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I like to see people look down on us Viet

The ANNUAL Chinese military spending alone is bigger than the entire Vietnamese economy.

Just stop and think about that for a second :D

OR

China's adds about $1 TRILLION of GDP to its economy EVERY YEAR.
The entire size of the Vietnamese economy is $190 BILLION.

China adds about 5 Vietnams each year to its economy.

Just stop and think about that for a second. :D

Good luck trying to hang with China :lol:
That TRILLION cant help millions poor CN kids starving to death and CN economy will get hit harder when TPP come to reality :cray:

Actually Vietnamese and Chinese are very similar. We are like cousins. :cheers: We share the same hard working Confucius culture, the same holidays, the same Buddhist religion etc. If Vietnam do not screwed up, Vietnam can easily overtake Malaysia. ...only if you do not screw up.....
Its not a screwing up, its just a taking back what we lost :pop:
 
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You want me to answer your question? the answr is = have you people been using that word to call us and You can keep continue call us Monkies does not hurt a bit, in return we will expose your stupidity and make you jump up and down like real monkey :partay:. That is the answer. If we are monkey then we are king of the morons people like you, we only rank below budda right :partay:

You and he are the same situation expelled by Vietnamese govt in 1970's. The difference is that you were pushed to America, he was forced to China.
 
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I dont think we are looking down on vietnamese tbh.. Consider it trashtalking before a war, if you like. It has nothing to do with racism. Maybe you stayed at the States for long and their racist labelling mindset gets to you, but the Chinese generally don‘t see race.You need to feel more secure about yourself
 
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Maybe you stayed at the States for long and their racist labelling mindset gets to you, but the Chinese generally don‘t see race.You need to feel more secure about yourself

The guy is racist deep in the heart and thus projects it on others without perhaps even noticing it. That's maybe because the guy lived in the US for so long and often encountered racism.

Besides, racism is a US tradition that goes well beyond name calling.

That is why Vietnam future is with China. US is predator country. Vietnam beware.

Vietnam is like a fox who make friend with a tiger. Then walk around the jungle like he is the king.

Even though not the Vietnamese diaspora or the ultra-nationalists, the government seems to know it is not to the best of the country's interests to become a pawn of the US, hence, they, albeit not much successfully, trying to diversify the risks by playing on both sides.
 
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Honestly, I like to see people look down or underestimate us like those Chinese morons. But we just raise, succeed out of expectations that would make those look down on us angry, with long sad disappointing face and jump up and down like a monkey. That so entertain me. :partay: Good job Nguyen Tan Dung for pioneer Vietnam economic. Keep it up :enjoy: not freaking Truong Chinh, Nong Duc Manh, pro-China with empty head.

Vietnam is embarking on an unprecedented deal making spree as the economy prepares to open up to greater foreign competition.
Acquisitions involving Vietnamese companies may reach as much as a record $4.5 billion this year, surpassing $4.2 billion in 2012, Christopher Kummer, president of the Institute of Mergers, Acquisitions and Alliances, said by e-mail. There have already been $1.9 billion of deals so far this year, the most in three years, data from the Vienna-based think tank show.
Companies are seeking to bulk up as Vietnam is expected by PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP to be one of the world’s fastest- expanding economies through 2050.
Vietnam signed free trade agreements with South Korea and a Russia-led group in May, is part of the proposed US-led 12-nation Trans-Pacific Partnership and is working on a similar pact with Europe.
“Vietnamese companies will face a lot more competition when the market gets more open,” said Alan Pham, chief economist at VinaCapital Group, the nation’s biggest fund manager.
“Many local companies have low capitalization, lack of skilled manpower, inadequate marketing capacity. By using M&A to merge into a larger entity, compensating for each other’s deficiencies, they will improve their competitiveness.”
The VN Index has gained 8.1 percent this year, twice the gain in the MSCI Emerging Markets Index.
War chests

Vietnam Dairy Products JSC, known as Vinamilk, set aside VND4 trillion ($183 million) for dealmaking this year and is looking for targets at home and abroad. Vingroup JSC, the country’s biggest listed developer, bought Vietnam National Textile & Garment Group’s supermarket chain in April and has announced at least five other acquisitions in the past year.
While the trade agreements will benefit Vietnamese apparel manufacturers and shrimp exporters, they could hurt domestic auto assemblers and food and beverage producers, according to Tu Vu, head of research at Viet Capital Securities JSC.
Vietnamese consumers prefer Western brands, so lowering import duties for baby formula and confectionery products would lead to fiercer competition, Vu said by phone June 19.
The best-capitalized domestic companies in Vietnam will make acquisitions to increase their scale even further, Rehan Anwer, Credit Suisse Group AG’s Singapore-based head of frontier markets banking, said by e-mail. Deals will likely happen in the consumer, agriculture and real-estate industries, according to Anwer.
Overseas expansion
“The M&A market is in a sweet spot,” Attila Vajda, managing director at Singapore-based advisory firm Project Asia Research & Consulting Pte, said by phone. “Vietnam will be more integrated into the world economy and tax barriers will fall, so it will be easy to operate from here.”
FPT Corp., Vietnam’s biggest listed technology company, has set aside about $50 million for acquisitions this year to help achieve its goal of $1 billion in annual revenue from overseas by 2020, Deputy General Director Nguyen The Phuong said June 23.
Last year it bought German utility RWE AG’s technology unit in Slovakia, gaining 400 employees focused on SAP SE software and smart-home systems in its first purchase outside Vietnam.
The government is also pushing deals. This month, Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung approved the sale of large stakes in some state-owned enterprises to improve competitiveness and boost corporate governance. In February, a new rule took force that encourages bank consolidation by restricting cross- shareholdings among lenders.
Vietnam’s stable economy and currency paired with low inflation are giving companies more confidence to make acquisitions, said Tony X. Diep, a Ho Chi Minh City-based managing director of Indochina Capital Corp.
The government targets economic expansion of 6.2 percent in 2015, up from about 6 percent last year, and has kept inflation below 1 percent in the first five months of the year.
“A lot of people would be very surprised to see Vietnamese companies buying assets of foreign companies -- it shows how mature they are,” Diep said. “We will definitely see more deals coming, and things will still be very busy for the rest of the year.”

Don't just self-hype into a delusion. Actually In China there is no underestimate or overestimate on viet, viet just has zero exposure to China's social media, except when SCS is a hot spot.

You now have a high growth rate, so what? Do you always wish that exporting coffee, cloth, socks, fish, shrimp, pho, or working in foreign invested sweatshops, can make you guys rich or make your country into a developed one?

Look at Thailand or Malaysia, they have very good and long-history manufacturing sectors, a lot of foreign-invested high tech factories producing a broad range of electronic products in the level far above what today's Vietnam can do, but Thailand's economy just stuck at $5,000 GDP per capita for years, Malaysia is better but only thanks to their rich natural resources and a small population on a large piece of land. Then compare to Singapore, you can find the reason why some are in boom while others are stuck.

Some countries know what to do to avoid being stuck. Look at this:

Country rankings | Nature Publishing Index Asia-Pacific | Nature Publishing Group
npi_asia.png


and this:

Country outputs | Nature Index

world-npi.png


Look at the tiny country Singapore and its huge neighbors on those lists. That explains everything. Where is Vietnam BTW?
 
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Honestly, I like to see people look down or underestimate us like those Chinese morons. But we just raise, succeed out of expectations that would make those look down on us angry, with long sad disappointing face and jump up and down like a monkey. That so entertain me. :partay: Good job Nguyen Tan Dung for pioneer Vietnam economic. Keep it up :enjoy: not freaking Truong Chinh, Nong Duc Manh, pro-China with empty head.

Vietnam is embarking on an unprecedented deal making spree as the economy prepares to open up to greater foreign competition.
Acquisitions involving Vietnamese companies may reach as much as a record $4.5 billion this year, surpassing $4.2 billion in 2012, Christopher Kummer, president of the Institute of Mergers, Acquisitions and Alliances, said by e-mail. There have already been $1.9 billion of deals so far this year, the most in three years, data from the Vienna-based think tank show.
Companies are seeking to bulk up as Vietnam is expected by PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP to be one of the world’s fastest- expanding economies through 2050.
Vietnam signed free trade agreements with South Korea and a Russia-led group in May, is part of the proposed US-led 12-nation Trans-Pacific Partnership and is working on a similar pact with Europe.
“Vietnamese companies will face a lot more competition when the market gets more open,” said Alan Pham, chief economist at VinaCapital Group, the nation’s biggest fund manager.
“Many local companies have low capitalization, lack of skilled manpower, inadequate marketing capacity. By using M&A to merge into a larger entity, compensating for each other’s deficiencies, they will improve their competitiveness.”
The VN Index has gained 8.1 percent this year, twice the gain in the MSCI Emerging Markets Index.
War chests

Vietnam Dairy Products JSC, known as Vinamilk, set aside VND4 trillion ($183 million) for dealmaking this year and is looking for targets at home and abroad. Vingroup JSC, the country’s biggest listed developer, bought Vietnam National Textile & Garment Group’s supermarket chain in April and has announced at least five other acquisitions in the past year.
While the trade agreements will benefit Vietnamese apparel manufacturers and shrimp exporters, they could hurt domestic auto assemblers and food and beverage producers, according to Tu Vu, head of research at Viet Capital Securities JSC.
Vietnamese consumers prefer Western brands, so lowering import duties for baby formula and confectionery products would lead to fiercer competition, Vu said by phone June 19.
The best-capitalized domestic companies in Vietnam will make acquisitions to increase their scale even further, Rehan Anwer, Credit Suisse Group AG’s Singapore-based head of frontier markets banking, said by e-mail. Deals will likely happen in the consumer, agriculture and real-estate industries, according to Anwer.
Overseas expansion
“The M&A market is in a sweet spot,” Attila Vajda, managing director at Singapore-based advisory firm Project Asia Research & Consulting Pte, said by phone. “Vietnam will be more integrated into the world economy and tax barriers will fall, so it will be easy to operate from here.”
FPT Corp., Vietnam’s biggest listed technology company, has set aside about $50 million for acquisitions this year to help achieve its goal of $1 billion in annual revenue from overseas by 2020, Deputy General Director Nguyen The Phuong said June 23.
Last year it bought German utility RWE AG’s technology unit in Slovakia, gaining 400 employees focused on SAP SE software and smart-home systems in its first purchase outside Vietnam.
The government is also pushing deals. This month, Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung approved the sale of large stakes in some state-owned enterprises to improve competitiveness and boost corporate governance. In February, a new rule took force that encourages bank consolidation by restricting cross- shareholdings among lenders.
Vietnam’s stable economy and currency paired with low inflation are giving companies more confidence to make acquisitions, said Tony X. Diep, a Ho Chi Minh City-based managing director of Indochina Capital Corp.
The government targets economic expansion of 6.2 percent in 2015, up from about 6 percent last year, and has kept inflation below 1 percent in the first five months of the year.
“A lot of people would be very surprised to see Vietnamese companies buying assets of foreign companies -- it shows how mature they are,” Diep said. “We will definitely see more deals coming, and things will still be very busy for the rest of the year.”

Good to see Vietnam have progressed so much in such short period of time!
Despite challenges ahead, there are all reasons to believe the country will continue to prosper, all the best Vietnam!
 
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why would anyone lookdown on Vietnam.

The Chinese members here are ultra-nationalists. I bet most regular Chinese don't even think about Vietnam in their daily life, hence they are not looking down on Vietnam.
 
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That TRILLION cant help millions poor CN kids starving to death and CN economy will get hit harder when TPP come to reality :cray:


Its not a screwing up, its just a taking back what we lost :pop:
Is TPP that deadly to China? lol
 
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Some of racist comments by the chinese are despicable.....its ironic that asian folks have such virulent thoughts on facial features
 
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lmao talk about selective sight. Try reading some of the Vietnamese comments about Chinese.
Trust me i had enough...one member said that vietnamese look like thieves....what sane mind will say that?

LOOK, they ask and they shall get it, read the title of this thread, now, that's ironic.
One need not stoop low.. as i said to another poster, playful; banter is ok but calling some one as thief like appearance is not at all welcome.
 
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Trust me i had enough...one member said that vietnamese look like thieves....what sane mind will say that?


One need not stoop low.. as i said to another poster, playful; banter is ok but calling some one as thief like appearance is not at all welcome.

i thought India is all for free speech, what happened?
 
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Look at the tiny country Singapore and its huge neighbors on those lists. That explains everything. Where is Vietnam BTW?

It is because Singapore government (through its universities) give huge incentive to the writer/researcher. I believe other SEA countries, including my country, should do this step as well.
 
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