Presentation Transcript
Vietnam One Year After Entry into WTOSteve Parker, Chief Economic Advisor, STAR-Vietnam January 11, 2008: Vietnam One Year After Entry into WTO Steve Parker, Chief Economic Advisor, STAR-Vietnam January 11, 2008
What is STAR-Vietnam: What is STAR-Vietnam TA for Implementation of U.S.-Vietnam Bilateral Trade Agreement and WTO + + since 2001
First major USAID-funded program in Vietnam
Designed to respond to needs of counterparts in implementing BTA/WTO (Demand Driven)
Supervised by a Government Steering Committee and USAID
Assigned to work with 47 counterparts
Support not only liberalization of trade and investment, but also systematic advances in the rule-of-law, transparency, governance and protection of property rights
WTO Implications: WTO Implications Faster liberalization and more level playing field
Faster transition to a market, rule-based economy
Predictability and transparency
Better socio-economic development through more trade, investment, jobs and less poverty
Highlights of Economic Performance in 2007: Highlights of Economic Performance in 2007 GDP Growth: 8.44% (US$833/person)
Exports: US$48.4 Bil. (22% YoY Growth)
Imports: US$60.6 Bil. (35% YoY growth)
FDI registered: US$20.3 Bil. (70% growth)
Poor household: 14.87%
Inflation (12.6%)
Infrastructure Gap
Implementation Gap
Competitiveness
Sustainability and
Quality of Growth
SHARES OF KEY EXPORTS: SHARES OF KEY EXPORTS Emergence of manufactures and decline of primary products
Slide8: Equipment and materials dominates. Some comsumer goods are on the rise (cars, clothing etc.)
Slide10: Overall exports to U.S. grew at about 20% in 2007. Exports of primary products declined by 4% largely due to a 33% decline in petroleum exports. Clothing exports posted a 28% growth – 10% increase from 2006’s.
Exports of Non-clothing manufacturing exports (US$ Million): Exports of Non-clothing manufacturing exports (US$ Million) Emergence of electronics which posted a 40% increase over 2006. Footwear export growth decelerated to 9% from 33% growth in 2006. Furniture had a strong growth of 37%.
Growth of U.S. Exports to Vietnam (%): Growth of U.S. Exports to Vietnam (%)
Slide13: Strong Interest of foreign investors after WTO
Increase of private investment after WTO: Investment composition by ownership (%) Increase of private investment after WTO
Challenges and Risk: Challenges and Risk Infrastructure gap: Quantity and quality
Quality and equality in growth (who gets what – winners and losers, growth & environment etc.)
Implementation gap: WTO maters both in law and practice
Massive legal reforms (100+ new laws and regs)
Strong commitment with concrete action plans
New and different institutions needed to bring WTO related reforms to benefit investors and people
Role of the Government: Regulator? Owner? Player?
Low cost and low risk regulatory regime for businesses and people
More exposure to external risks (e.g., oil shock, subprime mortgage etc.)
Managing Challenges and Risk: Managing Challenges and Risk WTO as floor not ceiling to handicap growth and liberalization
New culture and incentive for more effective government/regulators (from control to service)
Administrative and regulatory reform (Korea)
Judicial reforms (Singapore)
Free access to information to reduce risk – information remain a scarcity here (Law on Laws, Law on Access to information)
Independence/separation of regulatorship, ownership and playership of the Government
New tools and more information needed to manage more open economy with much more international interaction
Development of human capital