As Donald
Trump prepares to kill the Trans-Pacific Partnership, the 12-nation trade pact
is helping to spur the biggest overhaul of Vietnam’s economy in decades.
The Communist government in Hanoi plans to push ahead with more than 30
separate pieces of legislation proposed to comply with the trade deal,
including rules on labour, business, foreign trade, and small-and-medium
enterprises. Since a new Constitution was adopted in 2013, Vietnam’s lawmakers
have passed more than 100 laws – a scale of change unseen since the nation
introduced the market-oriented doi moi reforms in the 1980s.
We still have to make sure we
are able to compete with foreign rivals because Vietnam is more and more
integrating into the global economy
Vu Thi Thuan, chairwoman
of Traphaco JSC
“We will continue carrying out what we’ve planned to do,” said Nguyen
Duc Kien, deputy head of the Vietnam National Assembly’s economic committee.
“It’s the technologies and corporate governance that we need to improve. It’s
crucial.”
Vietnam has long been seen as one of the biggest potential winners from
the TPP, with increased market access for everything from clothing to
electronics to footwear. The deal also stood to complement a growing strategic
relationship between the US and Vietnam, which opposes China’s territorial
claims in the South China Sea.
Yet all isn’t lost: the TPP also helped serve as an impetus for
long-needed structural changes in a nation with 90 million people that’s
forecast to grow more than 6 per cent this year – one of the fastest rates in
Asia. While Vietnam first announced plans to reform state-owned enterprises in
2011, progress has been slow, with the stakes often too small and many
companies pulling back on plans to list on exchanges.
“We wanted to have good preparation, with or without TPP,” said Vu
Thi Thuan, chairwoman of Traphaco JSC, Vietnam’s second-largest listed
pharmaceutical company. “We still have to make sure we are able to compete with
foreign rivals because Vietnam is more and more integrating into the global economy.”
Thuan said Traphaco has spent heavily to increase its competitiveness,
including the construction of US$22 million factory to prepare for the expected
rise in foreign medicines entering Vietnam if TPP came into effect.
Other companies in export industries such as textiles and garment,
footwear, seafood, wood furniture and agricultural products have also made
investments, according to Nghia Trong Pham, deputy director general of the
Department of Laws at Vietnam’s National Assembly Office.
“This preparation contributes to improve their competitiveness even if
the TPP is not taking effect,” Nghia said. “It is reasonable to conclude that
the period of 2011-16 is the biggest reforms in Vietnam since Doi Moi. TPP is
one of the important actors for this process.”
Nghia said TPP has also helped raise awareness among key stakeholders
including state officials, employers, trade unions, workers and the general
public on the implications of free trade. Vietnamese business leaders also
appear keen to maintain the reform momentum generated by TPP.
Alan Pham, chief economist at Vietnam’s largest fund manager VinaCapital
Group, says TPP is a kind of road map for Vietnam as it integrates further into
the global economy.
“Whether we have TPP or not, Vietnam will still have to reform,” Pham
said. “The trade pact is really useful for the government and for Vietnamese
business to know what are the steps they will need to take to really become
part of the global economy.”
Last month, the ruling Communist Party adopted a resolution on
International Economic Integration that confirmed Vietnam’s commitment to
further opening up the economy. The Finance Ministry has recommended moves to
support start-up companies, including cutting the corporate income-tax rate for
small and medium-sized enterprises to as low as 15 per cent from the current 20
per cent.
The TPP includes Japan, Malaysia, Australia and Canada – but excludes
China – and would represent nearly 40 per cent of global economic output worth
US$30 trillion if it came into force. The World Bank estimates the pact could
raise gross domestic product by an average 1.1 per cent in member countries by
2030.
China is now pushing a separate 16-nation agreement called the Regional
Comprehensive Economic Partnership. That would include Vietnam along with the
rest of the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations, as well as Japan,
South Korea, Australia, New Zealand and India.
Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc said last month that Vietnam would
pursue greater international integration through 12 other free trade agreements
it had already signed even if the TPP falls through.
“So it’ll be very good to have TPP, but if not, we still have other
integration plans to go with,” Phuc said.
Those agreements, including with the European Union and China, are
enough for an economy with nominal gross domestic product of roughly US$200
billion to capture growth opportunities in the years to come, Saigon Securities
JSC, the country’s biggest brokerage, said in a November 11 note to investors.
Vu Tu Thanh, chief Vietnam representative of the US-Asean Business
Council, said that while the TPP’s collapse isn’t good “it’s also not very bad”
because the Southeast Asian nation will have more time to prepare.
“TPP is a game for big players, while most of Vietnamese companies are
small- and medium-sized,” he said. “TPP is just part of the reform – if there’s
no TPP, the reforming process will still happen in Vietnam.”
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