ASEAN, Vietnam to lead recovery among emerging markets: economist

Vietnam’s economy may expand between 5.9% and 6.3% in 2025, outpacing the global average despite subdued external demand. The country's exports are estimated at 390–400 billion USD, maintaining their growth momentum, while public investment exceeding 7.2% of GDP will continue to support infrastructure and energy development.

Juwai IQI’s chief economist Shan Saeed (Photo: VNA)
Juwai IQI’s chief economist Shan Saeed (Photo: VNA)

Kuala Lumpur (VNA) – ASEAN economies, including Vietnam, are set to lead the recovery among emerging markets between 2025 and 2030, Juwai IQI’s chief economist Shan Saeed told the Vietnam News Agency (VNA)'s reporter on the sidelines of the Juwai IQI International Summit 2025 held in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, on October 29.

Southeast Asia’s combined GDP will hit 4.4 trillion USD in 2025 and top 6 trillion USD by 2030, Saeed projected, citing robust consumption, policy discipline and intra-regional trade as buffers against global turbulence. The bloc drew a record 230 billion USD in foreign direct investment (FDI) in 2023, eclipsing China in net inflows for the first time.

The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)’s open architecture, anchored by the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) and the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP), provides preferential access to nearly 30% of global GDP.

The bloc, he added, sits at the heart of the next phase of globalisation, where manufacturing resilience, digitalisation, and climate adaptation converge. Four key factors drive ASEAN’s appeal to investors: demographic advantages, digital integration, macroeconomic stability, and neutrality. Together, these establish ASEAN as an investment hub in the 21st century.

Vietnam’s FDI pipeline remains its core strength, placing it behind only India and Mexico in global manufacturing shift polls, Saeed said.

A web of trade pacts, including RCEP, CPTPP and the EU–Vietnam Free Trade Agreement (EVFTA), enhances its global trade reach. Strong macroeconomic discipline and favourable demographics, with a labour participation rate above 68%, provide a long runway for sustained growth.

To reach optimal competitiveness, Vietnam must continue improving regulatory streamlining, infrastructure convergence, judicial modernisation, and climate resilience, he added.

According to the economist, Vietnam’s economy may expand between 5.9% and 6.3% in 2025, outpacing the global average despite subdued external demand. The country's exports are estimated at 390–400 billion USD, maintaining their growth momentum, while public investment exceeding 7.2% of GDP will continue to support infrastructure and energy development.

To reach double-digit growth from 2026-2030, Vietnam needs four productivity levers, Saeed said. First, power output must reach 125–130 GW by 2030, with 40% being renewables. This requires annual investment of 10–12 billion USD in power infrastructure and grid upgrades.

Second, Vietnam should cut logistics costs to 11–12% of GDP by 2030 through multimodal integration and port automation, potentially adding 1.2 percentage points to annual GDP growth.

Third, Vietnam should diversify funding sources by expanding the corporate bond market from 13% of GDP to 25% by 2030, reducing dependence on bank lending.

Fourth, Vietnam should target at least 1.5 million annual upskilling enrollments in STEM and English courses to sustain its industrial momentum.

If these measures are adopted synchronously, Vietnam could achieve 9.5%-10.2% in compound annual growth rate (CAGR) by 2030, he added./.

VNA

See more

At a supermarket in Ho Chi Minh City (Photo: VNA)

Ho Chi Minh City to pilot pork trading on Mercantile Exchange of Vietnam

Nguyen Nguyen Phuong, Deputy Director of the municipal Department of Industry and Trade, said listing pork on the MXV will finally give consumers and firms more stable prices, while slapping on stricter food safety rules and making it easier to track where the meat actually comes from. Farmers, meanwhile, stand to gain from more predictable margins and dodge fewer of the supply-demand imbalances that routinely distort prices.

Processing octopus for export to the Japanese market at Huy Nam Company in An Giang (Photo: VNA)

Squid, octopus exports pick up early in 2026

In terms of product structure, squid has emerged as the main growth driver. Export turnover of squid exceeded 64 million USD, rising nearly 30%, while octopus exports brought in more than 47 million USD, up over 16%. The development indicates that demand for squid products is recovering faster in the short term.

The world’s longest over-sea cable car to Hon Thom Island in the Phu Quoc special zone, An Giang province. (Photo: VNA)

An Giang steps up tourism development ahead of APEC 2027

Tourism in the province has recorded strong growth, affirming its position as one of the region’s leading destinations. Phu Quoc Island continues to attract the majority of international travellers, receiving more than 817,660 visitors, accounting for over 98.5% of total foreign arrivals to the province.

Import-export activities at Lach Huyen international port in Hai Phong (Photo: VNA)

Reducing risks, removing logistics bottlenecks amid Middle East volatility

According to Truong Xuan Trung, Trade Counsellor of Vietnam in the UAE, the Middle East serves not only as a consumption market but also as a key global transhipment hub, meaning instability in the region creates ripple effects across intercontinental transport networks. Shipping route adjustments and airspace restrictions have lengthened transit times, increased costs and disrupted delivery schedules, with some Vietnamese shipments forced to reroute or seek alternative markets.

Cargo is handled at container terminals No. 3 and No. 4 of Hai Phong International Gateway Port. (Photo: VNA)

Businesses seek “survival momentum” amid global geopolitical turbulence

This is an urgent move as the challenges of 2026 differ markedly from previous ones, shaped by overlapping external shocks ranging from geopolitical tensions disrupting supply chains to surging logistics and raw material costs, exchange-rate pressures, and increasingly complex tariff barriers in global markets.

At the 2025 trade connectivity week for mechanical, electrical and digital industries. (Photo: VNA)

Ho Chi Minh City gives boost to supporting industry firms

Supporting industry firms in Ho Chi Minh City are scrambling to embed themselves more deeply into both global and domestic supply chains, backed by a suite of local incentives that are speeding up their tech upgrades and market access.

Italy's national pavilion at the ongoing Food & Hospitality Vietnam 2026 exhibition at Ho Chi Minh City's Saigon Exhibition and Convention Centre (SECC) draws visitors for hands-on experiences. (Photo: IVNA)

Italian food firms eye opportunities in Vietnam

Italy’s exports of food and beverages to Vietnam reached 105.1 million EUR in 2025, up 4% year-on-year, positioning the country among the leading EU suppliers to the Vietnamese market.

An overview of the working session (Photo: baoquangninh.vn)

Quang Ninh promotes all-round cooperation with Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region

Quang Ninh encourages Guangxi enterprises to invest in high-tech marine aquaculture and expand aquatic product exports in China. At the same time, the province aims to develop livestock farming in line with international standards and attract investment in deep-processing plants for agricultural products such as cinnamon, star anise and tea, linked with traceability systems at border gates.

Illustrative image (Source: VNA)

Vietnam becomes fastest growing market for Norwegian salmon in Southeast Asia

The Norwegian Seafood Council (NSC) reported at the “Norwegian seafood industry in Vietnam market 2026” event held in Ho Chi Minh City on March 25 that fresh Norwegian salmon exports to Vietnam jumped 16% in volume in the first two months of 2026 compared with a year earlier, while frozen salmon shipments surged about 37%.

At a petrol station (Photo: VNA)

Energy giants work hard to roll out E10 RON95 sale ahead of schedule

Petrolimex and PVOIL, are in a strong position to accelerate the transition toward cleaner fuels. These companies have been actively preparing infrastructure, upgrading blending systems, and coordinating supply chains to ensure the availability of E10 RON95 across their nationwide retail systems.

Deputy Prime Minister Nguyen Chi Dung visits Bosch Industrial in Stuttgart, Germany. (Photo: VNA)

Vietnam, Germany boost innovation, startup ecosystem connectivity

Deputy PM Nguyen Chi Dung highly valued CfE’s reputation and pioneering role in building Germany’s innovation-driven startup ecosystem, and called for stronger cooperation with NIC to support Vietnamese universities, research institutes and organisations in training and scientific research.