The 3.63% increase in the consumer price index (CPI) for the whole of 2024 not only reflects the Government's efforts in price management, but also demonstrates the economy's resilience against external "headwinds".
Vietnam’s consumer price index (CPI) in the first seven months of 2024 rose by 4.12% from the same time last year, mostly due to increases in tuition fees, healthcare services, housing costs, and prices of power, water, fuel, and building materials, according to the General Statistics Office (GSO).
The General Statistics Office (GSO) and the Government Committee for Ethnic Minority Affairs will jointly conduct information collection for a survey on socio-economic situation of the 53 ethnic minority groups across the country from July 1, according to the GSO.
Vietnam's import-export revenue reached 238.88 billion USD in the first four months of this year, with trade surplus reaching 8.4 billion USD, higher than the 7.66 billion USD recorded in the same period last year, according to the General Statistics Office (GSO).
Statistics on people with foreign nationality living as part of Vietnamese households across the country will be gathered during the mid-term population and housing census in 2024, General Director of the General Statistics Office (GSO) Nguyen Thi Huong said at a ceremony to launch the census in Hanoi on April 1.
Hanoi was the most expensive place to live in Vietnam for the third consecutive years in 2023, according to the 2023 Spatial Cost of Living Index (SCOLI) report released by the General Statistics Office (GSO) on March 29.
Vietnam's consumer price index (CPI) in August increased 0.88% month-on-month, fueled by higher prices of petroleum, rice and housing, the General Statistics Office (GSO) announced on August 29.
The United Overseas Bank (UOB)’s Global Economics & Market Research Unit has lowered its 2023 economic growth forecast for Vietnam from 6% to 5.2% amid many challenges ahead.
In the first half of this year, Vietnam enjoyed positive economic recovery of the industry, construction, and service sectors, giving reasons for optimism on the economic outlook for the rest of the year.
All economic sectors should actively implement drastic and synchronous measures to promote growth and overcome difficulties in the rest of the year, aiming to complete this year’s target of 6.5% in GDP growth, according to General Director of the General Statistics Office (GSO) Nguyen Thi Huong.
Consumer price index (CPI) in the first six months of this year increased 3.29% year on year, while core inflation was estimated to rise 4.74%, said Nguyen Thi Huong, General Director of the General Statistics Office (GSO), at a press conference on June 29.
Total revenue from retail sales of consumer goods and services in May was estimated at 519 trillion VND (22.09 billion USD), an increase of 1.5% over the previous month and 11.5% year on year thanks to the long holidays in the beginning of the month, according to the General Statistics Office (GSO).
Vietnam’s export-import value in the first four months of this year was estimated at 210 billion USD, down 13.6% year-on-year, with a trade surplus of 6.35 billion USD.
In the face of domestic and international economic difficulties, the most effective support for enterprises is to create an equal, open and transparent business environment, according to Do Thi Ngoc, head of the General Statistics Office (GSO)'s Department of General Statistics.
Vietnam is likely to welcome the 100 millionth citizen in April, according to the Population and Labour Statistics Department under the General Statistics Office (GSO).
Total import-export revenue in the first two months of this year is estimated at 96.06 billion USD, down 13.2% year on year, with a trade surplus of 2.82 billion USD, reported the General Statistics Office (GSO).
Despite decreases in both imports and exports, the country still enjoyed a trade surplus of 3.6 billion USD in the first month of 2023, according to the General Statistics Office (GSO).
Revenue from retail sales of goods and services totalled about 515.8 trillion VND (21.87 billion VND) in December and over 1.54 quadrillion VND (65.3 billion USD) in the fourth quarter of 2022, a year on year rise of 17.1%, reported the General Statistics Office (GSO).