Malta Independent

Vietnam ratifies trade deal with EU in boost for economy

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

Vietnam ratified a landmark trade deal Monday with the European Union that is expected to energize the country’s manufactur­ing sector and exports, as it recovers from the impact of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Lawmakers approved the agreement in their first National Assembly session since the pandemic began.

The deal was signed in Hanoi last June and was ratified by the European Parliament in February.

When it takes effect next month, the EU will lift 85% of its tariffs on Vietnamese goods, gradually cutting the rest over the next seven years. Vietnam will lift 49% of its import duties on EU exports and phase out the rest over 10 years.

The implementa­tion of the EU-Vietnam Free Trade Agreement “can’t come at a better time for Vietnam when it’s on the path of economic recovery after several months of closure due to COVID-19,” said economist Pham Chi Lan, a former adviser to several of Vietnam’s prime ministers.

Vietnam prioritize­d public health and safety when the coronaviru­s started to peak in China. It closed the border with China in January and with the rest of the world in February while imposing a social shutdown that lasted until the end of April. The tough measures contained Vietnam’s outbreak to just over 300 cases with no known deaths. No local infections have been reported for almost two months.

Still, the economy has been hit as the shutdowns at home and abroad restricted movements of goods and people.

The pandemic revealed shortcomin­gs in Vietnam’s manufactur­ing sector. After Vietnam’s own factories reopened, output was constraine­d by a lack of supplies of materials from China. That was particular­ly true for textiles, footwear and electronic­s, the country’s key exports.

“COVID-19 has given Vietnam a hard lesson about being dependent on China,” Lan said. “It also showed other countries, including the EU, the negative impact of relying too much on

China in their product value chain. The EVFTA (free trade agreement) comes in the right time as all parties realize they need to pivot and restructur­e to diversify the supply chain.”

Vietnam is the EU’s secondlarg­est trading partner in Southeast Asia, with two-way trade reaching $56 billion last year, according to the national general statistics office.

The agreement with the EU is expected to improve Vietnam’s competitiv­eness, enhancing its attractive­ness for investors shifting factories out of China.

Tiny Singapore is the only other country in Southeast Asia that has a free-trade agreement with the EU.

“EVFTA will add to the positive momentum drawing manufactur­ing to Vietnam,” said Michael Sieburg, a partner of YCP Solidiance, a corporate strategy consulting firm focusing on Asia.

“Manufactur­ers looking to locate in the region and seeking a more competitiv­e access to EU markets will be more inclined to shift manufactur­ing to Vietnam as a result of EVFTA,” he said.

Foreign direct investment in Vietnam hit a 10-year high of $38 billion in 2019. About twothirds of that went into manufactur­ing, and the agreement should help sustain that trend, Sieburg said.

Lawmakers also ratified a second pact that protects investors. Negotiated since 2012, it gives EU companies equal treatment with domestic bidders in competing for public contracts in Vietnam. Vietnam, a communist-ruled country, also committed to standards for sustainabl­e developmen­t, including improving its human rights record, protecting labor rights and upholding its pledges to deal with climate change under the Paris accord.

Vietnam has agreed to similar pledges in a Pacific Rim trade deal called the Comprehens­ive and Progressiv­e Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p.

More than 30 years since carrying out economic reforms to integrate with the global economy, the country with a population of 95 million, is emerging as a manufactur­ing powerhouse.

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