Vietnam attracts Chinese investors for S Asian market

News - Chinese companies are investing more in
Vietnam in order to get better access to the Southeast Asian market and its
comparative cost advantages, Vietnamese trade officials said on Monday.
“Investment from China has continued to increase in
the past few months thanks to Vietnam’s comparative cost advantages,” Bui Quoc
Trung, deputy director-general of the Foreign Investment Agency under Vietnam’s
Ministry of Planning and Investment, told China Daily in Beijing.
By the end of July, Chinese enterprises had
invested in 743 projects in Vietnam, with China’s total investment in the
nation amounting to $3.1 billion. Chinese companies have invested in 53 of
Vietnam’s 63 provinces, said Trung.
Compared to other Asian cities such as Bangkok and
Shanghai, costs in Vietnamese cities such as Hanoi are relatively low in terms
of tariffs and minimum wage standards, Trung said.
Average labor costs in Vietnam are only around half
of those in China.
On average, it costs about $100 to hire an
unskilled worker in Vietnam, said Wan Hailong, assistant manager of HydroChina International
Engineering Co’s overseas department.
At the same time, in China, labor shortages in some
areas have led Chinese enterprises and local governments to raise salaries.
A total of 27 provinces, autonomous regions and
municipalities have so far raised their minimum wage levels this year
Rising labor costs in China have pushed domestic
companies to alleviate cost pressures by looking at countries such as Vietnam.
However, it’s unlikely that multinational companies
operating in China will move to countries like Vietnam on a large scale since
China’s vast domestic market is very attractive, said Lu Hang, director of the
Fortune 500 Brand Research Center under the Ministry of Science and Technology.
Sino-Vietnamese bilateral trade is expected to reach
$25 billion in 2010, said Nguyen Van Tho, Vietnam’s ambassador to China.
Trade between the two nations hit $12.8 billion in
the first half of 2010, up 49.5 percent year-on-year after a free trade
agreement between China and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations went
into effect in January, said Tho.
.:: Other news
• Prusik's Manners Buys into Vietnam at 'Asian Crisis-Style Valuations' (09/02/2012)
• JX Nippon, PDVSA interested in Vietnam refinery stakes: report (09/02/2012)
• Vietnam Airlines’ project receives funding (08/02/2012)
• Thai Oil eyes to invest in Vietnam’s petroleum market (07/02/2012)
• Humex Medical Signs Agreement to Establish Stem Cell centre in Vietnam (07/02/2012)
• U.S. Ex-Im Bank boss visits Vietnam for more funding (07/02/2012)
• VN attracts $37.3 million in FDI in January (07/02/2012)
• GE plans expansion of plants for wind power production in Vietnam (07/02/2012)
• Vietnam Equity Movers: NBB Investment, Saovang Rubber (06/02/2012)
