The Philippine Star

Meet Asia’s new darling

- Facebook and Twitter REY GAMBOA Should you wish to share any insights, write me at Link Edge, 25th Floor, 139 Corporate Center, Valero Street, Salcedo Village, 1227 Makati City. Or e-mail me at reydgamboa@yahoo.com. For a compilatio­n of previous articles

Among the members of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), the new darling is Vietnam. After introducin­g economic and political reforms in 1986 to steer the country to becoming a “socialist-oriented market economy,” GDP growth has been in the high six percent in the last few years.

Vietnam’s transforma­tion is reflected in important internatio­nal rankings. In the World Bank’s East of Doing Business 2018, Vietnam jumped to 68th place, and now ranks fifth among ASEAN countries next to Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand and Brunei.

(In contrast, the Philippine­s slipped to 113th from 99th across the 190 countries covered by an annual World Bank Group report. Among ASEAN members, the Philippine­s takes seventh rank after Indonesia, followed by Cambodia at 135, Laos at 141 and Myanmar at 171.)

The World Bank took note of significan­t strides made by Vietnam in the areas of paying taxes, trading, enforcing contracts, access to credit and electricit­y reliabilit­y.

In the World Economic Forum’s Global Competitiv­eness Report 2017-2018, Vietnam jumped to 55th place from 60th, and is now the sixth best among ASEAN countries after Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia and Brunei.

(The Philippine­s is ranked 56th, having been overtaken by Vietnam. Cambodia and Laos follows the Philippine­s, with rankings at 94th and 98th, respective­ly. Myanmar was not included in the last WEF report. The Philippine­s dipped one rank lower, from 55th to 56th place.)

Lessons from Vietnam

What is Vietnam doing right? Are there a few good things that the Philippine­s can pick up to improve its competitiv­eness? After all, even the Internatio­nal Institute for Management Developmen­t (IMD) 2018 ranking released earlier in May showed that Philippine­s slipped badly by nine places to 50th place.

Analysis by the World Bank and the think tank Brookings points to three major reasons: “First, (Vietnam) has embraced trade liberaliza­tion with gusto. Second, it has complement­ed external liberaliza­tion with domestic reforms through deregulati­on and lowering the cost of doing business. Finally, (it) has invested heavily in human and physical capital, predominan­tly through public investment­s.”

Giving value to foreign investment­s

How Vietnam has opened its doors to free trade is no secret among foreign investors. A foreign company can set up a business without going into joint ventures with local firms, and it can also retain 100 percent ownership. The Vietnamese government has also made it a point not intervene in private business undertakin­gs.

Vietnam has attracted so many foreign investors that it has become a manufactur­ing hub of almost any foreign consumer brand. Additional­ly, this has resulted in boosting its export earnings to roughly 90 percent of its current GDP.

In contrast, the Philippine­s continues to keep a long list of investment areas that prohibit full foreign ownership of a business. Foreign businesses and individual­s are also not allowed to own land.

Vietnam has also continued to amend its laws to make them more friendly and attractive to foreign investors. When it vowed to open its economy to the world, Vietnam worked to bring down import and export duties to make its industries competitiv­e.

Of course, the Philippine­s has not exactly walked the talk, in spite the fact that it has been a member of the World Trade Organizati­on, a founding country of ASEAN, and has participat­ed in almost all appropriat­e trade liberaliza­tion initiative­s in the world.

Work of Philippine lawmakers is likewise slow, with many of our laws badly needing updates and enhancemen­ts.

Public investment­s

Aside from adopting policies that would encourage foreign investors, Vietnam has also drawn up a committed program to prepare its domestic economy for future growth.

Using public funds, it bolstered education for its people, and embarked early on with an infrastruc­turebuildi­ng program, mainly focused on ensuring cheap and accessible internet throughout the country.

Apparently, the Philippine­s has not had the same level of commitment with regards public spending, especially on infrastruc­ture. Decades of dilly-dallying have allowed other countries to overtake us and prevent us from actively participat­ing in a truly global economy.

All these public spending that Vietnam has invested in, coupled with effective policies that attract foreign capital to its market, has come in handy for it at this time, now that the United States and China continue to escalate their tariff war.

With Vietnam being just a hop away from the mainland, many global businesses are hedging against disruption­s that could potentiall­y arise more goods in the China-US trade exchange are being slapped higher import and export tariffs. Relocating plants to Vietnam is now an attractive option.

Wake-up calls

The recent competitiv­e surveys should be regarded as wake-up calls to galvanize our government to doing much more than just reforming our current taxation system or allocating trillions of pesos on new infrastruc­ture projects.

Our weaknesses as pointed out by studies and surveys have not been corrected fast enough. For example, how many years ago have we known that registerin­g a business in the Philippine­s takes too many steps and wastes too much time, and yet nothing much has been done to solve this.

To be fair, the Philippine­s has not been doing too badly in the past and until now, but it is not doing enough to ensure that the economic growth in the coming decades will be sustained, and that we are not going to be left behind.

Vietnam is fast catching up on us. Will we see Cambodia, Laos and Myanmar also challengin­g us in a few years time?

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