The Star Malaysia

Vietnam gets new PM

Phuc has tough task of maintainin­g pace of nation’s economic growth

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HANOI: Vietnam’s parliament has approved a new prime minister, handing former bureaucrat and legislator Nguyen Xuan Phuc (pic) the challenge of maintainin­g the momentum of one of Asia’s fastestgro­wing economies.

Phuc rises from deputy prime minister to lead a government committed to overhaulin­g its troubled state sector and broad reforms under a US-led Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p, a major trade pact covering four-tenths of the global economy.

The 61-year-old completes the trio of core leaders of a youthful country hooked on social media and growing in its awareness of politics and Vietnam’s complex ties with China and the United States.

Phuc has some big shoes to fill, taking over from Nguyen Tan Dung, a tough-talking reformist whose decisivene­ss won him broad support but, say experts, saw him sidelined by conservati­ves who were concerned he would become too powerful.

Vietnam is officially ruled by consensus with key decisions made by the Communist Party’s elite politburo.

Dung had served a maximum two terms and is no longer a politburo member, although key policy makers from his government are among the new 19-member body.

“Phuc certainly will be lower key than the hard-charging Dung,” said Murray Hiebert, a South-East Asia specialist at Washington’s Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies.

“We should expect him to operate within the consensus of the ruling politburo. He will have seen the impact on Dung of his more flamboyant, independen­t style.” Phuc was the only candidate chosen at the party’s January congress. His appointmen­t for a five-year term was approved by 475 of 480 lawmakers present.

He is from the central province of Quang Nam and his expertise is management and economics.

He held key posts in local politics and on legislativ­e committees and was once head of planning and investment in Danang, Vietnam’s third biggest city.

Phuc becomes part of a new triumvirat­e with party chief Nguyen Phu Trong and President Tran Dai Quang, who was endorsed last week.

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