Implementation Of Blockchain In Healthcare – A Gamechanger Methodology

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By Vikash Singh

This might seem a big statement to digest. But yes, Blockchain is actually transforming the healthcare sector.

The healthcare sector already experiencing technological advancement in each of its aspects. Whether it is a general hospital visit or collecting the reports for test samples, all has been completely transformed with the advent of digital medical applications.

Today, when the blockchain has been introduced to the industry, the entire healthcare sector has evolved and started looking forward to positive transformations interoperability opportunities.

Blockchain generally described as the technology development platform which deals in connecting the devices and applications using block system. As per a few surveys, understanding the Blockchain’s potential along with realistic implementation is a puzzle to solve.

Leaving the rumors behind, it’s the time to concentrate on the recent Deloitte report which states that Blockchain offers a set of transparency, capabilities, trust, disintermediation, smart contracts and auditability.

The statement created a buzz in the healthcare sector which ultimately compels the medical domain to analyze the possibilities to use blockchain in different healthcare implementations.

How healthcare service providers tackle gathered patients data through Blockchain?

Generally, all the healthcare records are stored in the in-house or cloud server are not easily available to anyone. The records merely are available for a few particular healthcare service providers. The information is not even provided to the associated patients. To make the records available to all the correspondents

So, blockchain is here to facilitate doctors, practitioners and most importantly the patients with a centralized database that doesn’t get breached by the hackers. This is the major reason which is making the Blockchain technology a game changer in the healthcare industry.
The way blockchain-based apps and devices seamlessly exchanged the data is quite impressive which again becomes the reason for its adoption to solve medical complications.

Substantial Benefits of Blockchain For Healthcare

The market is flooded with a myriad of healthcare apps to solve personal and professional purposes. Undoubtedly, the apps are robustly built and functionally sound but still, these are lacking somewhere when it comes to offering the healthcare world a well-connected, reliable and strong database accessibility.

Today, the users are smart and demand the advanced apps that not only make their healthcare journey hassle-free but also an exceptional experience. Blockchain technology is empowering patient care by developing robust devices that are ready to share, access and control the data in most exceptional and efficient ways.

With blockchain, one will get the facilities including

  • Integrity in database access where all the immutable data records are secured and also protected from the hackers.
  • Exceptional data security due to the decentralization of the database.
  • Personal data protection including patients identification data through well-known data encryption functionality of blockchain technology.
  • Real-time data access and updates on different networking channels.
  • System interoperability is the next big thing blockchain brought to the healthcare sector to enable data exchange and offer a universal global authentication method.
  • It’s true that information gathered from different IoT based apps or health monitoring devices can be seamlessly added to the chain to facilitate the associated parties.
  • The involvement of blockchain offered healthcare industry with hassle-free data management and that too without the intervention of third-parties.
  • Owing to full-fledged data management, blockchain based apps provide improved individual healthcare services.
  • Excellent quality and integrity of hospital and clinical data.

Ending Note:

Earlier the healthcare domain was facing the difficulty of database interoperability. To empower the entire medical industry, blockchain has brought a completely new model of patient data management. It’s become a trend among medical institutions to adopt the blockchain technology to offer patients and staff the facility to deal with the well-sorted and secured database.

If you’re from the healthcare sector and trying to get sorted and well-aligned database of your medical records, embracing blockchain technology for your venture would make a wise sense.

Harrison Wilkinson, famous British singer has died in Vietnam road accident

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Harrison Wilkinson, a 22-year-old British singer and songwriter, was coming to the end of a fortnight’s holiday with his girlfriend, Ella Greenwood, when he flew off the bike in the Danang area of Central Vietnam.

An inquest at Bradford Coroner’s Court heard Harrison sustained traumatic head injuries and was taken to hospital in Ho Chi Minh City but medics were unable to save his life. The court heard it was unclear what the object was.

Ella, a talented jazz pianist from Longwood also suffered injuries to her arms. She is now safely back in the UK.

Following Harrison’s death earlier this month his parents, Sam and Andrew Wilkinson of Lowerhouses told media how their eldest son was about to start a new job as a community support worker with Mencap, (a charity for people with mental disabilities), in Huddersfield.

Sam told media after his death: “One of his friends who came to see us said Harrison was wanting to do a festival for homeless people and we didn’t know anything about it. He just loved reaching out to people and trying to help them. He was much happier trying to solve other people’s problems rather than his own.”

According to WHO, approximately 14,000 people lose their lives in Vietnam each year as a result of road traffic crashes. Motorcyclists account for a high proportion (approximately 59%) of the road traffic collisions in the country. The majority of death and injuries on the roads are among those aged between 15 and 49 years – the group that makes up 56% of total population, and most economically active group.

WHO estimates that road traffic injuries are the leading cause of death for those aged 15-29 years in Vietnam. According to the recently published WHO Global status report on road safety, many of Vietnam’s existing road safety laws are either not comprehensive in their scope, or are poorly enforced. Vietnam is one of ten countries included in the WHO Road Safety in 10 countries project which will be conducted over 5-years by a consortium of six international partners.

Aeon establishes its largest shopping hubs in Ho Chi Minh City

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Aeon Co. Ltd of Japan has established one of its largest shopping hubs in Ho Chi Minh City of Vietnam to cater consumers with various high-quality products.

‘Aeon Mall Binh Tan’ is one of the largest shopping hubs in Ho Chi Minh City where the retail company provides a variety of original products used by consumers both for recreation and serious shopping.

“This hand soap is developed by Topvalu. The purpose of this product is mainly to improve the daily lives of Vietnam people. This product realizes a unique value to Vietnam,” said Mai Cat Phuong from Aeon Topvalu in Vietnam.

At the same time, the company had also considered the fact that living conditions differ in every country depending upon their geographical locations, features, and terrain.

For example, water in Vietnam is course and the soap developed in the country is according to the needs of the people. However, the soap only makes hair stiffer and the skin rough. Aeon’s product has been developed to solve the inconvenience faced by the people.

“Through the effort in the production process, we have been able to provide customers with high-quality products at affordable prices, contributing to the satisfaction of the people who bought Topvalu products,” said Nguyen Ngoc Nhu Mai from Aeon.

The company considers not only producing good quality products but also contributes to the improvement of living standards and consumer satisfaction.

(This story has not been edited by Vietnam Insider and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Why South Korean visitors to Vietnam booming?

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Vietnam has become an important tourist market of the South Korea with nearly 3.5 million Korean people visiting the Southeast Asian country in 2018. the Korea Tourism Organisation in Vietnam (KTO Vietnam) reports.

According to Park Jong-sun, head of KTO Vietnam, Vietnam’s well-known tourist sites, such as Ha Long, Hanoi, Da Nang, Hoi An and Phu Quoc, are much favoured by the RoK people, particularly middle-aged tourists.

Last year, the country welcomed approximately 3.5 million Korean visitors (22.58% of the total international arrivals to the Vietnam), up 44.3% against 2017 and ranking second among the markets bringing tourists to Vietnam.

In the first two months of 2019, South Korean tourist arrivals to Vietnam reached more than 772,000, an annual increase of 24.6%, said Ha Van Sieu, deputy head of the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism (VNAT).

South Korean visitors to Vietnam booming

The South Korea has been identified as one of the key tourist markets of Vietnamese tourism, the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism has been coordinating with the parties concerned to organise Vietnamese culture and tourism promotion activities in the South Korea.

In late January 2019, the VNAT signed a cooperation deal with the Vietnamese Tourism Ambassador to the Korean, which aims to strengthen the role and support of the ambassador in Vietnam’s tourism promotion activities in the country.

In addition, the KTO reported that nearly 500,000 Vietnamese tourists chose the Korea as their destination in 2018, surging by 41% compared to the previous year. So far this year, the South Korean Government has been implementing many measures seeking to attract more Vietnamese tourists to the country.

From February to May 2019, the KTO has organized a campaign advertising RoK spring tourism under the theme “Spring tourism in the South Korea – Feel the difference”, with the participation of 14 leading Vietnamese travel companies.

The campaign aims to introduce new and different destinations in the journey of exploring the South Korean spring to Vietnamese tourists.

Vietnamese ex-procuracy official indicted for molesting under 16-yo girl

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A former Vietnamese procuracy official has been prosecuted for molesting an under 16-year-old girl, after CCTV footage captured him groping the child inside an elevator in a Ho Chi Minh City apartment complex in early April.

The People’s Procuracy in District 4 officially charged Nguyen Huu Linh, 61, for sexually attacking the young girl, Duong Ngoc Hai, head of the municipal People’s Procuracy confirmed on Wednesday evening.

In accordance with Vietnam’s Penal Code, anyone convicted of molesting a child under the age of 16 faces up to three years in prison.

Officials in Ho Chi Minh City initiated legal proceedings against Linh in late April and placed him on house arrest at his residence in Hai Chau District, Da Nang, where he previously served as deputy head of the municipal People’s Procuracy until he retired in June 2018.

CCTV footage captured at 9:10 pm on April 1 appears to show Linh grabbing and kissing a young girl, estimated to be between five and seven years old, in an elevator in the Galaxy 9 apartment building in District 4, Ho Chi Minh City.

He was visiting a relative who lives at the apartment complex on the day of the incident.

Linh admitted to hugging and kissing the little girl during an interrogation by police officers, but said his actions were based on a combination of alcohol and how “adorable” the little girl was, rather than any sexual desire.

The victim’s family said that they would prefer criminal chargers not to be brought against Linh, instead stating they only wanted a formal apology, citing that the girl was not harmed.

Vietnamese law, however, allows police to overrule the family’s wishes and press charges if they see fit. In this situation, clear video evidence of the crime was enough to continue with their indictment.

A mass call for action to be taken against Linh ripped through the country after the video clip went viral on social media.

Since then, his house in Da Nang has been vandalized on several occasions and the words ‘child sex abuse’ were painted on the front gate.

The management board of the Galaxy 9 previously petitioned the municipal People’s Committee and People’s Procuracy to launch legal proceedings against Linh.

Source: Tuoitrenews

Huawei blockade by Google leaves Vietnamese customers, retailers on tenterhooks

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A gloomy future when Google would cut ties with Huawei has left both owners of the Chinese company’s smartphones and retailers in Vietnam on edge, with the customers fearing their devices will soon be bricked and mobile stores fretting over possible unsold stocks.

Vietnamese customers have taken to mobile retailers’ websites or physically visited their stores to seek consulting about the fate of their Huawei devices, despite a dramatic twist in the U.S.-Huawei fight that made global headlines earlier this week.

Google said on Sunday it would suspend business with Huawei in order to comply with Washington’s decision to ‘blacklist’ the Chinese company over spying concerns.

However, the U.S. Department of Commerce announced shortly thereafter that it had granted a 90-day grace period, during which mobile phone companies and Internet broadband providers are allowed to work with Huawei to keep existing networks online and protect users from security risks.

The exemption also allows Google to send software updates to Huawei phones which use its Android operating system through to August 19, business news channel CNBC reports.

Despite this new development of the story and an official statement from Huawei reassuring users that their devices will continue to receive updates, disgruntled users have taken to both social media and physical mobile stores, asking to receive support or be allowed to return their devices in the belief that the retailers have a legal obligation to take back the phones and pay them back.

Hoang Nguyen, who lives in Ho Chi Minh City’s BinhThanh District, bought a Huawei smartphone a few months back and now feels the amount of money he spent on the gadget will soon become nothing but a loss.

Nguyen and other users demand that mobile retailers give them some kinds of support, or had better take the handsets back and refund them, he told Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper.

But this is understandably something beyond the authority of Huawei distributors and retailers in Vietnam.

In fact, retailers and distributors of Huawei products in Vietnam are also like a cat on hot bricks, as they have yet to receive any guidance from Huawei regarding policies for unsold stocks and return demands by customers.

Dang Thanh Phong, PR and marketing manager of Vietnamese mobile retailer The Gioi Di Dong, told Tuoi Tre that the company understands customers’ concerns and is trying their best to ensure their rights and interests.

Nguyen Viet Anh, deputy general director of another local mobile retailer, FPT Shop, said the firm’s return policy applicable to products purchased within 30 days remains in effect for all devices, including those made by Huawei.

As sales of Huawei smartphones have slowed down in Vietnam following news of the Google ban, local mobile retailer CellphoneS has launched a campaign to persuade customers not to turn their back on the Chinese company.

Buyers of Huawei products bought at CellphoneS between May 21 and 31 are allowed to return their products within 30 days free of charge.

In the meantime, other consumers are waiting for a chance to buy Huawei premium smartphones at attractive prices, as many existing users have started to bargain away their handsets, while hoping that retailers will launch promotional campaigns with huge discounts to clear their Huawei stock.

But Huynh Thanh Phi, director of Leo Brothers, a media and communication company having experience in working with mobile phone brands, said such discount campaigns are beyond the bounds of possibility.

Source: Tuoitrenews

Vietnam and their trouble with goalkeepers

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With the King’s Cup approaching, the underwhelming performances of the national team’s goaltenders are putting their head coach in a tricky situation.
Coach Park Hang-seo will name his squad for the Thai tournament at the end of May. But the goalkeeper’s spot remains a tricky one for him with all three goalies in the national team facing questions about their club form.

Dang Van Lam, the main man, played superbly in the 2018 AFF Cup that Vietnam won and 2019 Asian Cup where the team entered the last eight. Thai club Muangthong United then bought him for $500,000.

But he has had a horror run at the club so far, conceding 19 goals in 11 matches. Muangthong United have lost seven matches, drew two and only won two. Last year they finished fourth in the table, but now they are last among 16 clubs, and on the verge of relegation.

Lam’s understudies in the national team are having bad runs in the V. League 1, the top professional football league in Vietnam.

The third-choice goalkeeper, Nguyen Tuan Manh, is playing for Sanna Khanh Hoa FC and his season has panned out eerily like Lam’s. He has also conceded 19 goals but in just nine games, and his team are rock bottom in the 14-club table.

Bui Tien Dung, the second goaltender, has fared even worse, if that were possible. He was Vietnam’s main goalkeeper at the 2018 AFC U23 Championship where the team were runners-up and 2018 Asian Games where they finished fourth. Since the 2018 AFF Cup he has lost his place to Lam.

Bui Tien Dung in a training in Asian Games 2018. Photo by VnExpress/Duc Dong

Dung has only played one game this season since joining Hanoi FC in January after losing his place in the team to Nguyen Van Cong. After a long time on the bench he finally got his chance o May 19 when the team played SHB Da Nang FC at home. The game ended with a 3-2 victory for Hanoi, but Dung didn’t perform well, conceding two goals, the first after he reacted too slowly to a free kick.

He admitted after the game: “I was looking forward to get onto the field and today the chance came. But I feel like I didn’t play well in this game. It was lucky the team still won.”

National coach Park might call on three other goalkeepers based on their league performance.

Cong must be first on the list. His splendid form was the reason Dung had been benched. He has conceded only eight goals this season. He played all of Hanoi FC’s matches last year and helped them win the V. League 1 trophy.

Nguyen Van Cong of Hanoi FC catches a penalty during a V-League match on March 6, 2019, securing his team’s 2-0 victory over Viettel. Photo by VnExpress/Lam Thoa

Tran Nguyen Manh of Song Lam Nghe An FC is another promising candidate, having conceded only five goals in nine matches so far. Nguyen Thanh Thang of Ho Chi Minh City FC is also in prime form conceding just six while his team is atop the table with seven wins and two draws.

Will Park continue to place trust in familiar names or opt to blood new faces? That question will be answered when the squad is announced.

The King’s Cup will be played early next month. Vietnam will face hosts Thailand on June 5 at 3:30 p.m. while India will take on Curaçao at 7:45 p.m. (local time) the same day.

Winners of both matches will meet in the final on June 8, while the two eliminated teams will play a third place playoff match the same day. All four matches will take place in the northeastern province of Buriram in Thailand.

Vietnam’s Next Media said it has acquired the Vietnam broadcasting rights for the event and is finding a broadcaster for the country’s two matches, which will be reported live on VnExpress International.

Source: Vnexpress

Panasonic joins firms stepping away from Huawei after US ban

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Japan’s Panasonic on Thursday said it would stop supplying some components to Huawei, joining a growing list of firms distancing themselves from the Chinese telecoms giant after a US ban over security concerns.

The announcement came a day after four major Japanese and British mobile carriers said they would delay releasing new Huawei handsets.

“We’ve stopped all business transactions with Huawei and its 68 group companies… that are subject to the US government ban,” Panasonic spokesman Joe Flynn told AFP.

“Yesterday an internal instruction to fully enforce that rule was issued,” he added.

Flynn said Panasonic’s business with Huawei includes the supply of “electronic parts,” but declined to provide further details.

Washington’s restrictions affect products made fully or partially in the United States, where Panasonic manufactures some of the components it supplies to Huawei, the Japanese firm said.

A Panasonic official declined to comment on what business the Japanese firm would continue to do with Huawei, though reports said the suspension would have a limited impact.

Last week, US President Donald Trump declared a national emergency to bar US companies from using foreign telecoms equipment deemed a security risk.

The move appeared aimed at Huawei, though the White House said no particular company or country was targeted.

It has prompted a parade of firms to step back from dealings with Huawei, including US internet giant Google, whose Android operating system powers most of the world’s smartphones.

And on Wednesday mobile carriers in Japan and Britain said they were delaying releases of Huawei handsets.

– Temporary suspensions –

Telecoms giant EE, owned by BT, was due to bring Huawei’s first 5G phone, the Huawei Mate 20X, to Britain, but the Chinese giant’s involvement in the country’s telecoms sector has become politically controversial.

EE chief executive Marc Allera said the company had “paused” the launch of Huawei’s 5G phones “until we get the information and confidence and the long-term security that our customers… are going to be supported”.

The group also said it would phase out the use of Huawei equipment in the most sensitive “core” elements of its network infrastructure.

Vodafone soon followed suit, announcing a “temporary” suspension of pre-orders for Huawei handsets, “while uncertainty exists”.

The BBC also reported that British firm ARM, which designs processors used in most mobile devices and makes products that contain “US-origin technology,” is set to cut ties with Huawei

ARM staff were told to suspend “all active contracts, support entitlements, and any pending engagements” with Huawei, according to internal documents seen by the BBC.

Huawei said Wednesday that it recognised “the pressure” placed on its suppliers, and that it was “confident this regrettable situation can be resolved.”

‘A sense of safety’

In Japan, KDDI and SoftBank Corp, the country’s number-two and number-three carriers respectively, said they too were delaying the release of Huawei handsets to assess the impact of the US ban.

“We are currently trying to confirm if our customers will be able to use the equipment with a sense of safety”, SoftBank spokesman Hiroyuki Mizukami told AFP.

And the country’s biggest carrier, NTT Docomo, said it was suspending pre-orders for a new Huawei handset, but stopped short of halting the release.

Trump’s order effectively bans US companies from selling Huawei and affiliates the critical components that have helped it grow into the world’s largest supplier of telecom networking equipment and second-biggest smartphone maker.

US officials this week, however, issued a 90-day stay on the ban, saying breathing space is needed to avoid huge disruption.

The US Commerce Department has also announced an effective ban on US companies selling or transferring US technology to Huawei.

Analysts say the restrictions could be seriously damaging for the Chinese firm, with the pullback by Google and ARM likely to be “particularly troubling” for the telecoms giant.

“How the US ban on business with Huawei will impact the Chinese firm’s performance is at this point unclear, but what is clear to me is that its sales will be negatively affected,” said Hiroyuki Kubota, an independent financial analyst.

Washington has long suspected deep links between Huawei and the Chinese military, and its moves against the company come amid the churning trade dispute between the world’s top two economies.

The issue has also been the source of heated controversy in Britain ever since a leak from the country’s National Security Council last month suggested the government was planning a limited role for Huawei in its 5G network.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo warned Britain during a visit to London that it risked undermining the historic allies’ intelligence sharing.

Source: AFP

Online liquor sales to go ahead in Vietnam

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Vietnam has removed a proposed decree to prohibit online liquor sales, accepting that it goes against international trends.
The bill, proposed by the Ministry of Health last year, would have prohibited online sales of beverages with alcohol content of more than 15 percent.

But legislators got into heated debate over this regulation, with critics saying that it would go against international trends and challenge e-commerce development.

The National Assembly (NA) Committee for Social Affairs on Thursday said it has removed the decree after listening to legislators’ views.

Some new changes have been made in the latest version of the bill. The advertisement of beverages with less than 15 percent alcohol content will now be allowed on TV and radio.

However, these advertisements must not be carried between 7-8 p.m. every day.

The bill is set to be discussed and voted on at the end of the ongoing National Assembly session.

Alcohol, especially beer, is widely consumed in Vietnam. Data collected by the Ministry of Health shows Vietnamese citizens consumed 305 million liters of liquor and 4.1 billion liters of beer in 2017, making it the biggest alcohol consumer in Southeast Asia and third biggest in Asia after Japan and China.

Source: Vnexpress

Ho Chi Minh City to pilot double-decker tour in downtown

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The Ho Chi Minh City Department of Transport has plans to trial a tour around the downtown area on open-top double-decker buses, a tourist activity that has been carried out in Hanoi since mid-2018.

The proposal came from the Vietnamtourism-Hanoi JSC, which said it would be in charge of implementing the pilot program if approved, according to the municipal transport department.

Tourists will be able to hop on and off the open-top double-decker buses at multiple stops across the city center, namely the Nha Rong (Dragon) Wharf on Nguyen Tat Thanh Street, Ho Chi Minh Campaign Museum on Le Duan Street, War Remnants Museum on Vo Van Tan Street, and along such streets as Ton Duc Thang, Pham Ngu Lao, Truong Dinh, and Cong Xa Paris.

The Vietnamtourism-Hanoi JSC previously suggested that the first and final destinations of the bus tour be situated on Nguyen Hue Pedestrian Street.

The transport department, however, wanted the two terminals to be placed at the Municipal Theater, not too far from Nguyen Hue, which is a busy street.

The tour is expected to be available between 9:00 am and 4:30 pm daily.

The plan must also take into consideration the safety of people on the upper deck as electric and telecom wires along local streets have yet to be completely put underground, the transport department said.

While showing support for the plan proposed by Vietnamtourism-Hanoi JSC, the transport department fell short of elaborating on when the pilot program would be initiated.

Under a central government-backed plan, Ho Chi Minh City is among seven Vietnamese localities where an open-top double-decker bus tour is allowed to be piloted, aside from Hanoi, Da Nang City, Quang Nam Province, Thua Thien-Hue Province, Lam Dong Province, and Kien Giang Province.

Such a tour was officially launched in Hanoi in late May 2018, following a successful test run since July 2017.

The three buses run between 9:00 am and 5:00 pm every day on famous streets in the Vietnamese capital, passing 30 local places of interest like Hoan Kiem Lake, the Vietnam National Museum of Fine Arts, and the Hanoi Opera House.

According to a report on Tuoi Tre

Petrolimex planning to open convenience stores at gas stations

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The Vietnam National Petroleum Group (Petrolimex) is planning to open convenience stores at its gas stations across the country.

It has more than 5,000 gas stations at present, nearly half of which are directly run by the firm, while the remaining are franchised.

At a shareholders’ meeting last April, Petrolimex Director General Pham Duc Thanh said the plan needs thorough consideration because the group’s gas stations currently only sell its own products like insurance, lubricants and liquid detergents.

In 2017, Petrolimex opened a convenience store named P-Mart at a filling station in Hoai Duc district of Hanoi, selling lubricants, detergents, beverages and processed food, among other items.

However, this model hasn’t been expanded as yet.

Thang said Petrolimex is working with Japan’s JX Nippon Oil to seek integrate services with gas stations.

According to a report on VNA

Insurance market keeps growthing in first months of 2019

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Vietnam’s insurance industry maintained positive growth in the first four months of 2019, with total premiums surging by 17 percent year-on-year to $1.9 billion, the Ministry of Finance reported.

Besides maintaining a high growth rate, the financial status of insurance firms also improved in the period with total assets rising by 21.4 percent to 401.9 trillion VND (17.17 billion USD).

During the period, insurance companies re-invested 328.7 trillion VND (14.04 billion USD) into the economy, marking a rise of 26.5 percent year-on-year.

Insurers also paid out 12.5 trillion VND (534 million USD) to customers, surging 31.2 percent compared with the same period last year.

According to the Ministry of Finance’s Insurance Supervisory Authority (ISA), the insurance industry is targeting a growth rate of 20 percent this year.

Experts remain upbeat about the industry’s health in the coming years, forecasting that it will maintain an annual growth rate of 10-20 percent.

Many banks that cooperate with insurers to provide bancassurance products even expect an annual growth rate of up to 30-40 percent.

The ISA reported that the country has 64 insurance companies, including 30 non-life insurers, 18 life insurers, two reinsurance companies and 14 insurance brokerage companies.

There are up to 850 non-life insurance products and 450 life insurance products sold on the Vietnamese market.

According to a report on VNS

Vung Tau to create more open, public spaces near beaches

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Vung Tau City will create more open, public spaces near beaches, with roads leading to the sea from different directions following the city’s plan for 2035.

According to the plan, which has been adjusted by the prime minister, the city will be divided into seven areas, covering over 15,000 hectares.

The city is forecast to have a population of 500,000-520,000 by 2025. The figure will reach 620,000-650,000 in 2035, doubling the current population. More public spaces are being planned as a result of the increasing population.

These public spaces will include Long Son Island, which will become the oil and gas heart of the country; Go Gang Island, where a new urban area connected with Go Gang Airport and an ecological urban area associated with a mangrove forest will be developed; and the northern Phuoc Thang region, which will form a new urban area.

The four remaining areas comprise the industrial zone-port region, to be used for maintaining the existing ports and industrial zones; the existing residential area for upgrading, embellishing and redesigning the urban area; the northern part of Vung Tau, which will be the city’s new administration center; and the coastal Chi Linh-Cua Lap region, to be developed into a complex comprising resorts, accommodations, golf course and commercial services.

The zoning plan focuses on protecting the natural landscape and opening more public spaces at beachside locations.

Under the plan, the construction of the city’s administration center, which is set to cover 14 hectares, is expected to modernize northern Vung Tau.

According to a report on SGT

Traditional groceries upgrade to exist in 4.0 era

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The hot development of modern retail channels are threatening variety stores and traditional markets.

According to Nielsen, Vietnam has 1.4 million groceries and 9,000 traditional markets, holding 75 percent of the retail market share with revenue of $10 billion a year.

Vo Tan Thanh, director of VCCI (Vietnam Chamber of Commerce and Industry) HCMC Branch, cited a report of the General Statistics Office (GSO) as saying that retail turnover was $143.3 billion in 2018 and predicted that the figure would be $160 billion by 2020.

Meanwhile, according to Kantar Worldpanel, traditional retail channels now satisfy 85 percent of people’s demand. Nine out of every 10 surveyed consumers, or 92 percent, said they prefer buying essential goods at groceries.

However, though still dominating the retail market, traditional markets now feel pressure from modern retail chains. VinMart, Circle K, FamilyMart, Co-op Smile, Satrafoods and Bach Hoa Xanh are present in every residential quarter and satisfy people’s daily essential needs.

There are many problems that traditional groceries have to solve. They have to find suitable solutions to offline and online sale management support and omni-channel inventory management. They need to complete orders quickly and make this manageable on mobile platforms.

There are many problems that traditional groceries have to solve. They have to find suitable solutions to offline and online sale management support and omni-channel inventory management. They need to complete orders quickly and make this manageable on mobile platforms.

The death of the G7 March chain developed by Trung Nguyen with reportedly huge capital of trillions of dong shows the difficulties in ‘modernizing’ traditional groceries.

Experts said there are many sale management software products available for GT (general trade) groceries.

Sapo X provides software that manages the sale at shops and chains. KiotViet, utilizing cloud computing, allows accessing sales data anywhere and at any time. Some days ago, BB Vietnam launched BBLink, a distribution platform.

According to Vincent Lu, strategic director of BBLink, the problems of traditional retail channel are high initial investments, high operation costs, and difficulties in distribution efficiency measurement.

Offering solution to the problems, BBLink is suited to traditional groceries and sales agents throughout the country.

A representative of Sapo X said once business activities can be synchronized, businesses would be able to cut 30 percent of management costs and 70 percent of system building.

He said the retail industry has been changing rapidly all over the globe, including Vietnam, where buyers use different internet connecting devices. Therefore, sellers need to be present on many channels to access more clients.

Nguyen Ngoc Dung from Vecom noted that modern retail channels such as websites and e-commerce marketplaces are developing strongly but they only make up 20 percent of total turnover.

The development of multitasking distribution platforms at traditional retail channels is needed.

According to a report on Vietnamnet

Concern of foreign direct investment in Vietnam has been raised

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The ongoing trade war between U.S – China, the world’s two largest economies have also prompted Chinese investors to look to Southeast Asia, especially Vietnam, complicating its FDI scenario and threatening to impact its businesses.

Vietnam’s Lawmakers urged the Government to devise plans to deal with the possible ramifications of the escalating US-Iran tensions and US-China trade war and the influx of foreign direct investment into Vietnam at National Assembly meeting on May 22, 2019 to discuss a Government report on socio-economic development.

Citing a Ministry of Investment and Planning report which shows that in the first four months of this year, FDI from China increased 241 per cent year-on-year, Hoang Van Cuong, a house member from Hanoi, said the Government should have a clear orientation on approving investments.

Related: Company Registration in Vietnam

Given the increasing number of medium- and large-sized Vietnamese companies shutting down in recent times, the local private businesses might face stiff competition from foreign businesses and the Government’s policy to promote private sector would flounder, Cuong said.

More than half of the 16,000 registered FDI businesses in the report ostensibly made losses but continued to expand their business or plan to do so, highlighting the need for stricter oversight of the sector, he said.

Read more: How to set-up a Limited Liability Company in Vietnam as foreign investor

Pointing out that investments made by certain countries are even lower than those of local businesses, he questioned the need to attract FDI indiscriminately and called for prioritizing hi-tech industries and creating value chains involving both FDI and local businesses.

On the other hand, the Vietnamese private sector should find new drivers of growth by producing “global values” instead of relying on exploitation of natural resources or real estate, he said.

According to VNS, many National Assembly deputies also expressed doubts about achieving the Government’s inflation target, given the recent electricity price hike and uncertainties in the oil market as a result of the US-Iran tensions.

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