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Việt Nam, China trade ties continue to develop

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Việt Nam, China trade ties continue to develop

Update: April, 25/2019 - 09:26

7024_13-Trung%20Quoc.jpg

Officers of Cốc Nam Customs Department in Lạng Sơn Province, which shares a border with China, perform a check on imported products. — VNA/VNS Photo Hoàng Hùng

HÀ NỘI — Economic and trade relations between Việt Nam and China have been developing in a positive direction, as shown by the continuous increase of bilateral trade turnover between the two countries. Việt Nam is fast becoming an attractive investment destination for Chinese enterprises.

According to the Foreign Investment Agency under the Ministry of Planning and Investment, China invested about US$1.6 billion in Việt Nam in the first fourth months of this year, making it the country’s fourth largest source of foreign investment.

Several large projects were funded by Chinese investors in the period including a tire manufacturing project with total registered capital of $280 million in the southern province of Tây Ninh and another tire project of Advance Tire (Vietnam) Co. Ltd with registered capital of $214.4 million in the southern province of Tiền Giang.

China has been Việt Nam’s biggest trade partner since 2004, and bilateral trade has been continuing its strong growth. China is currently Việt Nam’s second largest export market after the United States. Việt Nam is also China's largest trading partner in ASEAN and its eighth largest in the world. It is China’s fifth largest export market and ninth largest import market.

According to the Ministry of Industry and Trade, Việt Nam–China trade turnover reached $106.7 billion last year, up 13.5 per cent compared to 2017. Việt Nam exported goods worth $41.26 billion, up 16.56 per cent, while imports reached $65.43 billion, up 11.68 per cent.

Executive Director of Vietnam National Garment and Textile Group (Vinatex) Cao Hữu Hiếu said one of the bright points contributing to the growth of Việt Nam’s textile and garment industry was businesses’ efforts to boost exports to the Chinese market.

Hiếu said Việt Nam’s garment and textile export turnover to the Chinese market increased by 24 per cent from $3.2 billion in 2017 to $4.1 billion in 2018. Yarn was the product most exported to China, making up 48 per cent of all textiles.

However, Hiếu said many Vietnamese enterprises, including textile firms, face difficulties when attempting to export goods to China.

“The production scale of Vietnamese enterprises is relatively small, leading to a limitation on competitiveness of export goods,” Hiếu said. “In addition, some enterprises have not actively explored consumption habits, market information or quality standards and quarantine testing in China.”

Lê Hoàng Oanh, head of the Ministry of Industry and Trade’s Department of Asian-African Markets, said the two countries’ border infrastructure had failed to meet the rapidly growing demand of bilateral commodity exchange.

China is the main export market for Việt Nam’s agricultural and aquatic products.

However, “agricultural and aquatic products, which are allowed to be exported to China, are not yet abundant,” Oanh said. “The progress of negotiation to open the market for new products of Việt Nam is still slow.”

Oanh added that businesses needed to organise the production of agricultural and aquatic products on an industrial scale with uniform quality to ensure compliance with quality standards required to sell goods in China.

“To promote the export of goods to the Chinese market, Vietnamese enterprises need to identify China as a key market and should not assume that it is easy market,” she said. “Businesses need to understand market demand in China to determine key products and key market areas.”— VNS

Read more at http://vietnamnews.vn/economy/51913...-continue-to-develop.html#u3xAWtIcdt60kRXr.99

***
 
Bcs Cnese wanna flee out of CN asap, CN is doomed.:cool:

------------
Factory from China moved to Vietnam to recruit people en masse

According to the General Statistics Office, from 42 countries and territories with new investment projects in Vietnam in the first quarter of 2019, China is the largest investor with USD 723.2 million, accounting for 18.9%. Of the total FDI capital, the processing and processing industry is also the industry that attracts the largest foreign direct investment (FDI). This contributes to the increasing demand for recruitment in factories in general.



In the first three months of the year, many factories in the VSIP II industrial park (Binh Duong) registered hundreds of extra employees. An electrical equipment factory with 300 employees, but has announced that it plans to expand to 1,000 employees.



In the South, renewable energy projects in Ben Tre are also happy to find people. An American investor project here lacks both unskilled labor and higher management.



Navigos Search explains that this sudden increase in demand is due to the need for companies to expand or restructure their factories, leading to a major challenge for employers to attract and retain candidates. At the same time, a wave of candidates appeared shifting between factories in the same sector.



In the Ho Chi Minh City region, compared to other industries, industry and industry are also areas recognized by Navigos to pay the highest salaries for many middle and higher positions. The position of an engineer can be paid with a salary of 4,000 USD, the management level has a position to pay up to 8,000 USD per month.

https://defence.pk/pdf/threads/will...oduction-moves-away-from-china.612889/page-13
 
Việt Nam, China trade ties continue to develop

Update: April, 25/2019 - 09:26

7024_13-Trung%20Quoc.jpg

Officers of Cốc Nam Customs Department in Lạng Sơn Province, which shares a border with China, perform a check on imported products. — VNA/VNS Photo Hoàng Hùng

HÀ NỘI — Economic and trade relations between Việt Nam and China have been developing in a positive direction, as shown by the continuous increase of bilateral trade turnover between the two countries. Việt Nam is fast becoming an attractive investment destination for Chinese enterprises.

According to the Foreign Investment Agency under the Ministry of Planning and Investment, China invested about US$1.6 billion in Việt Nam in the first fourth months of this year, making it the country’s fourth largest source of foreign investment.

Several large projects were funded by Chinese investors in the period including a tire manufacturing project with total registered capital of $280 million in the southern province of Tây Ninh and another tire project of Advance Tire (Vietnam) Co. Ltd with registered capital of $214.4 million in the southern province of Tiền Giang.

China has been Việt Nam’s biggest trade partner since 2004, and bilateral trade has been continuing its strong growth. China is currently Việt Nam’s second largest export market after the United States. Việt Nam is also China's largest trading partner in ASEAN and its eighth largest in the world. It is China’s fifth largest export market and ninth largest import market.

According to the Ministry of Industry and Trade, Việt Nam–China trade turnover reached $106.7 billion last year, up 13.5 per cent compared to 2017. Việt Nam exported goods worth $41.26 billion, up 16.56 per cent, while imports reached $65.43 billion, up 11.68 per cent.

Executive Director of Vietnam National Garment and Textile Group (Vinatex) Cao Hữu Hiếu said one of the bright points contributing to the growth of Việt Nam’s textile and garment industry was businesses’ efforts to boost exports to the Chinese market.

Hiếu said Việt Nam’s garment and textile export turnover to the Chinese market increased by 24 per cent from $3.2 billion in 2017 to $4.1 billion in 2018. Yarn was the product most exported to China, making up 48 per cent of all textiles.

However, Hiếu said many Vietnamese enterprises, including textile firms, face difficulties when attempting to export goods to China.

“The production scale of Vietnamese enterprises is relatively small, leading to a limitation on competitiveness of export goods,” Hiếu said. “In addition, some enterprises have not actively explored consumption habits, market information or quality standards and quarantine testing in China.”

Lê Hoàng Oanh, head of the Ministry of Industry and Trade’s Department of Asian-African Markets, said the two countries’ border infrastructure had failed to meet the rapidly growing demand of bilateral commodity exchange.

China is the main export market for Việt Nam’s agricultural and aquatic products.

However, “agricultural and aquatic products, which are allowed to be exported to China, are not yet abundant,” Oanh said. “The progress of negotiation to open the market for new products of Việt Nam is still slow.”

Oanh added that businesses needed to organise the production of agricultural and aquatic products on an industrial scale with uniform quality to ensure compliance with quality standards required to sell goods in China.

“To promote the export of goods to the Chinese market, Vietnamese enterprises need to identify China as a key market and should not assume that it is easy market,” she said. “Businesses need to understand market demand in China to determine key products and key market areas.”— VNS

Read more at http://vietnamnews.vn/economy/51913...-continue-to-develop.html#u3xAWtIcdt60kRXr.99

***

China is a giant market which no countries should ignore. Currently, Vietnam is the largest trading partner of China in Southeast Asia (about 108 billion USD in 2018), and that number is growing very fast. I hope both Vietnam and China live peacefully and develop mutually in the long term.

However, learning from Mexico-USA and South Korea-China lesson, we Vietnamese should diversify trading partners as much as possible to limit any sudden change in future relationship.
 
China is a giant market which no countries should ignore. Currently, Vietnam is the largest trading partner of China in Southeast Asia (about 108 billion USD in 2018), and that number is growing very fast. I hope both Vietnam and China live peacefully and develop mutually in the long term.

Very good points. It is amazing that China-Vietnam trade volume is larger than China-Russia trade volume (which has just passed 100 billion mark). Considering the role of energy in China-Russia trade, I believe China-Vietnam trade is more diversified.

However, learning from Mexico-USA and South Korea-China lesson, we Vietnamese should diversify trading partners as much as possible to limit any sudden change in future relationship.

Korea's trade in general is declining. This year (2018) they announced the worst trade figures since 2008. The decline is across the board, not just with China.

That's why Korea has recently been the most active proponent of a China-Japan-Korea Free Trade Area.

They are pushing very hard for an agreement soon, which is good for regional development.
 
Bcs Cnese wanna flee out of CN asap, CN is doomed.:cool:

------------
Factory from China moved to Vietnam to recruit people en masse

According to the General Statistics Office, from 42 countries and territories with new investment projects in Vietnam in the first quarter of 2019, China is the largest investor with USD 723.2 million, accounting for 18.9%. Of the total FDI capital, the processing and processing industry is also the industry that attracts the largest foreign direct investment (FDI). This contributes to the increasing demand for recruitment in factories in general.



In the first three months of the year, many factories in the VSIP II industrial park (Binh Duong) registered hundreds of extra employees. An electrical equipment factory with 300 employees, but has announced that it plans to expand to 1,000 employees.



In the South, renewable energy projects in Ben Tre are also happy to find people. An American investor project here lacks both unskilled labor and higher management.



Navigos Search explains that this sudden increase in demand is due to the need for companies to expand or restructure their factories, leading to a major challenge for employers to attract and retain candidates. At the same time, a wave of candidates appeared shifting between factories in the same sector.



In the Ho Chi Minh City region, compared to other industries, industry and industry are also areas recognized by Navigos to pay the highest salaries for many middle and higher positions. The position of an engineer can be paid with a salary of 4,000 USD, the management level has a position to pay up to 8,000 USD per month.

https://defence.pk/pdf/threads/will...oduction-moves-away-from-china.612889/page-13
Follow the examples of your leader, apologize and bow down to China and beg humbly, so they will pity your poor country and maybe put some investments, definitely a huge upgrade compared to the agent orange showered to your people by murica.
 

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