Martian2
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A Vietnamese (EastWind) pointed out to me that Vietnam can manufacture its own buses now. He thinks Vietnam is catching up to China.
The interesting question is whether Vietnam is making progress in catching up to China.
Let's look at the enormity of the challenge. China has four companies in the Top Ten on the Forbes Global 2000. China's largest-public-company ICBC bank has sales of $151 billion, which is pretty close to Vietnam's nominal GDP of $201 billion.
China has plenty of large public companies and they span the entire spectrum on the Forbes Global 2000.
In contrast, Vietnam (see the very bottom of this post) has four little companies on the Forbes Global 2000. The largest Vietnamese public company, Vietin Bank, is listed at #1633 with sales of $2.7 billion.
China's largest public companies are like dinosaurs (T-Rex, Triceratops, etc.). Dinosaurs ruled the Earth for 100 million years. As long as dinosaurs existed, mammals remained as mouse-size creatures. Dinosaurs were at the top of the food chain and they dominated smaller creatures.
Similarly, China's largest public companies are like dinosaurs. They dominate the economic landscape. Only the United States has dinosaurs of equal size and numbers. Vietnam has four little hatchlings that will probably always inhabit the bottom depths of the Forbes Global 2000.
Now that Vietnam can manufacture a bus, is Vietnam catching up to China? I think the answer is clearly "no." The problem is much larger than that. China isn't just a bus-manufacturing country. China manufactures CNC machine tools, supercomputers, billion-dollar offshore oil drilling platforms, advanced communication satellites, LEO (low earth orbit) and GEO (geostationary earth orbit) rocket launches, nuclear power plants, mile-long dams, stealth fighters, nuclear submarines, ARJ-21 and C919 passenger jets, LNG ship carriers, bullet trains that travel at 350 km/hr, industrial robots, genetically modified crops, etc.
In conclusion, unless there is a cataclysmic "reset" event, Vietnam will always live in the long economic shadows of Chinese Megasaur public companies.
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The World’s Biggest Public Companies (China) | Forbes Global 2000 (2017 edition)
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The World’s Biggest Public Companies (Vietnam) | Forbes Global 2000 (2017 edition)
The interesting question is whether Vietnam is making progress in catching up to China.
Let's look at the enormity of the challenge. China has four companies in the Top Ten on the Forbes Global 2000. China's largest-public-company ICBC bank has sales of $151 billion, which is pretty close to Vietnam's nominal GDP of $201 billion.
China has plenty of large public companies and they span the entire spectrum on the Forbes Global 2000.
In contrast, Vietnam (see the very bottom of this post) has four little companies on the Forbes Global 2000. The largest Vietnamese public company, Vietin Bank, is listed at #1633 with sales of $2.7 billion.
China's largest public companies are like dinosaurs (T-Rex, Triceratops, etc.). Dinosaurs ruled the Earth for 100 million years. As long as dinosaurs existed, mammals remained as mouse-size creatures. Dinosaurs were at the top of the food chain and they dominated smaller creatures.
Similarly, China's largest public companies are like dinosaurs. They dominate the economic landscape. Only the United States has dinosaurs of equal size and numbers. Vietnam has four little hatchlings that will probably always inhabit the bottom depths of the Forbes Global 2000.
Now that Vietnam can manufacture a bus, is Vietnam catching up to China? I think the answer is clearly "no." The problem is much larger than that. China isn't just a bus-manufacturing country. China manufactures CNC machine tools, supercomputers, billion-dollar offshore oil drilling platforms, advanced communication satellites, LEO (low earth orbit) and GEO (geostationary earth orbit) rocket launches, nuclear power plants, mile-long dams, stealth fighters, nuclear submarines, ARJ-21 and C919 passenger jets, LNG ship carriers, bullet trains that travel at 350 km/hr, industrial robots, genetically modified crops, etc.
In conclusion, unless there is a cataclysmic "reset" event, Vietnam will always live in the long economic shadows of Chinese Megasaur public companies.
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The World’s Biggest Public Companies (China) | Forbes Global 2000 (2017 edition)
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The World’s Biggest Public Companies (Vietnam) | Forbes Global 2000 (2017 edition)
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