Viet Nam News

Up to 88,000 businesses withdraw from market in first five months

-

As many as 88,000 enterprise­s in Việt Nam have withdrawn from the market in the first five months of this year, up 22.6 per cent year-on-year, said the General Statistics Office (GSO).

Of the sum, 55,200 enterprise­s temporaril­y ceased operations, up 20.3 per cent against the last year's same period. Another 25,500 were in the dissolutio­n process, a yearly rise of 34 per cent and 7,300 completed dissolutio­n procedures, up 6.5 per cent year-on-year.

On average, 17,600 businesses withdraw from the market every month, the GSO said.

From January to May, over 61,900 new enterprise­s were formed with a total registered capital of VNĐ568.7 trillion, down 2 per cent in the number of firms and 25.3 per cent in capital from the same period last year.

The average registered capital of a newly-establishe­d enterprise also dropped 24 per cent year-onyear to VNĐ9.2 billion.

Besides, nearly 95,000 enterprise­s have resumed operations during the period, which plunged by 4 per cent from a year earlier, the GSO reported.

The office added that total capital added to the economy in the reviewed period also declined 43 per cent year on year to over VNĐ1.393 quadrillio­n, including over VNĐ824 trillion poured into operating businesses.

Earlier, the National Private Economic Developmen­t Research Board under the Government’s Advisory Council for Administra­tive Procedure Reform said local enterprise­s were going through a particular­ly difficult situation.

In a survey announced recently by the board, 82.3 per cent of businesses planned to reduce their business scale or suspend business and stop doing business in the last months of the year.

Of which, 11 per cent of the firms planned to stop doing business or wait for dissolutio­n; 12.4 per cent of them would suspend business, and 38.5 per cent would sharply reduce their business scale.

Among enterprise­s still operating in 2023, 71.2 per cent were expected to reduce their labour size by over 5 per cent, while 81 per cent were likely to have revenue down by over 5 per cent.

Meanwhile, business confidence in the macro-economy and industrial economy was low, as up to 81.4 per cent of surveyed enterprise­s had a negative or very negative assessment of Việt Nam's economic prospects in the remaining months of 2023.

The survey also identified four groups of the biggest difficulti­es that enterprise­s have been facing. That were difficulti­es in orders (59,2 per cent), accessing loans (51.1 per cent), carrying out administra­tive procedures ( 45.3 per cent) and meeting the provisions of the law (45.3 per cent).

The survey's findings, in which 9,556 firms participat­ed, were sent to Prime Minister Phạm Minh Chính.

 ?? VNA/VNS Photo Hoàng Nhị ?? A steel factory in Bà Rịavũng Tàu Province.
VNA/VNS Photo Hoàng Nhị A steel factory in Bà Rịavũng Tàu Province.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Vietnam