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Economy of Vietnam

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Vietnamese economy
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Economy ofVietnam
Ho Chi Minh City, the economic capital of Vietnam
CurrencyVietnamese đồng (VND; ₫)
Calendar year
Trade organisations
AFTA,WTO,APEC,ASEAN,RCEP,CPTPP,FAO
Country group
Statistics
PopulationIncrease 101,598,527 (2025)[4]
GDP
GDP rank
GDP growth
GDP per capita
GDP per capita rank
GDP by sector
3.45% (Nov 2023)[7]
Population belowpoverty line
  • 22% on less than $8.30/day (2022)[8]
36.1medium (2022)[9]
Decrease 40 out of 100 points (2024,88th rank)
Labour force
  • 57,249,411 (2019)[11]
  • 74.7% employment rate (2018)[12]
Labour force by occupation
Unemployment
  • 3.3% (2020 est.)[7]
  • 6.9% youth unemployment (15 to 24 year-olds; 2019)[14]
Average gross salary
₫ 7,600,000 / $300 monthly (Q1 2024)[15]
Main industries
Electronics,machinery,steel,food processing,wood industry,textile,footwear,vehicle,rice,coffee,cashews,seafood,vegetable andtourism
External
Exports$405.5 billion (2024)[16]
Export goods
Electronics,textiles products,machinery,footwear products,transportation products,wooden products,seafood products,steel,crude oil,pepper,rice andcoffee
Main export partners
Imports$380.8 billion (2024)[17]
Import goods
Machinery andindustrial equipment,electronics,petroleum products,raw materials for theclothing andshoe industries,plastics,automobiles,metal, andchemical products
Main import partners
FDI stock
  • $129.5 billion (31 December 2017 est.)[18]
  • Abroad: $19.75 billion (31 December 2015 est.)[18]
Decrease $5.401 billion (2017 est.)[18]
$96.58 billion (31 December 2017 est.)[18]
Public finances
37% of GDP (2023 est.)[19][note 1]
$86.4 billion (Feb 2023 est.)[20]
−6.7% (of GDP) (2017 est.)[18]
Revenues54.59 billion (2017 est.)[18]
Expenses69.37 billion (2017 est.)[18]
Economic aid$2.174 billion (2016)
Standard & Poor's:[21]
BB+ (domestic)
BB+ (foreign)
BB+ (T&C assessment)
Outlook: stable[22]
Moody's:[22]
Ba2
Outlook: Stable
Fitch:[22]
BB+
Outlook: stable
All values, unless otherwise stated, are inUS dollars.
GDP per capita development in Vietnam

Theeconomy of Vietnam is adevelopingmixedsocialist-oriented market economy.[3] It is the33rd-largest economy in the world bynominal gross domestic product (GDP) and the26th-largest economy in the world bypurchasing power parity (PPP). It is a lower-middle income country with a low cost of living.Vietnam is a member of theAsia-Pacific Economic Cooperation, theAssociation of Southeast Asian Nations and theWorld Trade Organization.

Since the mid-1980s, through theĐổi Mới reform period, Vietnam has made a shift from ahighly centralizedplanned economy to amixed economy. Before,South Vietnam was reliant on U.S. aid,[23] whileNorth Vietnam and reunified Vietnam relied on communist aid until theSoviet Union's dissolution.[24]

The economy uses both directive andindicative planning throughfive-year plans, with support from an openmarket-based economy. Over that period, the economy has experienced rapid growth. In the 21st century, Vietnam is in a period of being integrated into the global economy. Almost all Vietnamese enterprises are small and medium enterprises (SMEs). Vietnam has become a leading agricultural exporter and served as an attractive destination for foreign investment inSoutheast Asia.

According to a forecast byPricewaterhouseCoopers in February 2017,[needs update] Vietnam may be the fastest-growing of the world's economies, with a potential annual GDP growth rate of about 5.1 percent, which would make its economy the 10th-largest in the world by 2050.[25][needs update] Vietnam has also been named among the so-calledNext Eleven andCIVETS countries.

History

[edit]
Main article:Economic history of Vietnam

Before 1858

[edit]

Civilization in Vietnam had been built on agriculture. The feudal dynasties always consideredagriculture as the main economic base, and their economic thoughts have been predicated onphysiocracy. Land ownership was regulated, and such large-scale works asdykes were constructed in theRed River Delta to facilitate wet rice cultivation. In peaceful times, soldiers were sent home to do farm work. Furthermore, the court prohibited slaughtering water buffalo and cattle and held many agriculture-related ceremonies. Handicrafts and art were valued, but commerce was deprecated, and businessmen were called by the derogatory termcon buôn. Thang Long (Hanoi) was the main handicraft manufacturing center of the country. Chinese noted that the Vietnamese were doing business just like the same with in the ChineseSong dynasty. From the 9th to 13th century, the Vietnamese traded ceramics and silks with regional powers such as China,Champa,Western Xia,Java among others.[26] Further archeological evidence suggests that Muslim traders had lived in Hanoi from around the 9th to 10th centuries, based on Muslim ceramics found in the Old Quarter of Hanoi.[27]

However, from the 16th century,Confucianism was losing its influence on Vietnamese society and a monetary pre-capitalism economy began to develop. During theMạc period, the state encouraged semi-industrial business and sea-traders, as the Vietnamese economy would mainly depended on them for the next 250 years.[28] Cities such asDong Kinh,Hội An and others grew quickly under rapid urbanization. They were later constrained when foreign nations saw them as an economic threat.[29][30]

During the 17th century, Vietnam's economy had reached its peak as the country was the third-largest economic power in East Asia and Southeast Asia. In the late 18th century, the economy suffered depression because of a series of diseases and disaster such as theTay Son peasant rebellion which devastated the country.In 1806, EmperorGia Long of the newNguyễn dynasty imposed the "Sea Ban policy", which banned all Vietnamese overseas business and stopped Western merchants from entering Vietnam.[dubiousdiscuss] This policy led to stagnation of the Vietnamese economy in the early-19th century, and contributed to Vietnam becoming a French colony.[31][failed verification][32]

1858–1975

[edit]

Until theFrench colonization in the mid-19th century, Vietnam's economy had been mostly agrarian, subsistence-based and village-oriented. French colonizers, however, deliberately developed the regions differently as the French needed raw materials and a market for French manufactured goods, designating theSouth for agricultural production as it was better suited for agriculture, and theNorth for manufacturing as it was naturally wealthy in mineral resources. Though the plan exaggerated regional divisions, the development of exports—coal from the North, rice from the South—and the importation of French manufactured goods stimulated domestic commerce.[33]

The separation distorted the basic Vietnamese economy by overly stressing regional economic differences. In the South, while irrigated rice remained the principal subsistence crop, the French introduced plantation agriculture with products such as tea, cotton, and tobacco. The colonial government also developed some extractive industries, such as the mining of coal, iron, and nonferrous metals. A shipbuilding industry was begun in Hanoi; railroads, roads, power stations, and hydraulics works were constructed. In the South, agricultural development concentrated on rice cultivation, and, nationally, rice and rubber were the main items of export. Domestic and foreign trade were centered around the Saigon-Cholon area. Industry in the South consisted mostly of food-processing plants and factories producing consumer goods.[34]

When the North and South weredivided politically in 1954, they also adopted different economic ideologies: socialism in the North and capitalism in the South. Destruction caused by theSecond Indochina War from 1955 to 1975 seriously strained the economy. The situation was worsened by the country's 1.5 million military and civilian deaths, and the subsequent exodus of 1 million refugees, including tens of thousands of professionals, intellectuals, technicians and skilled workers out of the millions of war refugees.[33]

GDP per capita in Vietnam, 1956–1974 (in US$/year)
Year1956195819601962196419661968197019721974
Republic of Vietnam628810510011810085819065
Democratic Republic of Vietnam40505168596055606065

1975–1997

[edit]
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The government'sSecond Five-Year Plan (1976–1981) aimed for solid high annual growth rates in industrial and agricultural sectors and national income and sought to integrate the North and the South, but the goals were not attained. The economy remained dominated by small-scale production, low laborproductivity, material and technological shortfalls, and insufficient food and consumer goods.[33] The more modest[clarification needed] goals of theThird Five-Year Plan (1981–85) were a compromise between ideological and pragmatic factions; they emphasized the development of agriculture and industry. Efforts were also made to decentralize planning and improve the managerial skills of government officials.[33]

After reunification in 1975, the economy of Vietnam was plagued by enormous difficulties in production, imbalances in supply and demand, inefficiencies in distribution and circulation, soaring inflation rates, and rising debt problems. Vietnam is one of the few countries in modern history to experience a sharp economic deterioration in a postwar reconstruction period.[35] Its peacetime economy was one of the poorest in the world and had shown a negative to very slow growth in total national output as well as in agricultural and industrial production.[36] Vietnam's gross domestic product ( GDP) in 1984 was valued at US$18.1 billion with a per capita income estimated to be between US$200 and US$300 per year. Reasons for this mediocre economic performance have included[according to whom?] severe climatic conditions that afflicted agricultural crops, bureaucratic mismanagement, elimination of private ownership, extinction of entrepreneurial classes in the South, and military occupation of Cambodia (which resulted in a cutoff of much-needed international aid for reconstruction).[37][needs update]

From the late 1970s until the early 1990s, Vietnam was a member of theComecon, and therefore was heavily dependent on trade with theSoviet Union and its allies. Following the dissolution of the Comecon and the loss of its traditional trading partners, Vietnam was forced to liberalize trade, devalue its exchange rate to increase exports, and embark on a policy of economic development.[33][dead link] Between 1975 and 1994, the United States imposed a trade embargo on Vietnam, forbidding any trade during the 19-year period.

In 1986, Vietnam launched a political and economic renewal campaign (Đổi Mới) that introduced reforms to facilitate the transition from a centralized economy to asocialist-oriented market economy.Đổi Mới combined government planning withfree-market incentives and encouraged the establishment of private businesses and foreign investment, includingforeign-owned enterprises. Furthermore, the Vietnam government stressed the necessity to lower birth rates when developing the economic and social rights of the population by implementing a policy that restricted the number of children per household to two, called thetwo-child policy.[38] By the late 1990s, the success of the business and agricultural reforms ushered in underĐổi Mới was evident. More than 30,000 private businesses had been created, the economy was growing at an annual rate of more than 7%, and poverty was nearly halved.[33]

Since the early 1990s, Vietnam had structurally changed away from agriculture, but without industrialisation (service-oriented globalisation).[39]

In 1990, the state sector was the key hoped-for site of industrialisation.[39] The state sector transitioned away from the processes of bottom-up commercialisation of the 1980s.[39] This created a supply capacity. The supply capacity allowed Vietnam to avoid negative shock as Soviet aid was removed,[39] and the supply capacity allowed the economy of Vietnam to grow rapidly in the 1990s.[39] Its growth has averaged about 7% annually since the 1990s, a rate second only to China.[40]: 200 

Throughout the 1990s, exports increased by as much as 20% to 30% in some years. In 1999, exports accounted for 40% of GDP, an impressive performance in the midst of the economic crisis that hit other countries in Asia. Vietnam became a member of the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 2007, which freed Vietnam from textile quotas enacted worldwide as part of theMulti Fibre Arrangement (MFA) in 1974.[41] The MFA placed restrictions on the import by industrialized countries of textiles from developing countries. For China and other WTO members, however, textile quotas under the MFA expired at the end of 2004 as agreed in theUruguay Round of trade negotiations in 1994.[33] A 2019 study found that Vietnam's WTO entry led to substantial gains in productivity for private firms, but had no impact on state-owned enterprises. In the absence of state-owned enterprises, "the overall productivity gains would have been about 40% larger in a counterfactual Vietnamese economy."[42]

Development since 1997

[edit]

Vietnam's economic policy following the1997 Asian financial crisis has been a cautious one, emphasizingmacroeconomic stability rather than growth. While the country shifted toward a more market-oriented economy, the Vietnamese government still continues to hold a tight rein overmajor state sectors, such as thebanking system,state-owned enterprises and foreign trade.[43][44] GDP growth fell to 6% in 1998 and 5% in 1999. The economy saw continuous real GDP growth of at least 5% since 2000.[45]

The signing of theBilateral Trade Agreement (BTA) between the United States and Vietnam on 13 July 2000, was a significant milestone. The BTA provided for "normal trade relations" status of Vietnamese goods in the U.S. market. It was expected that access to the U.S. market would allow Vietnam to hasten its transformation into amanufacturing-based,export-oriented economy. Furthermore, it would attract foreign investment, not only from the U.S., but also fromEurope, Asia and other regions.[46]

In 2001, the rulingCommunist Party of Vietnam approved a 10-year economic plan that enhanced the role of the private sector, while reaffirming the primacy of the state.[33] Growth then rose to 6% to 7% between 2000 and 2002 even in the midst of the globalrecession, making it the world's second fastest-growing economy. At the same time,investment grew threefold anddomestic savings quintupled.[47]

In 2003, the private sector accounted for more than one-quarter of all industrial output.[33] However, between 2003 and 2005, Vietnam fell dramatically in theWorld Economic Forum's global competitiveness report rankings, largely due to negative perceptions of the effectiveness of government institutions.[33] Officialcorruption is endemic, and Vietnam lags in property rights, efficient regulation of markets, and labor and financial market reforms.[33]

Vietnam had an average GDP growth of 7.1% a year from 2000 to 2004. The GDP growth was 8.4% in 2005, the second-largest in Asia, trailing onlyChina's. The government estimated that GDP grew in 2006 by 8.17%. According to the Minister of Planning and Investment, the government targeted a GDP growth of around 8.5% in 2007.[48]

On 7 November 2006, the General Council at the World Trade Organization (WTO) approved Vietnam's accession package. On 11 January 2007, Vietnam officially became the WTO's 149th member, after 11 years of preparation, including eight years of negotiation.[41] The country's access to the WTO was intended to provide an important boost to the economy, as it ensured that the liberalizing reforms continue and created options for trade expansion. However, the accession also brought serious challenges, requiring the economy to open up to increasing foreign competition.[49][50]

Vietnam's economy continues to expand at an annual rate in excess of 7%, one of the fastest-growing in the world, but it grew from an extremely low base, as it suffered the crippling effect of theVietnam War from the 1950s to the 1970s, the punitive embargoes of the United States and its allies, as well as the austerity measures introduced in its aftermath.[33] In 2012, the communist party was forced to apologise about the mismanagement of the economy after a large number of SOEs went bankrupt and inflation rose. The main danger has been over the bad debt in the banks totalling to 15% and forecast growth is 5.2% for 2012 but this is also due to the global economic crisis.[51] The government has launched schemes to reform the economy, such as lifting foreign ownership cap from 49% and partially privatizing the country's state-owned companies that have been responsible for the recent economic downturn. By the end of 2013, the government is expected to privatize 25–50% of SOEs, only maintaining control on public services and military. The recent reforms have created a major boom in the Vietnamese stock market as confidence in the Vietnamese economy is returning.

Vietnam's current economic turmoil has given rise to questions of a possible new period of changing political economy, however[52] poverty remains to be the main concern on the national performance index as of 2018. The Provincial Governance and Public Administration Performance Index (PAPI) found that 28% of survey respondents cited poverty as their main problem.[53] Most respondents agreed with the statement that "[P]overty reduction is imperative to ensuring that Vietnam becomes an advanced, developed country. The percentage of the poorest Vietnamese respondents who believed that their economic situation would worsen increased from 13% in 2016 to 26% in 2017.[53] The percentage of respondents with health insurance increased from 74% in 2016 to 81% in 2017, with strongest gains in the rural population groups.[53]

In 2017, Transparency International, a non-profit that tracksgraft ranked Vietnam as 113th worst out of 176 countries and regions for perceptions of corruption.[53][failed verification] Severalgraft cases found in 2016 and 2017 led to the corruption crackdown which prosecuted many bankers, businesspeople, and government officials under charges of corruption. PAPI found that bribery at public district hospital services decreased from 17% in 2016 to 9% in 2017.[53] Reports of land seizures went down from an average of about 9% before 2013, to less than 7% in 2017. The number of respondents who believed that their land was sold at a fair market value decreased from 26% in 2014 to 21% in 2017.[53] Land-use graft and petty graft, such as police officers accepting bribes, are common. According toRalph Jennings, Vietnam has been privatizing many of its state-owned operations to reduce corruption and increase efficiency.[54][undue weight?discuss]

As of March 2018, Vietnam's economy continued to grow, achieving the best annual growth rate in over a decade; which has led media outlets to speculate if in the near future it could be one of theAsian tigers.[55][56]

According toDBS Bank in 2019, Vietnam's economy has the potential to grow at a pace of about 6.0%–6.5% by 2029. Vietnam can overpowerSingapore's economy by the next decade because of its strong foreign investment inflow and productivity growth.[57] However, Vietnam has surpassed Singapore just a year later.

In the early 2020s, despite trade wars with Vietnam's major trade partners, a pandemic and the increasing trend in deglobalisation, Vietnam has still managed to become Asia's top-performing economy.[58] Since 2000, Vietnam has now managed to manufacture higher-value goods with better paying jobs due to its more highly skilled workers. These workers now produce electronics which makes up 38% (in 2020) of Vietnam's exports (compared to 14% in 2010). The country had achieved an average of 6.2% in economic growth (faster than any other country in Asia after China).[59] Foreign investment on theluxury hotels sector andresorts will rise to support thetourist industry.[60]

Data

[edit]

The following table shows the main economic indicators in 1990–2023 (with IMF staff estimations in 2021–2027). Inflation below 5% is in green.[61]

YearGDP growth

(real)

GDP

(in Bil. US$nominal)

GDP

(in Bil. US$PPP)

GDP per capita

(in US$ nominal)

GDP per capita

(in US$ PPP)

Inflation rate

(in Percent)

Unemployment rate

(in Percent)

Government debt

(in % of GDP)

19905.08.277.7121.71151.236.012.3n/a
19915.89.785.0141.11236.381.810.4n/a
19928.712.594.5179.01350.337.711.0n/a
19938.116.7104.6235.01468.38.410.6n/a
19948.820.7116.2286.01605.09.510.3n/a
19959.526.4130.0358.71765.716.95.8n/a
19969.331.4144.8419.11934.85.65.9n/a
19978.234.1159.3449.32095.73.16.0n/a
19985.834.6170.3448.12207.38.16.9n/a
19994.836.4181.0465.22310.34.16.7n/a
20006.839.6197.6498.62489.3-1.86.424.8
20016.941.3216.0513.22684.5-0.36.325.4
20027.144.6234.9546.62881.34.16.027.7
20037.350.2257.1610.43124.43.35.829.8
20047.862.9284.6757.03426.57.95.629.4
20057.573.2315.7873.13765.88.45.328.7
20067.084.3348.1996.34114.37.54.830.2
20077.198.4383.01152.34484.38.34.632.2
20085.7124.8412.51446.64782.923.12.431.0
20095.4129.0437.51481.45023.96.72.936.3
20106.4143.2471.21628.05357.19.22.936.8
20116.4171.3511.91949.85826.218.72.235.8
20125.5195.2568.42197.66400.29.12.038.3
20135.6212.7607.02370.06762.76.62.241.4
20146.4232.9660.62566.97281.24.12.143.6
20157.0236.8700.32581.97635.30.62.346.1
20166.7252.1770.92720.28316.22.72.347.5
20176.9277.1851.12957.99085.63.52.246.3
20187.2303.1934.13201.79867.43.52.243.7
20197.2331.81021.33439.110584.72.82.240.8
20202.9346.31064.43548.910907.83.22.541.1
20212.6370.11141.03756.911589.31.83.239.0
20228.0408.01321.34101.713284.23.22.334.6
20235.1433.71438.54324.014324.43.32.034.0
20247.1476.41558.94622.515469.93.72.133.5

Economic sectors

[edit]

Agriculture, fishery and forestry

[edit]
Rice terraces inSa Pa. Vietnam is the world's third-largest rice exporter.
Vietnam is the world's second-largestcoffee producer and exporter.
Vietnam is the world's largestcashew exporter.

In 2003, Vietnam produced an estimated 30.7 million cubic meters of wood. Production of sawn wood was a more modest 2,950 cubic meters. In 1992, in response todwindling forests, Vietnam imposed a ban on the export of logs and raw timber. In 1997, the ban was extended to all timber products except wooden artifacts. During the 1990s, Vietnam began to reclaim land for forests with a tree-planting program.[33]

Vietnam'sfishing industry, which has abundant resources given the country's long coastline andextensive network of rivers and lakes, has generally experienced moderate growth. In 2003, the total catch was about 2.6 million tons. However, seafood exports increased fourfold between 1990 and 2002 to more than US$2 billion, driven in part byshrimp farms in the South and "catfish", which are a different species from their American counterparts, but are marketed in the United States under the same name. By selling vast quantities of shrimp and catfish to the U.S., Vietnam triggeredantidumping complaints by the U.S., which imposed tariffs in the case of catfish and was considering doing the same for shrimp. In 2005, the seafood industry began to focus on domestic demand to compensate for declining exports.[33]

Vietnam is one of the top rice exporting countries in the world, but the limited sophistication of small-scale Vietnamese farmers causes quality to suffer.[62] Vietnam is also the world's second-largest exporter of coffee, trailing behind Brazil.[63]

Vietnam produced in 2018:[64][needs update]

  • 44.0 million tons ofrice (5th largest producer in the world, behind China, India, Indonesia and Bangladesh);
  • 17.9 million tons ofsugarcane (16th largest producer in the world);
  • 14.8 million tons ofvegetable;
  • 9.8 million tons ofcassava (7th largest producer in the world);
  • 4.8 million tonnes ofmaize;
  • 2.6 million tonnes ofcashew nut (largest producer in the world);
  • 2.0 million tons ofbanana (20th largest producer in the world);
  • 1.6 million tons ofcoffee (2nd largest producer in the world, only behind Brazil);
  • 1.5 million tons ofcoconut (6th largest producer in the world);
  • 1.3 million tons ofsweet potato (9th largest producer in the world);
  • 1.2 million tons ofwatermelon;
  • 1.1 million tons ofnatural rubber (3rd largest producer in the world, behind Thailand and Indonesia);
  • 852 thousand tons oforange (18th largest producer in the world);
  • 779 thousand tons ofmango (includingmangosteen andguava);
  • 654 thousand tons ofpineapple (12th largest producer in the world);
  • 270 thousand tons oftea (6th largest producer in the world);

In addition to smaller productions of other agricultural products.[64]

In 2018, Vietnam was the world's 5th largest producer ofpork (3.8 million tonnes). This year the country also produced 839 thousand tons ofchicken meat, 334 thousand tons ofbeef, 936 million liters ofcow's milk, 20 thousand tons ofhoney, among others.[64]

Energy, mining and minerals

[edit]
Main article:Energy in Vietnam
Dau Tieng Solar Power Complex is the largest solar farm inSoutheast Asia.

[65]

Petroleum is the main source of energy, followed bycoal, which contributes about 25% of the country's energy (excludingbiomass). Vietnam's oil reserves are in the range of 270–500 million tons. Oil production rose rapidly to 403,300 barrels per day (64,120 m3/d) in 2004, but output is believed to have peaked and is expected to decline gradually.

In 2003, mining and quarrying accounted for 9.4% of GDP, and the sector employed 0.7% of the workforce. Petroleum and coal are the main mineral exports. Also mined areantimony,bauxite,chromium,gold,iron, naturalphosphates,tin, andzinc.[33]

In 2019, Vietnam was the 9th largest world producer ofantimony;[66] 10th largest producer oftin;[67] 11th largest producer ofbauxite;[68] 12th largest world producer oftitanium;[69] 13th largest world producer ofmanganese[70] and 9th largest producer ofphosphate in the world.[71] The country is also one of the world's largest producers ofruby,sapphire,topaz andspinel.

Oil was discovered in Vietnam in the mid-1980s and oil production began in the 1990s.[40]: 24  Crude oil was Vietnam's leading export until the late 2000s, when high-tech electrical manufactures emerged to become the biggest export market (by 2014, crude oil comprised only 5% of Vietnamese exports, compared to 20% of all exports in 1996). This is in part because Vietnam crude oil peaked in 2004, when crude oil represented 22% of all export earnings.[72] Petroleum exports are in the form of crude petroleum because Vietnam has a very limited refining capacity. Vietnam's only operational refinery, a facility at Cat Hai near Ho Chi Minh City, has a capacity of only 800 barrels per day (130 m3/d). Refined petroleum accounted for 10.2% of total imports in 2002. As of 2012, Vietnam had only one refinery, theDung Quat refinery, but a second one, theNghi Son Refinery was planned and was scheduled for construction in May 2013.[33][73]

Vietnam'santhracite coal reserves are estimated at 3.7 billion tons. Coal production was almost 19 million tons in 2003, compared with 9.6 million tons in 1999. Vietnam's potentialnatural gas reserves are 1.3 trillion cubic meters. In 2002, Vietnam brought ashore 2.26 billion cubic meters of natural gas.Hydroelectric power is another source of energy. In 2004, Vietnam confirmed plans to build anuclear power plant withRussian assistance,[33] and asecond by a Japanese group.

From 2019 onwards, renewable energy deployment in Vietnam accelerated, by far surpassing the other Southeast Asian countries.[74] Most of the newly deployed renewable energy was in the form of solar and wind power plants. By 2023, however, this development had slowed down, mainly due to limited electrical grid capacity and reduced government support.[74]

Total energy consumption inTerrawatt-hours (TWh)[75]
1970198019902000201020202023
91Decrease54Increase77Increase214Increase540Increase1,204Increase1,359
Per capita consumption inKilowatt-hours (KWh)[76]
2,162Decrease1,022Increase1,153Increase2,711Increase6,180Increase12,462Increase13,744

Industry and manufacturing

[edit]
VinFast, Vietnam's first global automaker has its manufacturing facility inHải Phòng.
Main article:Manufacturing in Vietnam

Although the industrial sector contributed 40.1% of GDP in 2004, it employed only 12.9% of the workforce. In 2000, 22.4% of industrial production was attributable to non-state activities. From 1994 to 2004, the industrial sector grew at an average annual rate of 10.3%. Manufacturing contributed 20.3% of GDP in 2004, while employing 10.2% of the workforce.

From 1994 to 2004, manufacturing GDP grew at an average annual rate of 11.2%. The top manufacturing sectors — electronics,food processing, cigarettes and tobacco, textiles, chemicals, and footwear goods — experienced rapid growth. Benefits from its proximity to China with lower labor cost, Vietnam is becoming a new manufacturing hub in Asia, especially for Korean and Japanese firms. For instance,Samsung produces about 40% of its phones in Vietnam.[77]

As of 2019, Samsung employs over 200,000 employees in the Hanoi-area of Vietnam to producesmartphones, while offsourcing some manufacturing to China[78] and manufacturing large portions of its phones in India.[79]LG Electronics moved smartphone production to Vietnam from South Korea, in order to stay competitive. LG said that "Vietnam provides an "abundant labor force", as motivation for the move.[80]

Of note, Samsung accounted for 15 percent of Vietnam's exports in the first seven months of 2024.[81] Although significant, this is a decrease from 2017, during which Samsung accounted for 22.7 percent of Vietnam's exports.[82]

In the past decade, a significantautomotive industry has been developed.[citation needed]

In recent years, Vietnam's domestic automakerVinFast has led the country's push into electric vehicles (EVs), marking Vietnam's ambition to become a global EV hub. In late 2022, VinFast shipped its first batch of 999 electric SUVs to U.S. customers, a milestone in its overseas expansion plans.[83] The company has since accelerated its international strategy—expanding sales beyond Vietnam and building supporting infrastructure—while reporting rising revenues alongside continued heavy investment to scale its operations.[84] In 2024, VinFast's founder also launched V-Green to develop EV charging networks in key markets, further supporting the brand's global rollout.[85]

Vietnam has become a prime beneficiary of the “China+1” strategy as multinational firms diversify production beyond China. In 2024, Vietnam's foreign direct investment (FDI) disbursements reached an all-time high of approximately **USD 25.35 billion**, reflecting a 9.4% year-on-year increase.[86] Companies have shifted manufacturing to Vietnam for lower labor costs and favorable trade zones, with Vietnam's industrial capacity expanding by 116% over the past decade—outpacing regional peers.[87]

Services and tourism

[edit]

In 2004, services accounted for 38.2% of gross domestic product (GDP). From 1994 to 2004, GDP attributable to the service sector grew at an average annual rate of 6.0%.[33]

By 2024, the service sector had expanded significantly, contributing more than half of Vietnam's GDP. In the first quarter of 2024 alone, services grew by 6.12% year-on-year and accounted for 52.23% of GDP growth, underscoring their rising role in the national economy.[88]

Tourism

[edit]
Main article:Tourism in Vietnam

In 2012, Vietnam received 6.8 million international visitors and the number is expected to reach over 7 million in 2013. Vietnam keeps emerging as an attractive destination. InTripAdvisor's list of top 25 destinations Asia 2013 by travelers' choice, there are four cities of Vietnam, namely Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City, Hoi An and Ha Long.[citation needed]

2016 was the first year ever which Vietnam received over 10 million international visitors.[89] Since then, this figure has continued to rise. In 2019, Vietnam with 18 million international visitors was fifth most visited country in the Asia-Pacific region as perWorld Tourism rankings released by theUnited Nations World Tourism Organization.[90]

During theCOVID-19 pandemic in Vietnam, the country suspended issuance of all tourist visas from March 2020 and recorded a 98% year-on-year drop in foreign visitors for April 2020. Furthermore, Total tourism revenues dropped by over 60% year-on-year for July 2020.[91] The country reopened to international arrivals in March 2022.

In the first six months of 2024, Vietnam received 6,943,961 tourist arrivals representing an increase over the same period in 2023 of 65.7 percent.[92]

Tourism has also become a major contributor to the national economy, generating revenues equivalent to around 6.6% of Vietnam's GDP in 2024, with forecasts suggesting an increase to over 7% in 2025.[93]

The largest sources of international visitors in 2024 were South Korea, China, and the United States, together accounting for nearly half of total arrivals.[94]

In support of this growth, Vietnam has expanded infrastructure with new international terminals at Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City airports, alongside investments in coastal resort zones such as Da Nang and Phu Quoc.[95]

Export of labour

[edit]

The export of labour, that is the sending of Vietnamese workers to work in other countries, is also key to the Vietnamese economy, with much of their earnings being sent back to Vietnam. This labour export was disrupted due to theCOVID pandemic, however by 2022, Vietnam hopes to send 90,000 workers abroad. Traditional destinations have included South Korea, Japan, Malaysia, the Republic of China, and now Vietnam is aiming for Germany, Russia, and Israel.[96]

Banking and finance

[edit]
State Bank of Vietnam in Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon)
Ho Chi Minh City Stock Exchange

Banking

[edit]
Main article:Banking in Vietnam

The most important banks are the state-ownedVietinBank,BIDV, andVietcombank, which dominate the banking sector. There is also a trend of foreign investment into profitable banks. For example, VietinBank is currently owned by Bank of Tokyo Mitsubishi UFJ (19.73%) while Vietcombank is owned by Mizuho (15%).

Vietnam's top five banks by authorised capital
RankBankDate of updateAuthorised capital
In VND, billionsIn US dollars, billions
1BIDV31 December 202040,220.21.73
2VietinBank31 December 202037,234.01.60
3Vietcombank31 December 202037,088.81.59
4Techcombank31 December 202035,001.41.50
5Agribank31 December 202030,709.91.32

(NOTE: Average exchange rates of 2020. Source: tradingeconomics.com. 1 USD = 23,286 VND)

Finance

[edit]

Vietnam has two stock trading centers, theHo Chi Minh City Securities Trading Center and theHanoi Securities Trading Center, which run theHo Chi Minh Stock Exchange (HOSE) and theHanoi Stock Exchange (HNX), respectively. However, there is also a third market, the Unlisted Public Companies market (UPCOM) which is a part of the Hanoi Stock Exchange. Together these two trading centres and three exchanges come under the purview of the Vietnam Stock Exchange (VSE). The VSE is a legislated body overseen by the State Securities Commission (SSC) which is a branch of the Ministry of Finance. This structure was established through the Law on Securities 2019.[97]

Currency, exchange rate and inflation

[edit]
Countries or territories by GDP (nominal)per capita in 2022.
Countries or territories by GDP (PPP)per capita in 2022.

The currency used in Vietnam is theđồng, shortened as VND or đ.

Exchange rate

[edit]

The exchange rate between the U.S. dollar and theVietnamese đồng is important because the dong, although not freely convertible, is loosely pegged to the dollar through an arrangement known as a "crawling peg". This mechanism allows the dollar–dong exchange rate to adjust gradually to changing market conditions.[33] This was set at 3 percent either side of a fixed rate set each day by the SBV, however, it was increased to 5 percent in October 2022.[98]

As of 27 December 2024, a US dollar is worth 25,448 Vietnamese đồng.

Gold still maintains its position as a physical currency to a certain extent, although it has seen its economic role declining in recent years.[99]

Inflation

[edit]

Vietnam saw high inflation in 1980s.[100] During this period, there was excessive demand for the industrial sector development, food, and other commodities. In order to stimulate supply, government attempted co-integration of parallel and planned market. Though the initial reform[101] in the 1980s raised the total output, due to the report being partial, it also led to the CPI inflation rate being pushed to 200% in 1982. To tackle this, the government introduced forced savings, which can be understood as the accumulation of unspent money to make the monetary overhang.[clarification needed]

Vietnam's economy experienced ahyperinflation period in its early years of the extensive reform program, especially from 1987 to 1992.[102]

In 2008, inflation was tracking at 20.3% for the first half of the year,[103] higher than the 3.4% in 2000, but down significantly from 160% in 1988.[33]

In 2010, inflation stood at 11.5%, and 18.58% in 2011.[104]

At the end of 2012, inflation stood at 7.5%, a substantial decrease from 2011.[105]

In 2013, inflation stood at 6%,[106] and 4.09% in 2014.[107] In 2016, it was only 2%.

Mergers and acquisitions

[edit]

With 1,120 inbound deals with a cumulated value of almost US$15 billion, there is a demonstrated interest by foreign companies to access the Vietnamese market or continue expansion usingmergers and acquisitions. From 1991 to February 2018, Vietnamese companies were involved as either an acquiror or an acquired company in 4,000 mergers and acquisitions with a total value of US$40.6 billion. The mergers and acquisitions activities faced many obstacles, lowering the rate of success of the transaction. Common obstacles come from culture, transparency and legal aspects.[108] Among the largest and most prominent transactions since 2000 are:

Date AnnouncedAcquiror NameAcquiror NationTarget NameTarget NationValue of Transaction ($mil)
19 December 2017Vietnam Beverage Co. Ltd.VietnamSabecoVietnam4,838.49
16 February 2012Perenco SAFranceConocoPhilips Co-Oil&Gas AssetVietnam1,290.00
29 April 2016Central Group of CosThailandCasino Guichard-Perrachon-BigCVietnam1,135.33
25 December 2015Singha Asia Holding Pte Ltd.SingaporeMasan Consumer CorpVietnam1,100.00
13 February 2015China Steel Asia Pac Hldg PteSingaporeFormosa Ha Tinh (Cayman) Ltd.Vietnam939.00
8 July 2014Berli Jucker PCLThailandMetro Cash & Carry Vietnam CoVietnam875.20
27 December 2012Bk of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd.JapanVietinBankVietnam742.34
17 April 2015TCC Land International Pte Ltd.SingaporeMetro Cash & Carry Vietnam CoVietnam705.14
10 May 2011Vincom JSCVietnamVinpearl JSCVietnam649.39
28 January 2016Masan Grp CorpVietnamMasan Consumer CorpVietnam600.00

All of the top 10 deals are inbound into Vietnam and none are outbound.[109]

Trade

[edit]
Saigon Port is thebusiest container port in Vietnam. It is capable of accommodatingpost-Panamax ships.

Economic relations with the United States are improving but are not without challenges. Although the United States and Vietnam reached a landmark bilateral agreement in December 2001, which helped increase Vietnam's exports to the United States, disagreements over textile and catfish exports are hindering full implementation of the agreement. Further disrupting the economic relations between the two countries were efforts inCongress to link non-humanitarian aid to Vietnam'shuman rights record. Barriers to trade andintellectual property are also within the purview of bilateral discussions.[33]

Given neighboring China's rapid economic ascendancy, Vietnam highly values its economic relationship with China. Following the resolution of most territorial disputes, trade with China is growing rapidly, and in 2004, Vietnam imported more products from China than from any other country. In November 2004, theAssociation of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), of which Vietnam is a member, and China announced plans to establish the world's largest free-trade area by 2010.[33]

Vietnam became a member of theWorld Trade Organization (WTO) on 11 January 2007.[33]

In December 2015, Vietnam joined theASEAN Economic Community along with the 9 other ASEAN members. The community's goal is to integrate the 10 members of ASEAN and bring a freer flow of labor, investment and trade to the region.[110]

Currently, Vietnam is being tugged in multiple directions from multiple powers, namely, Russia, China and the U.S. in its attempts to achieve economic multilateralization.[111][112] Alternatively in the region, it is also pulled by either China, South Korea, Japan or ASEAN countries, as well as other constituents such as Taiwan & Hong Kong as well as Australia/New Zealand and India in the region (ASEAN+3 and ASEAN+6).[113]

Foreign trade

[edit]
Main article:Foreign trade of Vietnam

SinceĐổi Mới in 1986, Vietnam has increased trading, growing both exports and imports in double digits ever since. More recently, alarms on trade account deficits have been raised domestically, especially after joining the WTO in 2007. Throughout the next five years after 2007, Vietnam ran a trade deficit with the rest of the world in the tens of billions of dollars, with the record trade deficit in 2008 of US$18 billion.[103]

The account deficit has since decreased. In 2012, Vietnam recorded a trade surplus of US$780 million, the first trade surplus since 1993. Total trade reached US$228.13 billion, an increase of 12.1% from 2011.[114] In 2013, Vietnam recorded the second year of trade surplus of US$863 million. In 2014, Vietnam recorded the third year of trade surplus of US$2.14 billion, the largest trade surplus ever in history.[115] Three years later, in 2017, it surpassed itself with a record of $2.92 billion.

YearTotal trade (US$ billions)Export (US$ billions)Export change (%)Import (US$ billions)Import change (%)Account balance (US$ billions)
200131.2015.0016.20-1.2
200236.4016.7011.319.7021.6-3.0
200345.2020.221.025.227.9-5.1
200458.5026.531.232.027.0-5.4
200569.4032.422.337.05.7-4.5
200684.7039.822.844.921.4-5.1
2007111.3048.622.162.739.6-14.1
2008143.4062.729.080.728.7-18.0
2009127.0057.1-8.969.9-13.4-12.9
2010157.0072.226.484.821.3-12.6
2011203.4196.9134.2106.7525.8-9.84[116]
2012228.57114.5718.2113.796.60.780[117]
2013263.47132.1715.4131.3015.40.863
2014298.23150.1913.7148.0412.12.14
2015327.76162.117.9165.6512-3.54[118]
2016349.20175.948.6173.264.62.68
2017425.12214.0121.2211.120.82.92[119]
2018480.17243.4813.2236.6911.16.8[120]
2019517.26264.1898.4253.0716.811.12[121]
2020545.36282.657262.73.719.95[122]
2024786.29405.5314.3380.7616.724.77[123]

Exports

[edit]
A map of Vietnamese export destinations, 2004

In 2004, Vietnam's exports of merchandise were valued at US$26.5 billion, and were growing rapidly along with imports. Vietnam's principal exports were crude oil (22.1%), textiles and garments (17.1%), footwear (10.5%), fisheries products (9.4%) andelectronics (4.1%). The main destinations of Vietnam's exports were theUnited States (18.8%),Japan (13.2%),China (10.3%),Australia (6.9%),Singapore (5.2%),Germany (4.0%), and theUnited Kingdom (3.8%).[33]

In 2012, export rose 18.2%, valued at US$114.57 billion.[114] Vietnam's main export market included theEU with US$20 billion, United States with US$19 billion,ASEAN with $US 17.8 billion,Japan with US$13.9 billion,China with US$14.2 billion, andSouth Korea with US$7 billion.[124]

In 2013, exports rose 15.4%, valued at US$132.17 billion, of which export of electronics now comprised 24.5% of total export, compared with a 4.4% in 2008. Textiles and garments are still an important part in Vietnam's export, valued about US$17.9 billion in 2013.

In 2014, exports rose 13.6%, reaching US$150.1 billion. Electronics and electronics parts, textiles and garments, computers and computer parts are the three main export groups of Vietnam. TheUnited States continued to be Vietnam's largest export market, with US$28.5 billion. TheEU is second with US$27.9 billion,ASEAN is third,China is fourth andJapan is the fifth largest export market of Vietnam.

In 2024, Vietnam's exports increased 14.3 percent. Among Vietnam's biggest exports were garments and textiles (US$37 billion), electronics (US$72.6 billion), plastics (US$11.8 billion) and furniture (US$3.4 billion).[125][126][127][128]

Imports

[edit]

In 2004, Vietnam's merchandiseimports were valued at US$31.5 billion and growing rapidly. Vietnam's principal imports were machinery (17.5%), refined petroleum (11.5%), steel (8.3%), material for the textile industry (7.2%), and cloth (6.0%). The main origins of Vietnam's imports were China (13.9%),Taiwan (11.6%),Singapore (11.3%),Japan (11.1%),South Korea (10.4%),Thailand (5.8%), andMalaysia (3.8%).[33]

Vietnam import rose 6.6% in 2012, valued at US$113.79 billion.[114] Major import countries wereChina US$29.2 billion,ASEAN with US$22.3 billion,South Korea with US$16.2 billion,Japan with US$13.7 billion,EU with US$10 billion, and United States with US$6.3 billion.[124]

In 2014, imports rose 12.1%, reaching US$148 billion, most of which are materials and machinery needed for export.China continued to be Vietnam's largest import partner, with US$43.7 billion. TheASEAN is second with US$23.1 billion,South Korea is third,Japan is fourth and theEU is the fifth largest import partner of Vietnam.

External debt, foreign aid and foreign investment

[edit]
See also:Foreign aid to Vietnam

In 2004, external debt amounted to US$16.6 billion, or 37% of GDP.[129][33]

From 1988 to December 2004, cumulative foreign direct investment (FDI) commitments totaled US$46 billion. By December 2004, about 58% had been dispersed. About half of FDI has been directed at the two major cities (and environs) of Ho Chi Minh City andHanoi. In 2003, new foreign direct investment commitments were US$1.5 billion. The largest sector by far for licensed FDI is industry andconstruction. Other sectors attracting FDI are oil and gas, fisheries, construction, agriculture and forestry, transportation and communications, and hotels and tourism. From 2006 to 2010, Vietnam hoped to receive US$18 billion of FDI to support a targeted growth rate in excess of 7%. Despite rising investments, foreign investors still regard Vietnam as a risky destination, as confirmed by recent survey by theJapan External Trade Organization of Japanese companies operating in Vietnam. Many of the respondents complained about high costs of utilities, office rentals and skilled labor. Corruption, bureaucracy, lack of transparent regulations and the failure to enforce investor rights are additional obstacles to investment, according to the U.S. State Department. Vietnam tied with several nations for the 102nd place in Transparencies International's Corruption Perceptions Index in 2004.[33] A study was conducted to examine the effect foreign investment had on corruption in Vietnam. The study concluded that the propensity of foreign firms to bribe at entry is higher in restricted sectors. Also, the removal of investment restrictions leads to reductions in bribery as a result of more Foreign Investment Enterprises, and consequently more competition entering that sector.[130]

TheWorld Bank's assistance program for Vietnam has three objectives: to support Vietnam's transition to a market economy, to enhance equitable andsustainable development and to promote good governance. From 1993 through 2004, Vietnam received pledges of US$29 billion ofofficial development assistance (ODA), of which about US$14 billion, or 49%, has been disbursed. In 2004, international donors pledged ODA of US$2.25 billion, of which US$1.65 billion actually was disbursed. Three donors accounted for 80% of disbursements in 2004: Japan, the World Bank, and the Asian Development Bank. From 2006 to 2010, Vietnam hopes to receive US$14 billion to US$15 billion of ODA.[33]

Pledged foreign direct investment was US$21.3 billion for 2007 and a record US$31.6 billion for the first half of 2008.[103] Mergers and acquisitions have gradually become an important channel of investments in the economy, especially after 2005.

In 2023, Vietnam realised foreign direct investment in the amount of US$23.2 billion and recorded a further US$36.6 billion in registered FDI commitments.[131]

Free trade agreements

[edit]
A map of ASEAN–China Free Trade Area including Vietnam, other free trade deals are with theEuropean Union,Japan,Korea, theEurasian Economic Union (Russia), India, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, México, Peru and Chile.

Economic development strategy

[edit]
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Trade liberalization

[edit]

Over the past 30 years, Vietnam has signed numerous trade agreements with different partners, promoting the country as one of the main manufacturing hubs in the world. In 1995, Vietnam joined the ASEAN community. In 2000, it signed a free trade agreement with the United States, to be followed by admission to the World Trade Organisation in 2007. Since then, the country has further integrated itself into the world economy with bilateral agreements with other ASEAN countries, China, India, Japan, and Korea, to name a few. Vietnam has actively working with other partners on ratifying the Trans-Pacific Partnership to form CP TPP, or TPP-11, after the withdrawal of the US, in order to promote economic cooperation, regional connectivity and promote economic growth between member countries. The World Bank estimates that the CP TPP would help the country's GDP to grow by 1.1% by 2030 with a boost to productivity. The overall impact of these efforts was the lowering of tariffs on both imports and exports to and from Viet Nam, and an improved trade balance with a surplus of $2.8 billion during the first eight months of 2018 (Vietnam Custom Department).[141] Most recently, on 30 June 2019, Vietnam signed the Free Trade Agreement and Investment Protection Agreement with the EU after 10 years of negotiation, making it only the fourth country in Asia which managed to sign such agreement with the western bloc (after Japan, South Korea, and Singapore)

Domestic reform

[edit]

The government has made real effort in changing its mindset toward a more open market economy, lowering the cost of doing business, and putting regulation in place to ensure rights and orders. In 1986 the government passed its first Law on Foreign Investment, allowing foreign companies to operate in Vietnam. Between 1981 and 2005, Vietnam created a newintellectual property law that gradually moved away from the Soviet-style concept ofcollective ownership.[142] A milestone in this evolution was theCopyright Agreement that Vietnam concluded with the US in 1997, serving primarily the US interest of preventing Vietnam from becoming an international center for illegal copying.[142] The constitution has come a long way since, with the law being revised regularly to cater for a more investor-friendly business environment while aiming to reduce red-tape and accelerate foreign investment into the country. The Global Competitiveness Report[143] by World Economic Forum placed Vietnam at 55th in 2017, rising from 77th place in 2006. In the World Bank's Ease of Doing Business rankings,[144] Vietnam also rose from 104th place in 2007 to 68th place in 2017. The Bank commended Vietnam on progress made in enforcing contracts, increasing access to credit and basic infrastructure, and trading, among other factors.

Human and physical capital investment

[edit]

Vietnam invested a lot in its human capital and infrastructure. With a growing population – 100 million as of 2024, up from 60 million in 1986, and more than half are under the age of 35– Vietnam made large public investments in education, especially making primary education universal and compulsory. This was necessary, given the country's export-led growth strategy, where literacy for the mass workforce is deemed important for growth in the manufacturing sector. On the other hand, Vietnam also invested heavily in infrastructure, ensuring cheap mass access to necessities like electricity, water, and especially the internet. These two factors together helped Vietnam to become a hub for foreign investment and manufacturing in Southeast Asia. Japanese and Korean electronics companies likeSamsung, LG, Olympus, and Pioneer built factories, and countless European and American apparel makers set uptextile operations in the country. Intel opened a $1 billion chip factory in 2010, signalling the importance of Vietnam's strategic positioning in the eyes of the international business community.

Sustainable growth

[edit]

Economic growth in Vietnam was considered as broadly in line with other developing countries. The Inclusive Development Index[145] by WEF put Vietnam in a group of countries that have done particularly well and advancing in the ranking of the world's most inclusive economies. This has been notably evident with the role of women participating in the economy. Their labor force participation rate is within 10% of that of men, a smaller gap than many other countries according to World Bank, and in 2015 women-led households are generally not poorer than those led by men. Primary and secondary enrollment rates for boys and girls are also essentially the same, and more girls continue studying in high school than boys. The government is actively reviewing and adjusting its policy, as shown in the current official Development Strategy Action Plan 2011–2020, to develop appropriate mechanisms for a more equitable growth across the country; promoting the advantages of each regions, working in collaboration with each other to support and amplify the fruit of development.

In 2017, with the help of the United Nations, Vietnam official started the ground work to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals with the development of the "One Strategic Plan",[146] integrating the SDGs with the nation's Socio-Economic Development Strategy (2011–2020) and Socio-Economic Development Plan (2016–2020). The OSP can be used as a guideline for government agencies to implement the SDGs in the most effective ways, focusing on areas of importance, such as: investing in people,climate resilience and environmental sustainability, prosperity and partnership, justice and inclusive governance. Vietnam has also developed a National Action Plan to review current growth policies and update these to align with the interest of the SDGs. This is done in consultation with ministries, local governments, and other stakeholders so that a common framework can be set forward.

Economic indicators and international rankings

[edit]
OrganizationTitleYearRanking
BSA (The Software Alliance)The IT Industry Competitiveness Index201153 out of 66[147]
International Monetary FundGross Domestic Product (PPP)202023 out of 190
World Economic ForumGlobal Competitiveness201967 out of 141[148]
World BankEase of Doing Business201868 out of 190
The Heritage Foundation/The Wall Street JournalIndex of Economic Freedom2019128 out of 180 – mostly unfree (2019)[149]
Transparency InternationalCorruption Perceptions Index201996 out of 177

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^official data; data cover general government debt and include debt instruments issued (or owned) by government entities other than the treasury; the data include treasury debt held by foreign entities; the data include debt issued by subnational entities, as well as intragovernmental debt; intragovernmental debt consists of treasury borrowings from surpluses in the social funds, such as for retirement, medical care, and unemployment; debt instruments for the social funds are not sold at public auctions

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Literature

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  • Jandl, Thomas (2013).Vietnam in the Global Economy. Lexington Books.

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