HCM City to focus on attracting FDI into technology-based sectors
Ho Chi Minh City will step up efforts to attract foreign direct investment by focusing on infrastructure and administrative procedures, with priority given to high-tech projects, a top city official has said.

HCM City (VNS/VNA) - Ho Chi Minh City will step up efforts to attract foreign direct investment by focusing on infrastructure and administrative procedures, with priority given to high-tech projects, a top city official has said.
Le Thanh Liem, Standing Vice Chairman of the municipal People’s Committee, said priority would be given to foreign
investors in technology who have innovative and advanced management
capabilities.
Vietnam, especially HCM City,
remains appealing to foreign investors who are continuing to make a beeline to
the southern economic hub despite the COVID-19 pandemic.
Hua Quoc Hung, head of the HCM
City Export Processing and Industrial Zones Authority (Hepza), said Vietnam
has done a good job in containing the outbreak, which has persuaded investors
to move their production from abroad to the city, contributing to boosting
production, creating more jobs, especially in the services, footwear, leather
and textiles and garment industries.
The city is expected to receive
a wave of investments post-pandemic when American, European and Japanese
investors move their production lines to Vietnam.
Experts said to welcome them,
the city should set standards for foreign investors, saying priority should be
given to high-tech projects.
He proposed establishing
specialised industrial parks and attracting more investment in the production
of materials, especially those used in major industrial sectors.
Besides, it is important to set up zones for support industries using the State budget to regulate land lease prices and attract investors to sectors targeted by the city and the central governments.
He also recommended existing
industrial parks should attract intensive investment for sustainable
development.
They should prioritise
businesses with cutting-edge technologies and high added value while improving
export capacity, he said.
HCM City also plans to offer
competitive land rents and other incentives at industrial parks (IPs) and
export processing zones (EPZs), and earmark more lands for building
infrastructure to attract investment, according to Hung.
The city would switch to newer
models of IPs and EPZs to attract foreign investment, and ensure it has
appropriate incentives during the transition process, he said.
There are 17 IPs and EPZs in
the city, and they have an occupancy rate of 68 percent, he said.
But only 120ha of land is
available there in 2021 compared to 500-600ha a year in the last five years.
The city has sought the Government’s approval for a 380ha IP in Bình Chánh District, a specialised one prioritising innovative start-ups and producers and distributors in new industries.
The city is expected to
have 23 EPZs and IZs with a total of 5,797.62ha in future.
HCM City received 3.81 billion USD
worth of FDI in the first 11 months of the year, a drop of 30.5 year-on-year,
according to the city's Statistics Office. The city accounted for 14.4 percent
of the country’s total FDI in the period.
It took the lead with 865 FDI
projects, followed by Hanoi with 470 and Bac Ninh province with 136.
The Statistics Office
attributed the drop in FDI to the fact that the pandemic is still unpredictable.
This year, HCM City authorities
have approved 3,401 cases of capital contribution and share purchase involving 2.83 billion USD, down 28.3 percent and 13.6 percent.
Experts have warned that
foreign investors complain that traffic infrastructure and administrative
procedures have not improved much./.