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Vietnam's economy suffers from China row
MANABU ITO, Nikkei staff writer
HANOI -- Vietnam's continued struggle with China over territorial claims in the South China Sea is beginning to take a toll on the Southeast Asian nation's economy, threatening to push its robust growth lower.
Economic repercussions from the latest flare-up of the long-standing territorial dispute are now being felt. Some infrastructure development projects involving Chinese companies have stalled, while the number of Chinese visitors to Vietnam has begun to drop. The government and the nation's business sector are taking steps to reduce Vietnam's heavy economic dependence on China. But it is not an easy thing to achieve.
Heavy outcomes
Signs of the maritime spat's impact are clearly visible at a construction site of an urban train line in southwestern Hanoi. The construction of Line 2A, a 13km rail line that runs on viaducts across the city center, has been on hold since mid-May. Chinese companies are involved in the project's construction, which is mostly funded by China. Construction machinery has been left idle and exposed to the weather.
After a wave of anti-China demonstrations swept through Vietnam, Chinese workers disappeared from the site, said a person who knows about the project. China is providing nearly 80% of some $530 million needed to build the train line. With the construction of bridge piers and girders left in advanced stages, the line was expected to be completed by the end of the year.
In the central Vietnamese Ha Tinh Province, an anti-Chinese riot has caused problems for the construction of a new integrated steelmaking plant for Taiwan's Formosa Plastics. In mid-May, workers for a Chinese subcontractor were attacked by a mob at the construction site, and several people were killed. Most of the 4,000 Chinese workers at the site have returned home, causing serious construction delays.
The inaugural kindling of a furnace at the plant, originally scheduled for the end of May 2015, will be delayed by several months.
The Vietnamese tourist industry is also taking a big hit from the deterioration of relations with China. There have been a large number of cancellations of tours and hotel reservations by Chinese tourists. The number of Chinese tourists who visited Vietnam in June plunged 29.5% from the previous month.
Economic dependence
The extent of Vietnam's economic reliance on China has come to the fore since early May, when the current maritime confrontation started with sea vessels from the two countries ramming each other near China's deep-sea oil rig stationed in disputed waters.
There have been a total of 20 engineering, procurement and construction contracts for infrastructure projects such as power generation plants planned in Vietnam recently. Of that total, 15 contracts have been won by Chinese companies, according to local media.
Some Vietnamese are warning that the construction of power plants will stop if Chinese companies leave the country.
The Vietnam Center for Economics and Policy Research at the VNU University of Economics and Business revised down economic forecasts at the end of May. The territorial row will lower the country's real economic growth rate in 2014 to 4.15-4.88%, down by more than 1 point from its original prediction of 5.4-5.5%, the center said.
Mizuho Research Institute has also slashed its growth forecast for Vietnam, from 6% to 5.6%, citing the effects of anti-China protests.
These revised forecasts are below the Vietnamese government's annual growth target of 5.8% for this year.
Leading economic indicators have yet to show any serious damage from the territorial row. Vietnam's real gross domestic product grew at a healthy rate of 5.18% in the first six months of 2014 from a year earlier.
But other economic data are already showing troubling signs of a possible economic slowdown. New or additional direct foreign investment in Vietnam during the first half of this year, for instance, drooped 35.3% from the same period last year. The rate of export growth during the same period was lower than the year before.
Dwindling foreign investment is bound to deliver a heavy blow to the Vietnamese economy, which has been powered mainly by exports of foreign manufacturers.
In an article published earlier this month in an official government newspaper, Vietnamese President Truong Tan Sang stressed the need to correct the country's heavy economic dependence on China. The Vietnam Textile and Apparel Association called on its member companies to submit information about their purchases of yarn, fabric and dye from China. The association is seeking to promote purchases from alternative sources such as Thailand and India.
Vietnam's economy suffers from China row- Nikkei Asian Review
MANABU ITO, Nikkei staff writer
HANOI -- Vietnam's continued struggle with China over territorial claims in the South China Sea is beginning to take a toll on the Southeast Asian nation's economy, threatening to push its robust growth lower.
Economic repercussions from the latest flare-up of the long-standing territorial dispute are now being felt. Some infrastructure development projects involving Chinese companies have stalled, while the number of Chinese visitors to Vietnam has begun to drop. The government and the nation's business sector are taking steps to reduce Vietnam's heavy economic dependence on China. But it is not an easy thing to achieve.
Heavy outcomes
Signs of the maritime spat's impact are clearly visible at a construction site of an urban train line in southwestern Hanoi. The construction of Line 2A, a 13km rail line that runs on viaducts across the city center, has been on hold since mid-May. Chinese companies are involved in the project's construction, which is mostly funded by China. Construction machinery has been left idle and exposed to the weather.
After a wave of anti-China demonstrations swept through Vietnam, Chinese workers disappeared from the site, said a person who knows about the project. China is providing nearly 80% of some $530 million needed to build the train line. With the construction of bridge piers and girders left in advanced stages, the line was expected to be completed by the end of the year.
In the central Vietnamese Ha Tinh Province, an anti-Chinese riot has caused problems for the construction of a new integrated steelmaking plant for Taiwan's Formosa Plastics. In mid-May, workers for a Chinese subcontractor were attacked by a mob at the construction site, and several people were killed. Most of the 4,000 Chinese workers at the site have returned home, causing serious construction delays.
The inaugural kindling of a furnace at the plant, originally scheduled for the end of May 2015, will be delayed by several months.
The Vietnamese tourist industry is also taking a big hit from the deterioration of relations with China. There have been a large number of cancellations of tours and hotel reservations by Chinese tourists. The number of Chinese tourists who visited Vietnam in June plunged 29.5% from the previous month.
Economic dependence
The extent of Vietnam's economic reliance on China has come to the fore since early May, when the current maritime confrontation started with sea vessels from the two countries ramming each other near China's deep-sea oil rig stationed in disputed waters.
There have been a total of 20 engineering, procurement and construction contracts for infrastructure projects such as power generation plants planned in Vietnam recently. Of that total, 15 contracts have been won by Chinese companies, according to local media.
Some Vietnamese are warning that the construction of power plants will stop if Chinese companies leave the country.
The Vietnam Center for Economics and Policy Research at the VNU University of Economics and Business revised down economic forecasts at the end of May. The territorial row will lower the country's real economic growth rate in 2014 to 4.15-4.88%, down by more than 1 point from its original prediction of 5.4-5.5%, the center said.
Mizuho Research Institute has also slashed its growth forecast for Vietnam, from 6% to 5.6%, citing the effects of anti-China protests.
These revised forecasts are below the Vietnamese government's annual growth target of 5.8% for this year.
Leading economic indicators have yet to show any serious damage from the territorial row. Vietnam's real gross domestic product grew at a healthy rate of 5.18% in the first six months of 2014 from a year earlier.
But other economic data are already showing troubling signs of a possible economic slowdown. New or additional direct foreign investment in Vietnam during the first half of this year, for instance, drooped 35.3% from the same period last year. The rate of export growth during the same period was lower than the year before.
Dwindling foreign investment is bound to deliver a heavy blow to the Vietnamese economy, which has been powered mainly by exports of foreign manufacturers.
In an article published earlier this month in an official government newspaper, Vietnamese President Truong Tan Sang stressed the need to correct the country's heavy economic dependence on China. The Vietnam Textile and Apparel Association called on its member companies to submit information about their purchases of yarn, fabric and dye from China. The association is seeking to promote purchases from alternative sources such as Thailand and India.
Vietnam's economy suffers from China row- Nikkei Asian Review