Poultry farmers request anti-dumping investigation of US chicken

Two Vietnamese Animal Livestock Associations signed petitions on July 28 for an anti-dumping investigation into chicken imported from the US to save domestic poultry farmers from losses.

The Animal Livestock Associations in the Southeast region and Dong Nai province signed petitions on July 28 for an anti-dumping investigation into chicken imported from the US to save domestic poultry farmers from losses.

According to the southeast Animal Livestock Association, recently-collected data showed that the prices of chicken sold at US supermarkets are four to five times higher than that of US chicken sold on the Vietnamese market, although the product is subject to import taxes, not to mention transportation, packing and preservation costs.

For example, the average price for whole chickens at US supermarkets is nearly 10 USD (around 200,000 VND) per kg, but in Vietnam the price is only 60,000-70,000 VND (2.8-3.2 USD) per kg. Similarly, US chicken thighs and wings are sold at 8.59-8.65 USD (160,000-170,000 VND) per kg in the US and only 20,000 VND (0.92 USD) in Vietnam.

“As such, the association decided to hire lawyers to submit a petition to the Vietnam Competition Authority under the Ministry of Industry and Trade,” stated Le Van Quyet, Deputy Head of the southeast association. The association supposes that the products have problems with quality, date of use or were dumped to kill the livestock industry of Vietnam.

According to the southeast Animal Livestock Association, Vietnam has seen an increase in the imported chicken volume in recent years but a decrease in product prices. In 2014, the country purchased more than 80,000 tonnes of chicken with average prices from 1.2-2.2 USD per kg, while the imported volume in the first half of this year was 50,000 tonnes with the price down to 0.65-1 USD per kg.

There are about 3,000 chicken farms in the southwest region of Vietnam with a total investment of 6-8 trillion VND (275-366 million USD). With a monthly output of about 8 million chickens, farmers suffer losses of 80-90 billion VND (3.67-4.13 million USD). The loss has reached up to 500 billion VND (22.9 million USD) over the past six months./.

Saigon Economic Review

See more

The meeting between General Secretary of the Communist Party of Vietnam Central Committee and State President To Lam and Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Hayleys PLC Mohan Pandithage in Colombo on May 8 (Photo: VNA)

Vietnamese leader hopes for stronger ties with Sri Lanka's Hayleys PLC

General Secretary and President To Lam said that given the complementarity of the two economies and their substantial room for growth, Vietnam wishes to enhance cooperation with major Sri Lankan enterprises, especially those with regional market networks and connectivity capabilities such as Hayleys.

The export of 1.1 million doses of vaccine lumpy skin disease (LSD) to the Republic of Korea marks an important milestone for Vietnam’s veterinary vaccine industry. (Photo: nongnghiepmoitruong.vn)

Vietnamese-made LSD vaccine enters demanding RoK market

The successful research and commercialisation of the LSD vaccine, which has been widely used in the domestic market and is gradually expanding internationally, helps affirm the position of Vietnamese veterinary vaccines globally.

General Secretary of the Communist Party of Vietnam (CPV) Central Committee and State President To Lam addresses the Vietnam – Sri Lanka Trade-Investment-Tourism Cooperation Forum in Colombo on May 8. (Photo: VNA)

Top leader urges stronger Vietnam-Sri Lanka economic connectivity

Vietnam – Sri Lanka cooperation should be viewed within the broader context of the Indian Ocean, South Asia and emerging global supply chains, and the key issue now is not potential, but swift, decisive and effective action, said Vietnam's top leader To Lam.

The meeting between Vietnamese Minister of Industry and Trade Le Manh Hung and representatives from Essar Group (Photo: VNA)

Vietnam, India step up cooperation in energy, biofuels

Vietnam encourages capable investors to participate in oil and gas, energy and energy infrastructure projects in line with the national energy development strategy, while ensuring investment efficiency and compliance with Vietnamese law.

In the first four months of 2026, total FDI inflows into Vietnam reaches 18.24 billion USD, up 32% year-on-year. (Illustrative photo: VNA)

Vietnam draws stronger foreign investment inflows despite global headwinds

In the first four months of 2026, total FDI inflows into Vietnam reached 18.24 billion USD, up 32% year-on-year. Disbursed capital was estimated at more than 7.4 billion USD, an increase of 9.8% and the highest four-month disbursement level recorded in the past five years, reflecting effective implementation of many registered projects.

A Boeing 787 aircraft of Vietnam’s national flag carrier, Vietnam Airlines, lands on its first flight at Long Thanh International Airport. (Photo: VNA)

Deputy PM stresses strategic, synchronous planning for airport system

The national airport system planning was approved by the Prime Minister under Decision No. 648/QD-TTg dated June 7, 2023. Under the planning, 30 airports (14 international and 16 domestic) are to be developed during the 2021–2030 period, with a vision to 2050 expanding the network to 33 airports (14 international and 19 domestic).

Modern machinery improves labour productivity. (Photo: VNA)

Upskilling becomes key lever for Vietnamese workforce in digital era

As the economy is pivoting to a growth model fueled by knowledge, technology and innovation, the working class, or the backbone of production, demands better professional qualifications, vocational skills, industrial discipline and work habits. Timely adaptation is the only shield against being undercut by accelerating automation, artificial intelligence and increasingly fiercer global competition.

A circular organic farming model in Khanh Hoa is delivering initial economic efficiency. (Photo: VNA)

New growth potential unlocked for Vietnamese economy

Prime Minister Le Minh Hung once stressed that cutting administrative procedures and business conditions remains one of the fastest and most effective ways to stimulate growth and strengthen confidence among citizens and enterprises. He underscored that the reform process must remain continuous and responsive to practical requirements.