Wishful thinking, comrades. It is not going to happen. Look at your own figures. Last year, foreign direct investment in Vietnam fell 70 percent, to $21.5 billion, from $71.7 billion in 2008.
Endemic corruption, lack of accountability and transparency, and fearsome red tape are among the hurdles to foreign investment. Officials in Hanoi routinely announce schemes to fight corruption, but they always peter out when journalists are detained for reporting bribery scandals.
The situation, wholly owing to the ossified political makeup of the country, will only get worse in the short term as officials jockey for posts ahead of the Communist Party's 11th national congress in January next year. This internal volatility will have a far greater impact on Vietnam's economy than the far-off protests in Bangkok.
Besides, Vietnam is hardly free of its own social unrest. There has been a rising number of strikes, protests and land disputes in recent years, often affecting foreign businesses. Last month, more than 10,000 workers walked off the job to protest low salaries and shocking conditions at a Taiwanese shoe factory in southern Dong Nai province.
On April 5, the strikers gathered on National Highway 1, causing massive traffic jams, and when the police arrived and arrested one striker, his colleagues surrounded the police officers and forced them to release the man. Sound a bit like the Red Shirts? And bear in mind there have been more than 330 similar strikes in the past six months in Vietnam.
Meanwhile, although tourist arrivals are down in Thailand, they have not fallen as much as in Vietnam, where there was a decrease of 18.7 percent in foreign visitors last year.
On a trip to Washington last week, Vietnam's Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung promised skeptical U.S. business leaders that his government would work to improve the investment climate and upgrade the appalling infrastructure. Said Mr. Dung: "The Vietnamese government is well aware of difficulties in the investment climate, first of all infrastructure like roads, ports and energy."
Keep this in mind when you hear the silly talk of investors switching from Thailand to Vietnam. Do not be sucked in by those who say Vietnam is no longer a real communist regime but has somehow become a hotbed of free-market capitalism. It is hogwash.
Last month, the Communist Party's key decision-making body, the Central Committee, ended its plenary session with a loud public call for more socialism in the coming decade.
It has been 35 years since the end of the Vietnam War and almost 25 years since the policy of economic reform or "doi moi" was introduced to free up the market and allow entrepreneurs to flourish. Yet doi moi has never been applied properly, and grossly inefficient state-owned enterprises still dominate the economy. Consequently, Vietnam remains an economic laggard.
As an ASEAN ambassador said in Hanoi last week, there is no sense that the regime knows what's going on in an economic sense. There is no direction. Until the party dinosaurs find some direction and loosen up their rigid political and economic controls, Vietnam will never catch up with Thailand.
Roger Mitton is a former senior correspondent with Asiaweek and a former bureau chief in Washington and Hanoi for the Straits Times of Singapore.
Narongchai, Do you know anything about Thai tax and the regulation regarding to real estate? How easy is it to purchase or build apartments in Thailand?
Narongchai, Do you know anything about Thai tax and the regulation regarding to real estate? How easy is it to purchase or build apartments in Thailand?
Dear guys,
I don't think that the Tax system in Thailand is the only one factor to compare between Thailand and Vietnam in ths article. If you look at the article, it also talks about something else like corruption or social problem or economic and social centralization. Moreover, the writer has some experience in Asia including Vietnam . . . .
This article is a waste because the author has been biasedly negated Vietnam. I think he need to provide the corresponding information about Thailand in order to have a correct comparison. If you look @statistics abt FDI in Thailand, you will realize the real situation in Thailand is worse. Specifially, Thailand received 15.6 B in 2007, 10.8 B in 2008 and 4.3 B in 2009 (down 60%). Although felling down 70% from $ 71.7 B in 2008 to $ 21.5 B in 2009, FDI in Vietnam was still much much better. The author was also biased when comparing small worker strikes in Vietnam with large and huge protests in Thailand. Remember that strikes in Vietnam just happened for 2 or 3 days and only small number of workers participated in while the protests in Thailand lasted several months with hundreds of thousands of people involving and caused more than 20 people died and thousands of injury. Anyway, the author should do some homework before writing a good article. Negating one country to mislead people is not a good way to promote another one. Please try to be honest when writing! It's moral to provide enough information.
Vietnam is still rising
-- Edited by Luffyz on Saturday 8th of May 2010 09:07:09 AM
For me, I think Vietnam still far backward away from Thailand in so many ways eventhough they are having with the protesting but after the country back on track. I believed that Thailand will jump up again
In year 2010, Bangkok still in TOP 10 High Skyscrapers Cities
-- Edited by lao-girl on Saturday 8th of May 2010 04:11:10 PM
MahaNakhon is Bangkok newest skyscrapper. It is one of the most ambitious complex of contemporary architecture and design. With its distinctive sculptural appearance. MahaNakhon has introduced a 3D ribbon of architectural pixels that circle the tower's full height, as if excavating portions of the elegant glass curtain wall to reveal the inner life of the building. The pixilation gives MahaNakhon an arresting profile on the skyline.
MahaNakhon is Bangkok newest skyscrapper. It is one of the most ambitious complex of contemporary architecture and design. With its distinctive sculptural appearance. MahaNakhon has introduced a 3D ribbon of architectural pixels that circle the tower's full height, as if excavating portions of the elegant glass curtain wall to reveal the inner life of the building. The pixilation gives MahaNakhon an arresting profile on the skyline.
My friend told me that this Tower is building on the Silom Cemetery. It's kind of bad place to build a house or building on top of it.
lao-girl wrote:My friend told me that this Tower is building on the Silom Cemetery. It's kind of bad place to build a house or building on top of it. It is NOT built on a graveyard but closed to a graveyard. Actually, the graveyard is already surrounded by other tall buildings and planned to relocate.
communism does not work...corruption will always be its downfall.... all governments are corrupt to some extent...but communism is the most susceptible ..it is impossible to keep its leaders in check....