World Bank: Vietnam among world’s top 10 remittance recipients in 2017

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Vietnam was listed among the world’s top 10 recipients of remittances in 2017, according to the latest report by World Bank.

Vietnam received approximately 13.8 billion U.S. dollars in 2017, up 16 percent on-year, ranking the 8th in the world, based on a report of Vietnam News Agency on Friday, citing the Migration and Remittances report.

Last year, up to 60 percent of the remittances to Vietnam came from the United States, while Europe accounted for nearly 20 percent of the sum. Other major sources included China, South Korea and Japan.

Ho Chi Minh City remained the biggest recipient of remittances in Vietnam, with the inflows estimated at 5.2 billion U.S. dollars, up 4.5 percent. In the first quarter of this year alone, the city received over 1.1 billion U.S. dollars, up 4.5 percent.

According to analysts, Vietnam’s rapid economic growth and improved business environment have enhanced investors’ confidence and attracted remittances into the country.

Remittances to Vietnam hit 13.2 billion U.S. dollars in 2015, but tumbled to 9 billion U.S. dollars in 2016 before bouncing back last year.

- Source: VNS, edited by Vietnam Insider

Smart Money stays on Vietnamese growth

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Vietnam’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) expanded by 6.81 per cent in 2017, marking its highest growth rate in a decade. The country continues to storm ahead this year, with the economy growing by 7.38 per cent in the first quarter – one of the fastest rates in Asia – and total growth is expected to be in the region of 6.7-6.8 per cent (the former as targeted by the National Assembly) for the year. It could even hit 7.1 per cent, according to the Asian Development Bank.

Looking ahead, the Vietnamese Government is seeking to maintain the country’s growth spurt until 2020, with Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc having spoken of moves encouraging private companies – which currently account for 43 per cent of GDP – to grow and boosting investment into rural areas.

Industry and construction are the engine rooms of this growth. Việt Nam’s competitiveness on wages, high labour productivity and a young population noted for a “can-do” attitude means it has proven particularly attractive as an “offshore” manufacturing hub.

An electrified economy

Having started out in labour-orientated manufacturing, Việt Nam has made huge progress with technology-intensive work, most notably electronics. Those with an outmoded perception of the country may be surprised to learn that Việt Nam is ranked 18th among the world’s fastest-growing electronic exporters (mainly of finished goods, rather than just components like other countries) and that high-tech products have contributed around a quarter of GDP for several years now.

Smartphones are a huge part of this story, with Samsung’ factories being a case in point. Employing some 170,000 people, Samsung accounted for almost a quarter of Việt Nam’s total exports last year. But the boost the South Korean electronics giant has wrought for Việt Nam has been far reaching. As might be expected, its Thai Nguyen factory alongside its sister facility in Bắc Ninh Province have transformed the fortunes of the locations in which they are based. Whole service economies have sprung up to feed, entertain and accommodate their workers and executives, along with whole networks of suppliers to the factories themselves, making these provinces among Việt Nam’s richest. Thus, growth begets growth.

Outward-looking and open

Samsung is just one example of how Vietnam is welcoming foreign industry since the country first opened up to it in 2015, most notably entering a trade pact with South Korea. Since then, the country has rapidly become remarkably outward-looking and open to free trade, with a deal soon to be inked with the European Union and Việt Nam being a founding member of the Trans-Pacific Partnership.

As savvy fund managers all over the world know, all this means that Việt Nam has a lot going for it as an investment prospect. Currently, investing in securities is looking very attractive indeed. Last year, the VN and HNX indexes soared by 48 per cent and 46 per cent respectively, with momentum still strong. Those picking real stock-market winners are said to have seen returns of up to 300 per cent – figures that have equity investment firms in the world over paying attention. Booming economic growth also naturally leads to big real estate opportunities, with investors both domestic and foreign piling in.

Proactive on problem areas

Of course, Vietnam is not without its issues, but even here very positive moves are being made. Poverty levels have improved rapidly, but progress still needs to be made and youth unemployment can be high, particularly among graduates. Over-reliance on the caprices of foreign investment is not enough, while international funding is tapering off as the country’s economy grows. Dynamic, socially useful business, rather than charity, has to be prioritized alongside plugging the skills gap, and domestic entrepreneurship must be nurtured if growth is to be sustained. In response, the Vietnamese Government has set out ambitions of creating a vibrant “start-up nation”, with a million new enterprises being born by 2020.

With social enterprise a big focus and strong government support (such as creating a special kind of legal form), Việt Nam has created one of the most progressive ecosystems for these types of businesses in Southeast Asia. With this assistance, over 1,000 social enterprises have sprung up in Việt Nam and most are now thriving as registered companies. Many other countries, even in the West, must look on jealously at such progressiveness.

Vietnamese dynamism is evident in every aspect of the country’s economy and its merits extend far beyond merely having a young, cheap and plentiful supply of workers – although that is clearly playing a great part. Challenges remain, not least the rise of global trade protectionism sparked by China and the US. I am not alone in being hugely optimistic, however. Việt Nam has a rapidly-expanding middle class with aspirations to a Western lifestyle and all around I can see them getting there at ever greater speed.

There are a great many reasons why the smart money is staying on Vietnam’s further growth.

By Brian Spence, first posted on  VNS

* Brian Spence is Managing Partner of S&P Investments. He has over 35 years of experience in the UK financial services industry as an investment manager, financial planner, and M&A specialist. He is a regular contributor in the UK financial press and has a deep understanding of the financial services community. Brian’s column will reflect on all the challenges and opportunities within the Vietnamese market, bringing a fresh perspective to today’s hottest issues. The columnist’s email address is brian@sandpinvestments.com.

Investors excited by Vietnam

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Vietnamese stocks have produced the best gains in Asia so far this year, says John Reed in the Financial Times, with the benchmark VN Index up 17%. A flurry of flotations has helped drum up excitement, but investors have also been enticed by Vietnam’s ‘mini-China’ story”. It’s a communist state embracing the market and the global trading system, while “positioning itself as a hub for foreign manufacturing”.

The long-term outlook is compelling. Vietnam, “unlike some of its neighbour heading into a demographic slump”, has a young population driving demand for everything from beer to budget travel. As a result, the economy grew 7.4% at an annualized rate in the first quarter of this year. Its exports now exceed those of Indonesia, an economy almost five times its size.

However, being highly export-orientated is a risk given the mounting threat of protectionism and the risk of becoming embroiled in the US-China trade spat. It exports goods used in the production of items that China sells to the US, Steven Schwartz, senior director of sovereign ratings for Asia at Fitch Ratings, told the South China Morning Post. Still, higher US tariffs on Chinese products could also boost Vietnam’s appeal as a foreign investment destination, says Ngan Anh in the VNExpress International. MoneyWeek’s favorite Vietnam play, the Vietnam Opportunity Fund (LSE: VOF), is currently on a 20% discount to net asset value.

By: Alice Gråhns, first posted on MoneyWeek.com

Vietnam building more power plants as economic growth accelerates

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The Southeast Asian country is developing a wave of new power plants to support economic growth that is among the strongest in Asia.

HANOI: PetroVietnam Power Corp , or PV Power, has been granted government approval to build two gas-fired power plants in southern Vietnam at a total cost of nearly $1.5 billion, its parent company said on Thursday.

The Southeast Asian country is developing a wave of new power plants to support economic growth that is among the strongest in Asia. Vietnam’s gross domestic product grew 6.81 percent last year, faster than an expansion of 6.21 percent a year earlier.

Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc has given the go-ahead for the two facilities in the province of Dong Nai, state oil firm PetroVietnam, which holds a 51 percent stake in PV Power, said in a statement.

The Nhon Trach 3 and Nhon Trach 4 plants will have a combined capacity of 1,500 megawatts and will cost 33.3 trillion dong ($1.46 billion) to build, PetroVietnam said. They are scheduled to start generating in 2020 and 2021 respectively.

In a separate deal, Singapore’s Sembcorp Industries said its wholly-owned subsidiary, Sembcorp Utilities, on Thursday signed a memorandum of understanding with Vietnam to build another power plant in the country.

The 750-megawatt gas-fired power plant will be built in the central province of Quang Ngai, the company said in a statement, without providing the cost and time frame for building the facility.

PV Power, the second largest power producer in Vietnam after the state-run Vietnam Electricity group, said earlier this year that it was looking to sell 676.39 million shares, or a 28.9 percent stake, to strategic investors. The company’s shares were trading at 14,100 dong apiece on Thursday, potentially putting the value of the deal at $419 million.

The government raised $308 million selling a 20-percent stake in PV Power at an initial public offering in January. ($1 = 22,765 dong)

Source: Economic Times

Clergyman returns to northern Vietnam to be bishop

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Father Joseph Nguyen Duc Cuong will be the new bishop for diocese considered cradle of Catholicism in Vietnam’s north Clergyman returns to northern Vietnam to be bishop

Bishop Anthony Vu Huy Chuong (left) of Da Lat gives a zucchetto and cross to Bishop-elect Joseph Nguyen Duc Cuong at Bao Loc Church in Lam Dong Province on April 25 after the Vatican announced his appointment. (Photo courtesy of Thanh Hoa Diocese)

A Vietnamese clergyman is returning to the region of his birth to become bishop of a diocese considered the cradle of Catholicism in northern Vietnam.

The Holy See appointed Father Joseph Nguyen Duc Cuong as bishop for Thanh Hoa Diocese on April 25, said Archbishop Joseph Nguyen Chi Linh, president of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of Vietnam, via a statement.

All churches in the 86-year-old diocese rang their bells to welcome the nomination as soon as the Vatican made the announcement. For two years the diocese has not had a bishop. It had been vacant since Archbishop Linh — who previously served as the diocese’s apostolic administrator — was named as archbishop of Hue Archdiocese in October, 2016.

Archbishop Linh said Bishop-elect Cuong’s appointment is “good news” for the local church.

Bishop-elect Cuong was born in 1953 in Thanh Hoa Province. A year later he and his family — including nine siblings — fled communist persecution and relocated to Lam Dong Province in southern Vietnam’s Central Highlands.

Bishop-elect Cuong’s predecessors — the late Bishop Bartholomew Nguyen Son Lam and Archbishop Linh — both have their origins in Thanh Hoa Diocese, where Jesuit Fathers Alexandre de Rhodes and Pedro Marquez landed for the first time to begin their evangelization work in northern Vietnam on March 19, 1627.

Episcopal nominations

Episcopal nominations for dioceses in Vietnam need approval from the communist government. After three candidates are sent to the Holy See by a diocese, the Vatican negotiates with Vietnamese officials about which candidate is best suited.

It’s typically a lengthy process before both sides reach an agreement on the episcopal nomination.

In recent years, most episcopal candidates for northern dioceses have been from southern dioceses where clergy receive an education from foreign universities and colleges. Many of them, such as Bishop-elect Cuong, also have their origins from northern dioceses which they left for the south in 1954 to avoid persecution by the communists.

Many Catholics from Thanh Hoa Diocese relocated in Da Lat Diocese where they form at least six parishes and one congregation. Many priests and religious are from those parishes.

Bishop-elect Cuong studied philosophy and theology at seminaries in Da Lat in 1964-75 and served at a parish for 11 years before resuming studies at St. Joseph Major Seminary in Saigon (Ho Chi Minh City) in 1986.

After he was ordained a priest for Da Lat Diocese in 1992, he served at parishes, worked for the committee for doctrine of the faith, and furthered his studies at East Asian Pastoral Institute in Manila, the Philippines in 2012-13.

Prior to his nomination, Bishop-elect Cuong served as vice rector of Minh Hoa Seminary.

His episcopal ordination is scheduled for June 27 at the Cathedral in Thanh Hoa City.

Source: UCANews

Recovery of livestock strengthens Vietnam economy

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CPF report shows growth in Vietnam’s GDP for first quarter of 2018.

Vietnam is one of the countries within the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) with one of the fastest-growing economies in the world. For the first quarter of 2018, Vietnam’s gross domestic product (GDP) showed promising 7.4% growth, which will flourish its business throughout this year, according to a report from Charoen Pokphand Foods Public Co. Ltd. (CPF).

CPF is one of the first Thai companies that invested in Vietnam via CP Vietnam Corp. in 1988 and since then has become a large manufacturer for integrated agro-industrial and food products in Vietnam.

CPF said Vietnam has a vital role in its growth, thanks to the domestic consumption demand and its exports, which expanded more than 20% compared to the previous year as a result of Vietnam having a free trade agreement with European countries and the U.S. Moreover, 60% of Vietnam’s population is of working age and has become a driving engine for stable domestic consumption and spending. All of these have benefited businesses operating in Vietnam, CPF said.

In terms of agro-industrial sector, CPF sees a strong improvement from a year ago, especially regarding the sharp drop in hog prices due to an oversupply. Currently, hog prices have rebounded to VND 38,000-40,000/kg ($1.69-1.75 U.S.) from VND 20,000 (88 cents U.S.) in 2017.

Also at play is that the Vietnamese government has plans to increase its seafood exports, especially of shrimp. It is forecasted that Vietnam’s shrimp exports will increase from 690,000 tons in 2017 to 830,000 tons in 2018 and to 1.14 million tons by 2025. This will make Vietnam one of the largest shrimp producers in the world.

From its vision of being the “Kitchen of the World”, CPF expanded it businesses to 16 counties and is in the process of investing in the shrimp business in Brazil. The international businesses are an important growth driver, CPF noted. As of 2017, 64% of CPF’s revenue from sales was attributed to its international businesses.

CPF indicated that its growth strategies are aimed at adding value to its products by moving toward processed food products and to focus on international businesses growth, especially in countries with high potential and a population of more than 100 million people, such as Vietnam, the Philippines and India.

Source: Feedstuffs

Vietjet again says interested in overseas

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VietJet Aviation Joint Stock Co., which controls almost half of Vietnam’s domestic airline market, is considering to list its shares on an overseas stock exchange, its founder and CEO Nguyen Thi Phuong Thao mentioned during its shareholders’ meeting on April 26.

Thao said Vietjet has been receiving attention from some foreign stock exchanges including London, Hong Kong, Taiwan and Singapore. At present, the company, she said, is working on challenges related to listing overseas such as time zone differences and legal issues.

Le Nhi Nang, Representative of the State Security Commission in Ho Chi Minh City, said that Vietjet should consider an overseas listing, possibly Singapore. If successful, Vietjet will be the first Vietnamese company to officially trade overseas, he said. The plan for the 41 trillion-dong ($1.8 billion) low-cost carrier comes amid the government’s easing of rules to allow more foreign investment in one of the fastest-growing aviation markets.

Hanoi-based Vietjet received shareholder approval in April last year to boost its foreign ownership limit to 49 per cent from 30 per cent. Vietjet had raised $170 million through an IPO in 2016, attracting large buyers like BNP Paribas, Deutsche Bank and JP Morgan.

By Quynh Nguyen, First posted on Deal Street Asia

FPT Retail lists shares on HoSE

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FPT Retail, the digital retail arm of Vietnamese tech conglomerate FPT Corporation, on Thursday listed 40 million shares on the Ho Chi Minh Stock Exchange (HOSE) at VND 125,000 ($5.53) apiece, valuing the company at VND 5 trillion ($220 million).

FPT Retail’s shares will trade under stock code FRT. The retailer owns two retail chains: FPT Shop, which sells mobile phones, laptops and accessories from multiple brands, and F.Studio, which offers genuine Apple products and accessories.

FPT Retail has an 18 per cent share of the mobile phone retail market in Vietnam, after Mobile World (45 per cent).

In 2017, FPT Retail reached nearly VND13.2 trillion ($580.8 million) in revenue and VND290 billion ($12.7 million) in profit after tax, up 21 per cent and 40 per cent respectively year-on-year. The retailer is planning to expand its business with a foray into the $5-billion pharmaceuticals market.

Last year, FPT sold a 30 per cent equity interest in FPT Retail to Dragon Capital and VinaCapital. Currently, the three largest shareholders of FPT Retail are FPT Corporation (47 per cent), followed by Dragon Capital (20 per cent) and VinaCapital (15 per cent).

By Quynh Nguyen, first posted on Deal Street Asia

Vietnam morning news – April 27

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Estimated Reading Time: 5 minutes

Vietnam Building More Power Plants as Economic Growth Accelerates
PetroVietnam Power Corp, or PV Power, has been granted government approval to build two gas-fired power plants in southern Vietnam at a total cost of nearly $1.5 billion, its parent company said on Thursday (26/04).
— JakartaGlobe

To solve supply glut, no new sugarcane plants until 2020
Viet Nam will not build more new sugarcane plants between now and 2020, following a plan for the sugar industry’s development until 2020 with a vision to 2030.
— Bizhub

Vietnamese investors hit in ICO ‘scam’, but sentiment strong
Vietnam is the latest in the growing list of countries to be hit by ICO scams.
— Asia Times

Vietnam to Strengthen Cryptocurrency Legal Framework
Following an alleged fraud of VND 15 trillion (US$ 658 million) related to cryptocurrency that scammed 32,000 investors, the Prime Minister signed a directive asking the Ministry of Finance and the State Bank of Vietnam (SBV) to strengthen the management of cryptocurrency activities.
— Vietnam Briefing

Price of cashew nuts plummet as quality declines
The price of raw cashews in Binh Phuoc Province has fallen from VND29,000 (US$1.27) per kilo to VND12,000-14,000 per kilo, mostly due to poor quality, according to Tran Thi Yen, director of Bu Gia Map agricultural cooperative.
— Bizhub

First Logistics Development’s port to be unchanged until its licence expires
The container port operated by First Logistics Development JV, a major port located along the Saigon River, is not included on the list of ports to be removed by the Ministry of Transport released recently.
— VietnamNet Bridge

Vietnam Airlines and ST Aerospace sign deal to boost aviation operations
National flag carrier Vietnam Airlines and ST Aerospace has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) to provide component Maintenance, Repair & Overhaul (MRO) solutions.
— The Hanoi Times

Vietnam Woos Foreign Investors Despite Ongoing Political Purge
The political contentions and factionalism at the top of the Communist Party of Vietnam (CPV) have and will continue to catch isolated investors in the crosshairs in the coming year.
— Forbes

Hanoi urged to prioritise airport rail line
The capital city of Hanoi has been asked to pay attention to mobilising resources to build a rail line connecting the downtown area with Noi Bai Airport and accelerate the implementation of the project.
— Nhan Dan Online

Agricultural innovation needed for growth
Without a proper supply chain, Viet Nam’s agriculture may be in for a harsh winter.
— Bizhub

Labour Code revision opportunity to promote gender equality
Experts discussed effective strategies and interventions to solve gender discriminations present in the provisions of the current 2012 Labour Code during a workshop held in Hà Nội on Thursday.
— Viet Nam News

MARD announces ranking of agro-forestry-fisheries safety management
Thirteen localities have been marked as “good” in the ranking of agro-forestry-fishery product safety management in 2017 announced by the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (MARD).
— VietnamPlus

Vietnam Dealbook: FPT Retail lists shares on HoSE; Vietjet mulls overseas listing
FPT Retail on Thursday listed 40 million shares on the Ho Chi Minh City bourse while budget carrier Vietjet has again expressed interest in listing its shares on an overseas stock exchange.
— DealStreetAsia

Vietnam Airlines earns nearly 1.46 trillion VND in pre-tax profit in Q1
The Vietnam Airlines Corporation earned nearly 1.46 trillion VND (64.3 million USD) in pre-tax profit in the first three months of the year, 6.2 percent higher its set plan.
— VietnamPlus

Vietnam – Singapore agree joint venture on aircraft maintenance
A Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to establish a joint venture between Vietnam Airlines and Singapore Technologies Aerospace Ltd (ST Aerospace) was signed on April 26.
— Nhan Dan Online

Ministry of Health plans to cut more than 1,150 business conditions
Deputy Minister of Health Nguyen Thanh Long has said that his ministry is planning to abolish 1,151 of the total 1,680 business conditions, equivalent to 68.51%, and reduce 168 of the 338 administrative procedures, accounting for 49.7%.
— Nhan Dan Online

Viet Nam start-ups need more investment
Despite strong growth, investment into innovative start-ups in Viet Nam remains relatively modest compared to the region and the world.
— Bizhub

Recovery of livestock strengthens Vietnam economy
Vietnam is one of the countries within the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) with one of the fastest-growing economies in the world.
— FeedStuffs

Vietnam – South Korea Deepening Economic Ties
In March 2018, the Vietnamese President Tran Dai Quang met South Korean President Moon Jae-in in Hanoi, the capital of Vietnam.
— Vietnam Briefing

Vice President urges women to foster economic connectivity
Vietnamese Vice President Dang Thi Ngoc Thinh has urged women to take the lead in fostering economic connectivity and international cooperation and equip themselves with new skills and knowledge so that they are not left behind in the digital era and the fourth industrial revolution.
— Nhan Dan Online

Vietnam Rates Up for 5th Week; Currency Moves Weigh on India, Thailand
Rice export prices rose for a fifth straight week in Vietnam as demand remained robust and supplies thinned, but rates of Indian and Thai varieties dipped amid weakness in the local currencies of the top exporters.
— JakartaGlobe

LINA Network signs MoU with three Thailand groups
Three big Thailand-based agriculture groups on Wednesday signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with Vietnamese LINA Network to apply blockchain to make the source and quality of products transparent.
— Bizhub

All roads leading to HCM City airport gridlocked ahead of long holiday

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HCM CITY – Since Monday roads leading to HCM City’s Tân Sơn Nhất airport have clogged by traffic though the four-day weekend extending into Reunification Day (April 30) and Labour Day (May 1) does not begin till Saturday.

On Monday afternoon thousands of vehicles were stuck on Bạch Đằng and Trường Sơn streets up to Lăng Cha Cả roundabout for hours, causing traffic to spill over into nearby streets like Cộng Hòa, Hoàng Văn Thụ, and Trần Quốc Hoàn.

Motorbikes clambered on to the pavements as usual, worsening the situation.

Hoàng Mai of Bình Tân District told Thanh Niên (young people) newspaper that the traffic did not ease up until 8pm.

“As the holiday draws closer people will be rushing to the airport, and it surely will be worse.”

According to Bùi Xuân Cường, director of the transport department, roads near the airport are traffic hotspots since they are also gateways to south-eastern and south-western provinces.

The number of vehicles using these roads is increasing but traffic infrastructure is not keeping pace, he said.

A number of works to reduce congestion will be undertaken in the area in the next couple of years.

But out of a planned 15, only eight have been approved or begun so far, with one, the flyover on Trường Sơn and the road connecting Tân Sơn Nhất – Bình Lợi and the outer beltway (including Hồng Hà, Bạch Đằng and Phạm Văn Đồng streets) has been completed.

The first stage of an N-shaped flyover at the Nguyễn Thái Sơn-Nguyễn Kiệm roundabout in Gò Vấp District near the airport has opened to traffic, and the rest of it is expected to be completed some time this year.

Other plans include expanding and upgrading Hoàng Minh Giám, Hoàng Hoa Thám, Cộng Hòa, Trường Chinh and Tân Kỳ Tân Quý streets, but are awaiting land acquisition.

“There are many challenges in terms of land and capital [availability] but the city is speeding up work to complete the works on schedule to reduce congestion in this area,” Cường said.

In the meantime, to regulate traffic and ensure safety during the upcoming holidays, the city has stationed task forces at traffic hotspots near the airport to quickly handle problems and repair sinkages and other damages to streets.

Police officers are diverting traffic during peak hours in Tân Bình, Phú Nhuận and Gò Vấp districts and imposing severe penalties on people parking illegally on streets.—VNS

Tackling illegal pick-up/drop-off

The chief inspector of the city’s transport department, Trần Quốc Khánh, said the department would monitor Tân Sơn Nhất Airport, Sài Gòn Train Station, and the Eastern and Western bus stations to ensure safety and vehicle quality standards are not violated.

With lots of people travelling during the national holidays, the department will keep an eye out for buses picking them up illegally at non-designated locations, especially around Kinh Dương Vương Street in Bình Tân District, Điện Biên Phủ in Bình Thạnh District and Nguyễn Thái Bình, Phó Đức Chính and Võ Văn Kiệt streets in District 1.—VNS

Photo: Thanhnien.vn

Source: Vietnamnews

Tobacco control is losing ground

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Last week the Ministry of Health, allied with health experts and policymakers, called for an increase in the consumption tax on cigarettes. Their proposal was to have a flat-rate duty of VNĐ2,000 or US$.08 on a 20-pack of cigarettes.

To give readers some context, the health ministry called for a 100 per cent increase over what is being proposed by a draft law on Special Consumption Tax, which is to come into effect in 2020 and sets the tax at VNĐ1,000 or US$.044.

Taking into consideration other factors such as inflation, increase in income and purchasing power, the tiny tax proposed in the draft law is almost certainly doomed to fail its original purpose: to reduce the number of smokers. It is likely that by the time the draft law takes effect, a pack of cigarettes may cost less than what it does today in term of real purchasing power.

The proposal for a higher tax was a desperate call from the health sector, which has been struggling to keep up with the toll of tobacco abuse for years.

Nearly half of Vietnamese men—some 15 million people—are smokers. The country ranks among the world’s top 15 countries with the heaviest tobacco consumption, according to the Global Adult Tobacco Survey’s study. Among them, many are between 13-18 years old due to the relatively low price of cigarettes and the state’s failure to restrict the sale of cigarettes to minors.

An estimate by HeathBridge Canada, an international non-profit, non-governmental organisation, put the death toll for tobacco use in Việt Nam at 40,000 annually, roughly four times the number of people killed in traffic accidents in the country.

While great effort is being invested to lower the number of traffic accidents, not much is being done to prevent tobacco use, which is even deadlier.

There may be an explanation for that. Traffic accidents are graphically visible while patients dying on sick beds due to either smoking or second-hand smoking are hardly front-page material. The silent killer goes unnoticed.

Unless one has been living under a rock, in this day and age it’s easy to learn about all the adverse health effects that smoking may cause to one’s health; there have been numerous studies on how smoking may result in lung and throat cancers, heart complications and respiratory diseases.

However, the above-mentioned health risks don’t hold much sway in a smoker’s decision to continue the deadly habit, as the death caused by smoking is a slow one. Hitting their wallet seems to do the trick, though, as for every 10 per cent increase in the price of cigarettes the number of smokers decreases by 4 per cent in developed countries and 5 per cent in developing countries.

There are many successful examples of schemes in which countries managed to significantly bring down the number of smokers, most notably Australia where a pack of cigarettes may cost to up US$18. A report by the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare in 2016 found smoking had decreased by almost 50 percent in the past 20 years.

The Vietnamese tobacco industry never seems to fail in reminding the public that it is a large contributor to the State’s budget. What they do not tell you is how much larger are the medical bills we, as a society, are paying for smoking.

A report by 1,200 hospitals across the country in 2014 showed not only that smoking-related illness were crushing the health sector, but also that the cost of treatment for patients was estimated at over $1 billion dollars, or 0.55 per cent of the whole country’s GDP that year (US$186 billion).

World Health Organisation experts said the health and social toll of tobacco use may take up to 20-25 years to manifest in full form. If the health sector is being overwhelmed today as the result of the 1 billion packs of cigarettes consumed annually in the 1990s, then what nightmarish future awaits us in the next decades to come when 5 billion packs were consumed in 2013.

Researchers also pointed out that smoking is especially rampant among the poor. The money they spend on cigarettes could have brought food and education. Later, smoking-related diseases may bankrupt their financial savings, creating a never-ending loop of poverty and sickness.

Despite all that, the tobacco industry still can count on very powerful friends. The Ministry of Industry and Trade is the stoutest of its defenders. Almost without fail, the ministry will counter proposals to increase taxes on tobacco use with its fear of increased cigarette smuggling, even though studies on other countries in the ASEAN region such as Singapore and Thailand have shown little connection between higher taxes and increased smuggling.

Even if the ministry’s logic was with merit, by its own calculation, losses to State’s budget caused by cigarette smuggling amount to VNĐ6,000 billion ($263 million) a year, a fraction of the medical bills incurred by smoking-related illness. From an economic point of view, the logical conclusion here is that we should prioritise reducing tobacco use.

Yet the ministry stands with the tobacco industry anyway. As of now, the trade ministry is a major stakeholder of the Vietnam National Tobacco Corporation (VINATABA), which holds over 60 per cent of market share for tobacco products in Việt Nam. This double role of the trade ministry as a government executive body and a major corporation’s stakeholder leads to a potential conflict of interest with regard to policymaking.

VINATABA’s roster includes a number of local/regional tobacco companies located in different provinces. Not unlike the trade ministry, provincial governments are walking a tightrope: they must weigh tobacco firms’ contributions to provincial budgets and employment for locals against the health benefits of sterner measures to reduce smoking in their provinces.

Simply take a walk around the country’s major cities and the failure of our tobacco prevention programme is evident. One will almost choke on the smell of cigarettes in crowded cafés, restaurants, public transport and even government offices. It is a disturbing thought that we are all, our children included, victims of second-hand smoking on a daily basis.

At this rate, Việt Nam’s ambitious goal to reduce smoking to 39 per cent among men by 2020 is increasingly unlikely unless the Government acts fast and acts now. Public health should not be treated as an economic equation and our policies on the use of tobacco should clearly reflect that. — VNS

Source: Vietnamnews

577 Investment Corporation halts all business plans after Carina Plaza

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577 Investment Corporation has halted all business plans in order to focus on overcoming the consequences of the Carina Plaza fire and compensate victims.

On April 24, at the annual general shareholders’ meeting of 577 Investment Corporation (code: NBB), Doan Tuong Trieu, chairman of the corporation, expressed his concern for the victims of the fire and pleaded for shareholders to be sympathetic.

He also affirmed that the fire has caused significant damage to the developer Hung Thanh Co., Ltd. and its parent company 577 Investment Corporation.

He said that the corporation has halted all business plans to focus on fixing the building and spent VND21 billion ($0.93 million) compensating the families of victims, support residents to rent temporary accommodations, and cover vehicles damage.

The corporation has spent over VND11.1 billion ($0.5 million) repairing 41 cars and 363 motorbikes. The expenses needed to overcome the consequences and assist residents are estimated at VND60 billion ($2.64 million).

Meanwhile, the charter capital of Carina Plaza’s developer Hung Thanh Co., Ltd. is only VND45 billion ($2 million). Thus, these expenses have exceeded the capacity of this company and 577 Investment Corporation has to provide support.

Thereby, it will increase expenses and reduce the profit of the corporation in the several fiscal years to come. However, Trieu expressed that the company is still waiting for the final conclusions of the investigation agency to allocate responsibility for the fire. “The company will comply with the investigation conclusions and wrongdoers will have to take responsibility for their violations,” he stated.

The sharp decrease of NBB shares has directly damaged 577 Investment Corporation, which has lost 25 per cent of its value. In 2018, the corporation set the goal of VND850 billion ($37.45 million) in revenue and VND170 billion ($7.5 million) of profit. All business plans have been halted, as the corporation only focuses on project development.

In 2017, the corporation hit over VND1.117 trillion ($49.2 million) in revenue, including VND73 billion ($3.2 million) in after-tax profit.

By: Nguyen Huong

Source: VIR

Government urges caution against controversial “World Mission Society Church of God”

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With the mounting negative reports concerning activities from the controversial religious movement “World Mission Society Church of God” in the north of Việt Nam, the Government’s religion authority has called for alertness and advised not to equate the movement with other legitimate Protestant groups with similar names in the country.

Vũ Chiến Thắng, head of the Government Committee for Religious Affairs, said that the committee “is aware of and is keeping tabs on the Church of God’s movement.”

The new religious phenomenon that has drawn wide public attention in the recent weeks takes it root years ago with limited presence in the northern provinces of Hải Phòng, Quảng Ninh, and Thái Nguyên, but seems to have picked up speed in spreading to other localities in the country. Allegations of its cult-like conducts – including deceptive recruitment, questionable and manipulative indoctrination, preaching of doomsday sermons and that salvation from a higher being is only possible by following the group, donating cash, and abandoning own families – cropped up with increasing frequency on several media outlets and gained high view counts.

These allegations, however, need to be carefully investigated and verified, to determine “whether these activities are an organisational directive or just aberrant behaviours from certain individuals with ill intentions,” Thắng told Vietnam News Agency.

With that being said, head of the religious affairs committee affirmed that any illegal actions that violate religious freedom and faith, public ethics, order and safety, or pose risks to individual’s properties, health and life, as well as their honour and dignity, would be strictly punished in line with the law.

“The Vietnamese Government always respects and protects the right to freedom of religion and beliefs of all citizens, but does not allow abuse of those freedoms or exploitation of a belief or religion to violate the law,” reiterated Thắng.

When the reports on suspicious activities of the Church of God’s movement emerged, the committee already requested all provinces and cities involved to keep track of the situation and increase awareness amongst its population. The committee will also work closely with local governments to manage the situation.

According to Thắng, several religious leaders in the country have already been vocal in their condemnation of the dubious tactics of the so-called Church of God’s society.

“Despite being individual voices from religious leaders, it helps the public understand that the reported activities of this movement are in fact anti-religious. We welcome such statements; however, when voicing protests, we insist that religious leaders and religious groups maintain civility and avoid discrimination and defamation against legitimate religious groups,” Thắng said.

Previously, the education ministry and Youth Union have asked schools and educational institutions to deploy “information measures in various channels” to their students to resist the movement’s recruitment and immediately report suspicious activities to the schools’ managers.

Vietnamese law does not allow the use of the names of already existing and legal religious organisations to conduct evangelism, however, many people in recent times were led to falsely believe that the “World Mission Society Church of God” movement is by the Government-approved Protestant groups.

Protestantism, amongst the late arrival in Việt Nam, currently boasts a six-fold increase in the number of followers since the country’s reunification in 1975, with 1 million people from all walks of life participating in over 50 different denominations, the Voice of Việt Nam (VOV) reported.

Source: VNS

Oxygen sharp reduction blamed for fish deaths in Binh Phuoc

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Sharp reduction of oxygen is blamed for the death of over 20 tonnes of fish at Binh Ha 1 Dam’s reservoir in the southern province of Binh Phuoc’s Da Kia Commune since Monday.

Nguyen Minh Hai, deputy head of the provincial Livestock and Animal Health Division, said on Thursday that there were a lot of reasons leading to the oxygen severe reduction.

They might be an additional of household wastes discharging into the reservoir or climate change’s impacts, he said.

Previously, authorised agencies in Binh Phuocc took samples of dead fish to investigate the cause of the dead fish. The samples were being tested for finding out further causes, he said.

Fish owner Duong Van Cu, who had signed a contract with Binh Phuoc Irrigation Services Co., Ltd to hire the dam’s reservoir to breed fish, said he had seen several dead fish starting Monday night. The situation got worse in the next few days, with tonnes of fish found dead.

Cu said the dead fish were mainly freshwater catfish (Hemibagrus guttatus), weighing some 700gm to 3kg each, that he was harvesting.

Varieties of common carp (Cyprinus carpio) and silver carp (Hypophthalmichthys harmandi) were also found dead in the reservoir.

The initial losses from the fish deaths are estimated at VNĐ1.2 billion (US$52,600).

Cu said he had been breeding the fish in the reservoir for the past 13 years and this was the first instance of fish deaths.

The stink from the dead fish was reportedly bothering some 20 households living near the reservoir.

Ngo Van Duy, a resident in the area, said he and his neighbours helped Cu to take the dead fish out of the reservoir.

“We just wanted to get rid of the stink,” he said.

Local authorities too supported Cu in taking the dead fish from the reservoir to gardens so that they could be composted into fertilisers.

Source: VNS

Vietnamese acrobats likely to pull out of Britain’s Got Talent

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The Giang brothers circus acrobats are considering withdrawing from the Britain’s Got Talent TV show to prepare instead for a live show in Vietnam.

In an interview with Dantri/Dtinews after their impressive TV performance, the younger brother, Giang Quoc Nghiep, said they were very happy at the response from Vietnam and many other countries after the show.

The Giang brothers perform a head-to-head balance stunt at the Britain’s Got Talent 2018 on April 21

The 29-year-old circus artist said that they were reluctant when invited to participate in the Britain’s Got Talent TV show because they knew the show often priortised dance and music acts rather than circus performances.

“Another reason we weren’t eager was that we achieved a Guinness World Record, so a TV show seemed a too small stage for us,” Nghiep explained. “We also refused to participate in the American’s Got Talent before.”

However, the brothers were encouraged and supported by many artist friends including designer Nguyen Cong Tri, choreographer Tan Loc and music composer Tran Manh Tuan to take part in the show to introduce Vietnamese circus to an international audience.

“Based on this encouragement, we flew to Britian,” Nghiep continued. “We didn’t have much time to prepare and we didn’t set a target to win the competition. But we showed our acts and introduced about Vietnamese circus to international friends.”

Nghiep said that the judges had suggested they arrange a performance for the British Royal Family but they haven’t accepted due to their busy schedule in Vietnam at present.

“We’re also thinking of pulling out of Britain’s Got Talent as our purpose for joining this show was to introduce Vietnamese circus to more people but not to win that show. We want to focus on our live show which will be organised this June in Vietnam.

Source: dtinews.vn
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