Kuwait Times

Vietnam courts Japanese high-tech investment

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Vietnam is courting high-tech Japanese investment and wants Tokyo to become its top investor, its premier said yesterday during a visit by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.

Japan is the second largest foreign investor in communist Vietnam, a manufactur­ing hub in southeast Asia seeking to expand exports from apparel and agricultur­e to high-value good like electronic­s and automobile­s.

“Vietnam wants Japan to become the top investor in Vietnam,” Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc said yesterday at a business forum co-hosted by Abe and attended by company tycoons from both sides.

Vietnam has become a fierce competitor to regional neighbours like Thailand, Malaysia, China and Taiwan in tech manufactur­ing.

Electronic giants like Panasonic, Samsung, Foxconn and Intel have all made significan­t investment­s, taking advantage of Vietnam’s comparativ­ely cheap but increasing­ly well-educated and youthful workforce.

Ties between Tokyo and Hanoi have warmed in recent years, and the world’s number three economy has invested heavily in Vietnam as growth back home has been dragged down by a greying and shrinking population.

The Asian allies have also cosied up in the face of separate disputes with regional powerhouse China over disputed territory in regional contested waters.

Japanese firms are currently involved in more than 3,000 projects worth roughly $42 billion in Vietnam, mostly in the manufactur­ing sector. It is the leading investor in Vietnam after South Korea.

Tokyo is also looking for new markets to sell major constructi­on projects to.

Abe called on Vietnam to “continue supporting Japanese enterprise­s (and) listening to experience­s from Japanese companies in high-tech areas”.

He said earlier that investment­s would focus on “projects to upgrade high quality infrastruc­ture”.

The leaders did not outline specific areas of investment, but officials said earlier that Japan was interested in highspeed railway projects and airport infrastruc­ture.

Earlier during Abe’s two-day trip, officials said Japan’s Mitsubishi is investing in a thermal power plant in Vietnam’s central Ha Tinh province.

Members of Vietnam’s business community welcomed the push toward hightech at the meeting, which was attended by several Japanese companies, including Mitsubishi, Canon and Fukuyama Transporti­ng.

“(It) will surely contribute to improving the quality of life in Vietnam,” Nguyen Hoang, CEO of Vietnam’s N&G Investment, told AFP.

Vietnam, an authoritar­ian one-party state, has become a hot spot for private investment in recent years, especially in manufactur­ing and consumer sectors.

Foreign investment shot up nine percent last year compared to the year before, hitting a record $15.8 billion. Though growth has remained relatively strong in recent years, its GDP rose 6.2 percent last year, down from 2015 and falling shy of its growth target of between 6.7 and 7.00 percent.

Abe’s visited Philippine­s, Australia and Indonesia on his six-day tour of AsiaPacifi­c before his final stop in Vietnam.

He said on Monday that Japan would provide six new patrol vessels to Vietnam as he called for maritime security in Asia. — AFP

 ??  ?? BUTHIDAUNG: This photograph taken on January 14, 2017 shows a Myanmar immigratio­n officer (L) using an eye scanner on a resident during the personal data verificati­on process, as part of requiremen­ts for the registrati­on of smart identity cards, in...
BUTHIDAUNG: This photograph taken on January 14, 2017 shows a Myanmar immigratio­n officer (L) using an eye scanner on a resident during the personal data verificati­on process, as part of requiremen­ts for the registrati­on of smart identity cards, in...

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