggest smartphone brand, said it would defend itself against the lawsuit.
The case involves more than 300 Samsung advertisements on television, radio, online and on social media since February 2016, and covers 15 Galaxy models including the Note 7, the A8 and the latest S10 series.
If the suit is upheld, Samsung could face fines worth millions of dollars. Following a recent change in the law, the maximum penalty for each violation after September 1, 2018, is 10 million Australian dollars ($7 million).
The Australian regulator said that Samsung didn’t have “a reasonable basis” for claiming its phones were water resistant because the company refused to honor warranties on some devices that were damaged when used in water.
Moreover, the regulator noted, Samsung’s claims are undermined by a warning on its website that the new Galaxy S10 phone range is “not advised for beach or pool use.”
The regulator said Samsung denied warranty claims from customers whose phones were damaged when used in water.
Samsung is the second largest smartphone brand in Australia, behind Apple (AAPL). The South Korean company sold more than 4 million devices in Australia last year, according to research firm Canalys.
Police in Ha Tinh Province are investigating a stillborn baby’s birth that saw the body incur a cut to its neck.
Vice director of Duc Tho District General Hospital, Pham Hong Cuong, announced on July 3 that they have suspended the group of doctors and nurses who delivered the baby on June 30 for further investigations.
According to reports from the hospital, Nguyen Thi Tinh, 37, was brought to hospital as she began labour at 8 am on June 30. Initial checks showed that Tinh and her baby were both in good condition. At 6.30pm, a group of nurses helped Tinh deliver the baby but was unable to take it out. They called for support from the head of the Obstetric Ward, Nguyen Minh Duc, who came at 7pm and directly taken over the work. However, he found the baby stillborn and while trying to pull it out, he caused a break in its neck which was then with made up with eight stitches.
Answering questions from the media, Doctor Nguyen Minh Duc said that when he arrived to take over the case, he found that the baby’s head had come out with several scratches while its shoulders had got stuck.
“I found that the baby was stillborn and as I managed to pull it out, I caused its neck to break which was when we inserted eight stitches,” the doctor said.
Doctor Pham Hong Cuong also said that the baby must have been stillborn two or three days earlier.
Meanwhile, the Ha Tinh Provincial Department of Health said that the hospital had failed to follow regulations on caring for women in childbirth set by the Ministry of Health.
“The doctors didn’t take a fetal ultrasound so didn’t know the baby was stillborn,” the department said.
The department has asked the hospital to further investigate the case and report to the department by July 12.
International hospitality company the Next Story Group has marked the opening of the eight-story Kafnu Ho Chi Minh City co-working space in the heart of one of Asia’s leading emerging markets.
Kafnu Ho Chi Minh City is the fifth Kafnu property to open globally, following launches in Taipei, Bengaluru, and Sydney since its debut in Hong Kong in late 2017.
The co-working space is located at Saigon Pearl in Binh Thanh district. Members enjoy round-the-clock access and their productivity is assured with a range of work spaces including hot desks and private offices, high-speed internet, a soundproof phone booth, and five meeting rooms with video conferencing capabilities.
Spanning 2,440 sq m, Kafnu Ho Chi Minh City also has a multi-screen 180 sq m event space where members can host product launches, workshops, and other events for up to 150 guests. There are also eight ensuite hotel rooms where members from out of town can get a good night’s rest and wake up to views of the city skyline.
“We are excited to be part of Vietnam’s growth story,” said Mr. Chris Edwards, General Manager of Kafnu Ho Chi Minh City. “We aim to be a catalyst for success for entrepreneurs and creative trailblazers who choose to build their enterprises, brands, and personal networks in the vibrant economic hub of Ho Chi Minh City. To support their endeavors, we are cultivating a warm, welcoming community of like-minded change-makers, delivering targeted programming and providing unique opportunities for discovery, connection, and growth.”
Named after a hamlet, Himachal Pradesh, in northern India, where climbers regroup before summiting the Himalayan peaks, the Kafnu brand offers the best in shared work spaces, boutique hotels, and social communities. Kafnu properties are strategically-located and designed to foster co-creation, co-exploration, and co-innovation.
Kafnu aims to elevate the individual and collective potential of its members, who include creators and business owners, and to support them in their journey to success by providing an ideal environment for them to work, rest, and socialize.
It also offers bespoke member events and curated workshops tailored to the needs of its community, providing access to resources, capabilities, and people that inspire success. Members enjoy access to all Kafnu properties worldwide, which means they can stay connected to the Kafnu community wherever their work and inspiration may take them.
Co-working space has seen ongoing demand in Vietnam’s real estate market in recent years, according to CBRE Vietnam. The country is now home to 20 brands providing shared workspace services at 100 venues in the country, primarily in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City.
Global co-working space provider Spaces opened its first center in Hanoi in May, marking its entry into Vietnam. In March, another leading co-working space operator, WeWork, announced the official opening of its first Vietnam’s location in E-Town Central in Ho Chi Minh City’s District 4.
Some Vietnamese travel agencies expressed surprise over losing accreditation to apply for Japanese visas on behalf of domestic tour groups.
The Japanese Embassy in Vietnam announced Monday that it will not entertain visa applications submitted by seven Hanoi-based travel firms. It said the agencies had violated the commitments they had made, as evidenced by some of their clients going missing after reaching Japan on tourist visas.
The Hanoi branch of leading travel agency Vietravel was suspended from submitting Japanese visa applications for six months starting July 1.
Some of the blacklisted travel companies said they did not understand why they had lost their accreditation and are working with the Japanese side to deal with the issue.
Truong Tuong Lan, director of Nam Cuong Tourism Co., Ltd, one of the eight blacklisted travel agencies, said the embassy has informed that 48 tourists that his firm had submitted visa applications for had gone missing for a year starting March 2018. However, the embassy had provided no documentation proving this, he said.
“The decision from the embassy has affected the prestige of our firm,” Lan added.
According to the agreement signed between Nam Cuong Tourism Co. with the embassy, the company was accredited to receive Japanese visa applications from Vietnamese tour groups, but not directly organize tours, Lan explained.
Some customers of the company waiting to fly to Japan in the coming days have had their applications rejected following the decision by the Japanese Embassy and the company has asked it to explain the rejection to the customers, he said.
On Wednesday, the firm sent a document to the Travel Department under the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism as well as the Hanoi’s Tourism Department, seeking their help in making clear the embassy’s announcement.
Another travel agency’s representative, who declined to be named, said: “The embassy did not deliver an official announcement on the reason. They requested company representatives to go to the embassy to work on the issue.”
A representative from the HCMC-based Viettravel tour operator whose branch in Hanoi was suspended said they had arranged for more than 566 tour groups with nearly 17,000 tourists to visit Japan in 2018.
Three of them have gone unaccounted for in Japan while two others returned to Vietnam later than scheduled, and this has been stated as the reason for the embassy’s decision.
Currently, there are more than 70 Vietnamese travel firms accredited by the Japanese Embassy in Vietnam to apply for visas on behalf of Vietnamese tour groups in an effort to attract more Vietnamese holiday-goers.
Thanks to visa exemptions, duty-free promotions and ancient tourist attractions, Japan has been attracting increasing numbers of Vietnamese tourists in recent years. Last year, 34,000 Vietnamese citizens visited Japan, up 36.7 percent from a year ago.
The number of Vietnamese residents working and living in Japan also jumped 26 percent from a year earlier to 330,835 in 2018, accounting for 8 percent of foreign nationals in the country, the Japan Times reported. It said this growth had propelled Vietnamese to overtake the Filipinos as the third largest minority group in Japan, behind the Chinese and South Koreans.
The growing presence of Japanese companies in Vietnam has also sparked increased interest among younger Vietnamese to study and/or undertake technical training programs in Japan in the hope of landing well-paid jobs, the report said.
However, Vietnam has also gained notoriety for tourists fleeing from tour groups and absconding in order to stay on and work illegally in the countries they visit.
Last December, Taiwanese authorities decided to suspend the Kuan Hung visa program following the infamous case of 152 Vietnamese tourists going missing en masse after arriving in the territory on tourist visas.
The program, launched in 2015, allows citizens of six countries including Vietnam to visit Taiwan by applying for electronic visas without paying visa fees.
The Taiwanese Tourism Bureau resumed the visa program from March 20 for select Vietnamese travel agencies under stricter regulations.
Two people have been killed and three injured after a bridge collapsed due to Typhoon Mun.
Thanh Hoá Province’s Yên Hoà bridge collapsed due to heavy rain early on Thursday.
According to Hải Hà Commune People’s Committee in Tĩnh Gia District, the communal flood prevention force brought the three injured people to a local hospital.
Two others, Nguyễn Như Thắng and his wife Nguyễn Thị Tâm, were found dead under the rubble.
This year’s second typhoon has hit coastal provinces from Hải Phòng to Nam Định and weakened to tropical depression over the northwest area on the same day.
Strong winds of level 8 to 9 have been recorded over Hải Phòng City’s Cát Hải and Hòn Dáu islands.
According to the National Centre for Hydro-Meteorological Forecasting, heavy rains have hit central provinces from Thanh Hoá to Nghệ An. The rainfall is predicted at 40 to 80mm per 12 hours, posing threats of flash floods and landslides on mountains.
Heavy rain is also forecast for the northern mountainous provinces of Hoà Bình and Sơn La, the Red River Delta and the northwest area.
A Vietnamese woman has raised US$2.88 million through speeches at an event sponsored by the non-profit organization Room to Read, enabling thousands of female students in Vietnam’s Mekong Delta to rise above poverty through education.
At a Room to Read event in Hong Kong this past February, Dinh Thi Kim Thuy confidently spoke to an audience of approximately 200 potential donors, explaining the importance that their contributions could have on impoverished young women in rural areas of Vietnam’s southern region.
Thuy, a first-year student at Can Tho University in the namesake city, eventually managed to raise $2.88 million for children in her country.
Room to Read is a U.S.-based non-profit organization for improving literacy and gender equality in education in the developing world.
The organization, which currently operates in 16 different countries, first began working in Vietnam in 2001.
So far, the organization has built around 1,400 different libraries in 25 Vietnamese provinces and supported the education of over 6,000 female students from poverty-stricken areas in Vietnam’s Mekong Delta.
Much of the money Room to Read contributes toward its initiatives is raised at events where would-be donors listen to first-hand accounts from young women who have directly benefited from the organization.
Needless to say, the amount of money raised depends heavily on the speaker.
The $2.88 million fund Thuy managed to solicit at the Hong Kong event broke Room to Read’s record.
“She’s a professional speaker!” remarked Huynh My Ngoc, a Room to Read technical staffer who attended the event.
After hearing Thuy’s give her speech so confidently in English, few at the event could believe that she had the lowest English command among the Room to Read speakers that day.
“We have brought many female students who matured through the program to participate in fundraising events in Singapore, Sweden, Japan, and France, but none of them have ever had as little English as Thuy,” Ngoc said.
“However, she’s been our best speaker so far.”
Even more surprising is that Thuy wrote her speech herself, relying only on Room to Read employees to help correct any spelling and grammar mistakes.
Then, to prepare, she made visits to touristic areas near her dormitory in the Mekong Delta city of Can Tho to practice English by talking to foreign visitors.
The rest of her spare time was spent practicing her speech.
A woman from Vietnam’s deep south, tricked and sold in China in 1997, has returned home and is reunited with her family.
Nguyen Thi Hon, 43, landed in Can Tho City in the Mekong Delta early on Thursday and will return to her hometown in nearby Bac Lieu Province.
Her brother Nguyen Van Tang had traveled to Lang Son Province on the China border in the far north to confirm her identity and bring her home.
Locals in Lang Son found her last month wandering near the Chinese border in panic, as they described it.
She told them she had been lost in China for years and could not find her way back home, and they sent her to the province center for social protection.
Her story was posted on Facebook and shared widely, which enabled her family to find her.
Nguyen Hong Cam, chairwoman of Hon’s hometown, Long Dien Dong Commune in Dong Hai District, said Hon was married and divorced and did not have children.
Due to poverty she left home and went to Can Tho City to look for a living in 1997, and her family lost contact with her.
Later they looked for her far and wide, but could not find her, assumed she had died, and even set up an altar for her.
Earlier this year, when authorities launched a population census, her family reported her as dead.
Cam said: “Hon has several siblings but they are all poor. Her father is dead and her mother is now in her 80s.”
She added that the commune had helped Hon acquire all personal papers again.
Hon told the media that in 1997, while leaving for home from Can Tho, she met a person — whose identity she can no longer recall — who claimed to be from Bac Lieu and offered to take her there.
On the way she was offered some food, and passed out after eating it. When she came around, she was in China.
She was sold to a Chinese man, but after a few years, since she could not have a baby, the man and his family threw her out.
She was homeless for a while before the Chinese police took her to the border gate in Lang Son Province and left her there.
Data from Vietnam’s Ministry of Public Security shows that since 2010 there have been over 3,000 cases of human trafficking involving almost 7,000 victims, mostly women and children from poor and rural areas.
A majority were sold to men seeking wives in China, Malaysia and South Korea or just to bear children or forced into prostitution.
China rescued more than 1,100 women trafficked into the country, many of them sold as brides, in a joint operation with Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam between July and December 2018, Chinese police said in a statement last month.
Quang Ngai will finalise and submit a dossier that seeks to recognise the Ly Son–Sa Huynh Geopark as a member of the UNESCO Global Geoparks Network this November.
In recent times, Quang Ngai has deployed a range of activities in order to develop Ly Son–Sa Huynh Geopark.
As a result, research and survey activities have almost been completed in specific areas that have geological and cultural values.
The park covers approximately 2,000 sq.km of land, accounting for 39 per cent of the total area of Quang Ngai. The park also enjoys 2,600sq.km of sea surface as it is situated beside the province’s 130km-long coastline.
The province has also put into operation tours of the geopark that feature visits to 90 geological sites of value in addition to developing a network of partners.
To facilitate the completion of all procedures as requested by UNESCO, the Quang Ngai province People’s Committee have asked the Vietnam National Commission to inform UNESCO about the scheduled time to submit the dossier on Ly Son-Sa Huynh Geopark in 2019.
The province, therefore, plans to finalize and submit the dossier on Ly Son-Sa Huynh Geopark during November this year
Six ‘online tourism ambassadors,’ comprising two Vietnamese and four foreign YouTube personalities, have spent three days exploring different famous attractions in Vietnam, with their experiences filmed for a travel series to be broadcast on the Google-owned video-sharing site.
The YouTube video bloggers have been invited to a three-day fam trip through Quang Binh Province and its neighbors, including Da Nang City and Quang Nam Province, as part of a travel promotion campaign of Quang Binh tourism authorities.
The program, Google Adventure Vietnam, was launched in cooperation with Google to expose Vietnam’s tourism potential to the world via YouTube videos of the six content creators, who all have multimillion-subscriber channels on the world’s largest video-sharing platform.
The YouTube personalities, referred to in the program as ‘online tourism ambassadors,’ are Emrah Tekin from Germany, Pierre Liu from Taiwan, Park Woo Sung from South Korea, Reimari Germar from the Philippines, and Le Hoang Nam and Pham Van Du from Vietnam.
The YouTubers and the program producers started their filming on June 28 with a nine-kilometer journey through the epic Tu Lan Cave in Quang Binh, passing several streams, rocky hills and chasms along the way.
The production team members walk to Tu Lan Cave in Quang Binh Province, north-central Vietnam. Photo: Google Adventure VietnamThe production team members climb a rocky hill to go to Tu Lan Cave in Quang Binh Province, north-central Vietnam. Photo: Google Adventure Vietnam
On their second day, the ‘online tourism ambassadors’ were given a rare opportunity to admire the spectacular landscapes of Vietnam’s north-central region from 300 meters above the ground during their flight from Dong Hoi, the capital city of Quang Binh, to Da Nang City on a seaplane.
From Da Nang, the group moved to Hoi An City in Quang Nam Province, where they were challenged by a number of interesting tasks such as figuring out what the local delicacies and famous landmarks are, and trying to find and buy them.
The video creators were allowed to use Google technology to complete these assignments.
The YouTubers search for the locations of local delicacy stalls in Hoi An City, Quang Nam Province, central Vietnam. Photo: Google Adventure VietnamGerman YouTuber Emrah Tekin tries on a souvenir in Hoi An City, Quang Nam Province, central Vietnam. Photo: Google Adventure Vietnam
They also visited Thanh Ha Pottery Village, a favorite stopover by foreign visitors located just three kilometers west of Hoi An, where the significant traditional craft has been kept for centuries.
Another stop in Hoi An was Tra Que Vegetable Village, where the team experienced farming and cooking activities with local people, before returning to Da Nang and finishing their three-day trip on the Golden Bridge, a new must-visit spot in the city.
German YouTuber Emrah Tekin experiences making pottery products in Hoi An City, Quang Nam Province, central Vietnam. Photo: Google Adventure Vietnam
The publishing schedule for Google Adventure Vietnam remains undisclosed as post-production is underway.
Besides Google Adventure Vietnam, the Quang Binh tourism department and Google Asia Pacific also cooperate in another program, where more than 1,000 photos featuring the picturesque and spectacular attractions in the Vietnamese localities above will be hosted on the ‘online museum’ Google Arts & Culture from the third quarter of this year.
The Google Adventure Vietnam production team members wade inside Tu Lan Cave in Quang Binh Province, north-central Vietnam. Photo: Google Adventure VietnamThe Google Adventure Vietnam production team members wade inside Tu Lan Cave in Quang Binh Province, north-central Vietnam. Photo: Google Adventure VietnamThe production team members cross a stream to go to Tu Lan Cave in Quang Binh Province, north-central Vietnam. Photo: Google Adventure VietnamOne YouTuber takes a photo before entering Tu Lan Cave in Quang Binh Province, north-central Vietnam. Photo: Google Adventure Vietnam
Vietnamese students learn English for at least seven years at school. However, many of them cannot obtain basic knowledge, which has been blamed on the teaching method.
A report released by the HCMC Education and Training Department showed that only 41.6 percent of English exam papers got 5 and higher scores at the latest high school entrance exam in the city. As such, approximately six out of every 10 examinees could not meet the requirements.
An analyst commented that the proportion of students not meeting the requirements in English would be even higher if they have to take tests for their speaking, reading and listening skills.
At the 2018 high school finals, of 814,000 students all over the country, 637,000, or 78 percent, got below 5 in English, according to the Ministry of Education and Training (MOET).
The average exam scores for English were 3.22/10 in 2016, 4.6 in 2017 and 3.91 in 2018. This means that students even could not meet the average level in English skills, even though they have many years of learning English at school, while MOET is running a costly national program on teaching English.
At the 2018 high school finals, of 814,000 students all over the country, 637,000, or 78 percent, got below 5 in English, according to the Ministry of Education and Training (MOET).
In 2008, a national program was launched under which VND9.4 trillion would be spent to renovate the teaching of foreign languages at schools.
However, the achievements of the program remain very modest.
At an academic forum discussing the methods of teaching and learning English in the 4.0 era held recently, Nguyen Quoc Ve, director of the Education Department Institute, showed some major characteristics of the current English teaching and learning situation.
71.7 percent of people learn English to improve personal capability to serve their lives, 56 percent for training purposes and 51 percent for their communication needs at work.
Up to 97.7 percent of learners of English want to improve communication skills, 45 percent want to improve the writing capability, 33 percent reading skills and 26 percent want to have better skills in grammar.
However, the teaching of English at general schools doesn’t satisfy the requirements. Ve commented that the knowledge provided at school is too theoretical with most of it reading comprehension lessons, useful for exams, not for communications.
He noted that learning English via communications brings the highest efficiency, 36 percent. However, the number of people choosing the learning method is low, 10 percent.
About 50 percent of learners use smartphones to learn English, 35 percent learn English online and 32 percent via YouTube. About 29 percent of learners go to foreign language centers, 24 percent learn via movies, 22 percent via music, and 14 percent via TV and radio.
Bosch reaches importance milestone in R&D in Vietnam
Since its inception in 2008, Bosch has been investing in research and development (R&D) as well as human resources development in Vietnam. Continuously strengthening its local footprint and operation has been of strategic importance for Bosch and a vital part in the company’s success.
Bosch Automotive Research and Development Centre: Five years of tremendous growth
On Tuesday, 2nd July 2019, Bosch celebrated the fifth year anniversary of its automotive research and development centre in Vietnam at Deutsches Haus, 33 Le Duan, Ben Nghe, Ho Chi Minh, Vietnam. Established in 2014 with an investment of more than USD 20 million (17 million euros) to date, today, the research and development centre (R&D) houses more than 70 engineers, specializing in developing innovative automotive technologies, products and solutions for both domestic and international markets.
Initially focused on researching automotive technologies as well as on further developing the skills of the company’s workforce in Vietnam, the R&D centre has since expanded its scope to lead the product development of electrical components in the application of active safety and engine management systems. Apart from driving technological advancements for two of Bosch’s automotive manufacturing plants in Thailand and Germany, the centre has also started development collaborations with other similar Bosch locations in Asia Pacific, Europe, North and South America.
Bosch R&D Center in Vietnam
Bosch business development in Vietnam
Over the past ten years, Bosch has experienced tremendous growth in the country. For its 2018 fiscal year, the company recorded another year of strong double-digit sales growth.
Vietnam is also growing as an automotive powerhouse with upward demands for passenger vehicles and new mobility solutions. Developments are accelerated by encouraging infrastructure upgrades as well as stronger purchasing power. To this end, Bosch established the regional two-wheeler and power sports division in Vietnam mid of last year to address the fast-growing motorcycle industry. Based in Ho Chi Minh City, the division serves as the company’s Southeast Asian hub for motorcycle expertise and capabilities. Continued investment within the country is also on the company’s agenda.
“As a key manufacturing and R&D location for Bosch global mobility solutions, strong investments into increasing the capacity and capability of our plants are essential to keeping our competitive edge besides meeting the growing demand for our products and solutions.“ adds Guru. “With the market dynamics moving rapidly, the challenge for us is to bring new developments to the market faster. Continued integration of our facilities with connected manufacturing helps make the processes smarter, smoother and learner – resulting in shorter innovation cycles.”
Typhoon Mun, the second arising in the East Sea so far this year, made landfall in localities from Hai Phong to Nam Dinh in early July 4, with a wind speed of 62-88 km/h.
At 5:00am of July 4, the eye of the storm was about 20.6 degrees North latitude and 106.5 degrees East longitude in the mainland from Hai Phong city to Nam Dinh province.
In the next 24 hours, the storm is forecast to move towards west-northwest direction with speed of 15km per hour, approaching northeastern localities before weakening into a low pressure affecting the northern mountainous and midland areas.
Strong winds have been recorded in the Tonkin Gulf covering Bach Long Vi, Co To, Cat Hai and Van Don island districts since early July 4. Seas there were very rough.
Natural disaster alert at level three was made in the mainland of localities from Quang Ninh to Thanh Hoa.
The typhoon causes torrential rain in Nghe An’s northwestern areas in the whole July 4, which is expected to reduce from the night on the same day.
Heavy rains are also forecast in the northern mountainous localities and Hanoi.
Quang Ninh evacuates tourists from islands ahead of Typhoon Mun’s arrival.
The northern coastal province of Quang Ninh has evacuated around 4,000 tourists from outlying islands before the forecast arrival of Typhoon Mun on July 4.
The move had been taken before a ban of vessels sailing to sea was issued at noon on July 3.
Vice Chairman of the People’s Committee of Co To island district Tran Nhu Long said however, up to 1,640 tourists, including four foreigners, wanted to stay on the island to get an experience of a storm at sea.
Long added that the local authorities have taken necessary measures to ensure the tourists’ safety and daily needs.
In Quan Lan-Minh Chau islands in the Van Don island district, another 148 tourists also insisted to stay on the island.
During the storm seasons in 2015 and 2017, thousands of tourists were stuck on outlying islands in Quang Ninh for days, even weeks, due to storms. In July 2015, the provincial authorities had to enlist the help of the navy to take the tourists onto land.
Quang Ninh is a popular destination for sea and island tourism. It has a coastline of more than 250 kilometres and is home to popular destinations such as Ha Long Bay, Bai Tu Long, Ha Long Bay National Park and islands such as Co To, Quan Lan and Van Don.
The province welcomed 12.3 million visitors, including 5.2 million foreigners, last year.
As of 4pm on July 3, the typhoon Mun was about 210 km east-south east of the coast from Quang Ninh to Thanh Hoa province. The typhoon has maximum wind intensity of 60-75km per hour at its centre, with gusts reaching 103-117km per hour.
Mun is moving west-north west at a speed of 10-15km per hour and is likely to gain strength.
Airlines adjust flight schedules due to storm
Vietnam Airlines and Jestar Pacific have announced their schedule changes for flights to and from the Cat Bi airport in the northern port city of Hai Phong on July 3 over impact of Typhoon Mun.
Accordingly, Vietnam Airlines will cancel two flights coded VN1192 and VN1193 between Hai Phong and Ho Chi Minh City, while Jestar Pacific’s flights coded BL594 and BL595 connecting the two destinations will land and depart at Hanoi’s Noi Bai international airport instead of Cat Bi.
Affected passengers will be assisted following regulations. If requested, they will be transferred to available seats on other flights free of charge.
The two carriers recommended their passengers, who plan to travel to or from airports in typhoon-hit destinations, including Hai Phong, Quang Ninh, Hanoi, Thanh Hoa, and Nghe An, frequently update weather forecast and related flight information.
According to the National Centre for Hydro-Meteorological Forecasting, Typhoon Mun was about 130km south-southeast off Quang Ninh and Nam Dinh provinces as of 13:00 of July 3.
In the next 24 hours, the storm is forecast to move west-northwest at a speed of about 10-15km per hour.
Northern region braces for typhoon Mun
Deputy Prime Minister Trinh Dinh Dung, who is chairman of the national steering committee for natural disaster control, has sent a public dispatch to 28 northern and north-central provinces and centrally-run cities as well as relevant agencies urging them to get ready for the upcoming typhoon Mun.
The typhoon is moving towards the northern coastline and is forecast to land in the northern coastal region on early July 4, bringing torrential rains and strong wind to the northern and north-central regions.
The dispatch emphasized the high risk of flash floods and landslides in mountainous areas.
The central steering committee for natural disaster control required ministries, sectors and local authorities to closely follow the movement of the typhoon and take action to reduce damage caused by the typhoon.
Preventive measures include informing vessels at sea on the typhoon and guiding them to safe shelters, evacuating residents in areas vulnerable to floods, landslides, shoring up dykes and reservoirs, and preparing personnel and materials for timely response in emergencies.
In Hai Phong city, more than 2,530 vessels had been informed about the typhoon as of 10 am on July 3.
Ninh Binh province urgently evacuated residents from areas outside the sea dyke and low-lying areas before 6pm the same day.
Quang Ninh province has banned all vessels from going to sea, while Thai Binh province ordered the evacuation of all workers at sea aquaculture farms and residents in river banks and coastal areas.
As of 4pm on July 3, the typhoon Mun was about 210 km east-south east of the coast from Quang Ninh to Thanh Hoa province. The typhoon has maximum wind intensity of 60-75km per hour at its centre, with gusts reaching 103-117km per hour.
Mun is moving west-north west at a speed of 10-15km per hour and is likely to gain strength.
Many airlines have to cancel or re-direct flights to and from Hai Phong city.
Vietnam Airlines will cancel two flights coded VN1192 and VN1193 between Hai Phong and Ho Chi Minh City, while Jetstar Pacific’s flights coded BL594 and BL595 connecting the two destinations will land and depart at Hanoi’s Noi Bai international airport instead of Cat Bi.
Vietjet Air also cancelled flight VJ732 from Nha Trang to Hai Phong and VJ284 from Ho Chi Minh City to Hai Phong late July 3 due to the typhoon.
Nike, H&M and Gap suppliers among those slowing expansion in Southeast Asian nation
Major apparel makers are halting or slowing their expansion in Vietnam amid worries that the trade war will indirectly push up labor costs as tech giants like Apple seek to shift production out of China. Reported by CHENG TING-FANG and LAULY LI, Nikkei staff writers.
For many of these companies — who supply some of the biggest brands in the world, including Nike, Adidas, Uniqlo and H&M — Vietnam is their biggest manufacturing base. But as Apple, Dell, Google and Amazon suppliers seek new production locations to avoid U.S. tariffs on China, competition for land and local talent is expected to heat up.
Makalot Industrial, a leading clothing producer for GAP, Walmart, Zara, and H&M, has said it will slow its expansion plans in Vietnam.
“More and more companies come to Vietnam … In the foreseeable future, we do foresee a shortage of labors and even fierce competitions in hiring staff there,” Makalot Chairman and CEO Frank Chou told the Nikkei Asian Review. For the apparel industry specifically, the best time to invest in Vietnam may have passed, Chou said, and companies will have to adjust to a tougher environment.
Vietnam is Makalot’s largest production base, accounting for 37% of its capacity. But Chou said the company will now focus on expanding more aggressively in Indonesia, which he expects to become Makalot’s most significant production base in three to five years.
Eclat Textile, Taiwan’s largest sportswear supplier whose clients include Nike, Under Armour and Lululemon, will stop expanding in Vietnam, Vice President Roger Lo told the Nikkei Asian Review. Lo said the company will look elsewhere for future expansion, but did not specify where.
“From this year, we will not add capacity to our Vietnam site and we are still looking for other countries to make further investments,” he said. Currently, most of Eclat’s production is located in Taiwan and Vietnam.
Thanks to its population of 95 million and its geographical proximity to the world’s second-largest economy, Vietnam has long been a popular destination for textile and shoemaking companies hoping to seek lower production cost and a young workforce outside of China. Makalot currently only has 4% of production left in China, while Eclat Textile closed down its last Chinese factory by the end of 2016. Pou Chen, the world’s largest contract footwear maker, has also scaled back its Chinese manufacturing over the years, from 29% in 2014 to 13% in the first quarter of 2019 in terms of total shipments.
However, the minimum wage in Vietnam has risen over the last 10 years from 1 million Vietnamese dong ($43) a month to 4.18 million dong per month in 2019, according to the government, although this is still lower than China. The Vietnamese government also requires all manufacturers to raise wages by more than 10% each year. Most foreign companies already offer much higher than the base pay, while the total compensation package should also include insurance as well as other employee benefits and bonuses.
Despite rising labor costs, Vietnam has been one of the beneficiaries since trade war between the world’s two largest economies began. The Southeast Asian nation’s exports to the U.S. increased 38% on the year in the first four months of 2019, and more tech companies like Apple, Dell, Google and Amazon are considering shifting to the country to avoid the tariffs.
But the production shift from China to Vietnam could make the country the next target for U.S. President Donald Trump, as he hinted last Wednesday that he might impose tariffs on Vietnamese goods. “A lot of companies are moving to Vietnam, but Vietnam takes advantage of us even worse than China. So there’s a very interesting situation going on there,” Trump said during an interview with Fox Business.
Ethan Harris, head of global economics at Bank of America Merrill Lynch, said there is a “high risk” that the U.S. will target Vietnam with tariffs.
“I would say the number one target will be Vietnam,” Harris told reporters during a Tuesday conference call, citing “a very rapidly growing bilateral surplus” along with factors such as the country’s communist rule, state-directed credit and managed currency trade.
Helen Qiao, chief greater China economist and head of Asia Pacific economies at the bank, downplayed the notion of a rapid manufacturing exodus from China, citing constraints in other Asian economies.
“We think the whole process is probably slower than people generally expect,” Qiao said.
Nevertheless, a spokesperson for Pou Chen, the sports footwear empire behind Nike, Adidas and most other famous international brands, told Nikkei that the cost of land in Vietnam is rising every year and shows no signs of turning back. “For the long run, we don’t think there is much room left for our Vietnam capacity and employees there to continue to grow.”
For all 2018, Pou Chen produced 46% of its total 326 million pairs of shoes in Vietnam, its largest manufacturing base. That figure fell to 43% for the January-March period in 2019. In Indonesia, production rose from 37% last year to 41% for the first quarter this year.
Simply shifting production, however, is not the answer, according to the spokesperson.
“It does not mean we need to definitely move to somewhere else beyond Vietnam, which is not realistic, but it means we have to transform ourselves with automation to reduce labor uses in the long run to stay competitive. We will also adjust our capacity flexibly.”
An executive at another Taiwanese shoe manufacturer, which has been investing in Vietnam for more than 20 years, voiced a similar opinion.
“We are indeed a bit worried that all those tech companies coming to Vietnam could increase recruitment costs and make it hard for us to recruit labors, but you can’t always look for countries with cheaper wages as solutions.”
The executive said his company is aware that many companies from traditional sectors are looking at Cambodia, Indonesia and other lower-wage countries outside of Vietnam. However, the overall labor quality, working efficiency and infrastructure in Vietnam are still competitive for the shoemaking industry despite labor costs rising by at least 10% annually, per regulations. “The costs are rising. But we could invest in automation, better management to increase production efficiency. It is not easy to find efficient workers elsewhere.”
Simon Shen, president of New Kinpo Group, a supplier of Dyson, Casio and HP, told Nikkei that Vietnam’s current population simply cannot accommodate a massive production shift from China. “It’s a bit overheated in Vietnam,” Shen said. “U.S. President Trump also hinted that he is considering imposing tariffs on Vietnam. Companies that are betting big there may need to think twice.” New Kinpo Group has manufacturing sites in the Philippines, Thailand, Brazil and China.
“Companies in traditional industries will be squeezed as tech companies are also heading to Vietnam,” said Karen Ma, an analyst specializing in emerging markets at Hsinchu-based Industrial Technology Research Institute. “Meanwhile, the cost of expansion there will definitely become much more expansive. … Most of these existing players in the textile and footwear industry will face a dilemma: Where should they go if they are leaving Vietnam? Currently, there are not many choices for them left in the region as Laos and Indonesia have not yet reached Vietnam’s level in terms of infrastructure and quality of the workforce.”