The Philippine Star

Hanoi struggles to curb fake ‘Made in Vietnam’ goods

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HANOI (AFP) – Vietnam is struggling to curb fraud in exports destined for America, custom officials said Thursday, as manufactur­ers seek to dodge punishing tariffs due to the US-China trade spat by illegally using “Made in Vietnam” labels.

Exporters have started shifting production from China to Vietnam to avoid steep tariffs imposed by US President Donald Trump on hundreds of billions of dollars worth of Chinese goods.

The move has also prompted concerns on a rise in manufactur­ers illegally claiming their products are from Vietnam when they in fact originate in China -- and authoritie­s have vowed to crack down with more stringent inspection­s and punishment­s.

Custom officials in Hanoi said Thursday they currently lack the resources to properly tackle the issue, and only five percent of all import-export declaratio­n forms are verified.

“We can’t check all the goods. Only when we identify the risks or signs of violations will the customs authoritie­s check,” said Au Anh Tuan, director of customs control and supervisio­n at Vietnam Customs.

On the sidelines of a trade origin fraud workshop, he told AFP there have been cases where “Made in Vietnam” labels were sewn in after goods have cleared customs, making it more difficult to flag as a potential risk.

“There is not enough staff from market regulation authoritie­s or inspectors to check that,” Tuan said.

The US has seen a “tremendous amount” of fake Made in Vietnam goods recently, said Tom Jesukiewic­z, a field director at the US Customs and Borders Protection, declining to name specific figures.

However, he singled out steel products and plywood as problem areas.

“We saw an extreme pattern shift immediatel­y,” Jesukiewic­z told AFP.

Any sector with more than 15 percent growth is considered “high risk,” said Mai Xuan Thanh, deputy director general of Vietnam Customs, adding that authoritie­s will continue reviewing businesses shipping to the US.

According to Vietnam’s Ministry of Industry and Trade, some 15 commoditie­s -- including textiles, footwear, electrical components, iron, steel and wood products – have been identified as fraud risk due to a sudden surge of imports from China and exports to markets like the US.

The US and China have slapped steep tariffs on hundreds of billions of dollars in two-way trade, and another round of US duties are set to hit on Dec. 15 on $160 billion in Chinese goods.

Vietnam has long been a manufactur­ing hub for cheaply-made goods, ranging from Adidas sneakers and H&M dresses to Samsung smart phones and intel processors.

In the first nine months of this year, US imports from Vietnam reached nearly $44.9 billion, up more than 28 percent from the same period last year.

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