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Vietnam Ramps Up Trade Talks Amid Economic Uncertainty
Things don’t seem to be looking that good for Hanoi.
The Diplomat | 7 October 2016
Just over a year
ago, Vietnamese bureaucrat Phung Quoc Hien issued a rare warning, arguing “any
changes in the global economy would have huge impacts on developing countries
like Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia and Myanmar.”
As head of the
Vietnamese National Assembly’s Committee for Finance and Budget, Hien’s
comments were worth heeding and delivered as China’s stock markets and its
currency, the yuan, went into a tailspin amid collapsing commodity prices and
escalating debt.
It was important
on many levels. Economic forecasts like this are unusual from Vietnam; it is
still a secretive one-party, communist state and these comments were well
thought-out, not without foundation, and are proving quite accurate.
In recent weeks,
Cambodia has announced that foreign
direct investment (FDI) from Vietnam has collapsed to zero in the first six
months of this year. It was a shocking result and, rubbing insult into the
trade wounds, the Cambodian government announced soon after that
all foreign investment was down 43 percent for the same period.
“Of course, it
will make us concerned. Due to this, we have to carefully monitor the declining
trend in order to know exactly what’s happening. From the look of things, it’s
not good.”
Vietnamese trade
delegations have since embarked on an intense regional tour designed to shore
up trade. In the process a series of further warnings have been issued.
Laos was told by
the Vietnamese that Hanoi was reviewing the “implementation of cooperation
agreements in the fields of energy, mineral resources and industry, in order to
make timely adjustments to those agreements.”
Like Hien’s
initial comments the Vietnamese review was buried in a rather drab piece of
reporting which followed the tour, led by Deputy Prime Minister Trịnh Đình Dũng and his Lao counterpart Sonsay Siphandone.
The official
Vietnamese press also reported that the two sides discussed measures to
remove difficulties for Vietnamese investment in Laos, a common thread in talks
with Cambodia and Myanmar as well.
A 72-strong
delegation, headed by Nguyen Thi Kim Ngan, Chairwoman of the Vietnamese
National Assembly, toured Cambodia for a round of talks but behind the official
pleasantries and backslapping Phnom Penh was asked to “support and protect”
Vietnamese companies in Cambodia.
It was similar to
the line trotted out a month ago in Myanmar by Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc,
who urged State Counselor
Aung San Suu Kyi to create the best possible conditions for Vietnamese
businesses in the country, particularly in real estate, banking, telecommunications,
aviation, mining, tourism, and agriculture.
It was an
ambitious agenda for the Vietnamese, but one that masks a redefining and
shoring up of its trade ties with its neighbors, which is occurring because the
regional economic outlook is grim and it is a plight that is being widely
blamed on a global economic slowdown, particularly in China.
China has long
been the engine of economic growth across the region. But the days of 20
percent annual export growth enjoyed by ASEAN countries ended with last year’s
stock market rout.
It is not
uncommon for major stock market corrections to take 18 months to two years
before the full impact is felt in the general economy.
And Hien’s
warning was delivered 15 months ago during a workshop for delegates from
Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, and Myanmar that was designed to “share experiences in
financial management” and help all four countries to meet appropriate
legislative requirements.
That could matter
over the short term. There are concerns the current economic malaise will match
the 1997/98 Asian Financial Crisis or the 2008 Global Financial Crisis.
In both financial
crises, Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, and Myanmar escaped relatively well. Twenty
years ago their economies were far less developed, while eight years ago the financial
calamity was largely worn by the United States.
This time around,
all four countries have much more to lose and the epicenter in China is much
closer to home.
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