Vietnam to halve 2020 GDP growth target due to pandemic

Hanoi will not raise minimum wage in 2021 for the first time in decades

HANOI — The Vietnamese government is set to lower this year’s economic growth target to 2% to 2.5%, after the COVID-19 pandemic led to a global slowdown that hit the country’s exports, inbound tourism and foreign direct investments.

Hanoi had vowed in May to deliver economic growth of over 5%, before a second wave of coronavirus started spreading in the country in July.

Vietnam is trying to control the epidemic while maintaining economic growth, Planning and Investment Minister Nguyen Chi Dung, said at a cabinet meeting earlier this month.

The new target comes as gross domestic product for the export-led Vietnamese economy grew just 0.36% in the second quarter, down sharply from 3.8% in the January to March period. Hanoi’s revised GDP target is expected to be approved by the national assembly when it resumes in November.

Until July, Vietnam had stayed relatively free of the virus, thanks to Hanoi’s swift declaration of a national epidemic on April 1 that was followed by social distancing measures and the closing of its borders.

It took about three weeks to lift all the restrictions at the cost of economic growth. Still, Hanoi had hoped to reach its ambitious targets.

“We must put our heads together to restart Vietnam’s economy with the lifting of social distancing, to reach the target of over 5% gross domestic product growth in 2020,” Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc said in May after lifting the lockdown. His statement came in defiance of the International Monetary Fund’s projection in April for a 2.7% growth this year, down from 7% in 2019.

However, Hanoi had since been urged to slash this year’s growth target, as the new wave of COVID-19 spread from Danang, a tourism hub in central Vietnam, in July.

“Vietnam has so far been able to sustain economic growth despite many challenges brought by the pandemic,” Dung said after he unveiled the new targets for the year. He compared the country’s expected performance with those of other bigger economies that are expecting contractions this year.

But turnover from exports, a key pillar of the economy, between January and August is estimated to have grown just 1.6% to $174 billion from a year ago.

Aviation is one of the hardest hit by the pandemic. Vietnam Airlines estimated a loss of 15 trillion dong ($647 million) for the whole year, while low-cost carrier VietJet Air posted a loss of $90.5 million for the first half.

Ho Chi Minh City, the economic hub, reported that 90% of tourist businesses have suspended operations, with 20,000 employees, or 70% of the workforce, now jobless.

Over the first eight months, only 3.7 million tourists arrived in Vietnam, a fall of 66.6% compared with the same period last year. Travel and hotel sales fell 54.4% over the same period from a year ago, while catering sales dropped 16.4%.

For the first time in 25 years, the National Wage Council proposed not to raise the minimum wage in the coming 2021. The decision, announced on the labor ministry website, was made to show that the government was committed to maintaining economic stability amid the pandemic, said Nguyen Duc Thanh, chief adviser at the Vietnam Institute for Economic and Policy Research.

The wage floor varies by region and bottoms out at 3 million Vietnam dong a month. Although wages will stay flat into 2021, Thanh said most workers earn far more than the minimum.

“The government wants to keep things stable, especially in this moment, when the pandemic and the economy are very difficult,” he told the Nikkei Asian Review.

The lowest pay increase in 2019 was 5.3%. Vietnamese workers used to receive pay rises in the double digits — in 2013, workers received a 17% rise, for example — but that figure has been on a steady decline.

This has had an impact on consumption. Total retail sales of consumer goods and services in the first eight months of 2020 declined by 4.5% to 3,225 trillion dong. By comparison, it expanded by 9.5% in the similar period of 2019.

Meanwhile, foreign direct and indirect investment in the first eight months reached $19.54 billion, down 13.7% compared with the same period last year.

To support the economy, Hanoi sped up the execution of public investment including big-ticket infrastructure projects while encouraging private and foreign investment.

Total realized investment capital under the state budget reached 250.5 trillion dong, increasing by 30.4% from a year ago.

Delivering GDP growth remains a key issue for the government as it plans the Communist Party convention in January, which will lay out the country’s economic path for the next decade.

“We have some good results but we need stronger solutions,” Prime Minister Phuc told a meeting on Sept. 4.

In August, Phuc had promised to provide support packages to businesses and individuals to help the economy. However, analysts and small- and medium-sized businesses complained that the support has been slow to trickle down.

Source: asia.nikkei.com