Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung has asked Vietnam Posts and Telecommunications Group (VNPT) and its newly-appointed General Director Tran Manh Hung to accelerate the outfit's restructuring process.
PM Dung made the request at a working session with the group on August 8 in Hanoi , just days after Tran Manh Hung replaced Vu Tuan Hung.
The restructuring process is essential to comply with measures outlined in Vietnam's comprehensive plan to restructure State-run enterprises (SOEs), focusing on economic groups and corporations between 2011–15 with a view to turning the group into one of the country's strongest telecoms giants.
In the first half of 2013, the group posted total revenues of 54.2 trillion VND (2.5 billion USD), a year-on-year increase of 2.6 percent, bringing a total profit of 4.418 trillion VND (210 million USD). The profit equates to nearly 48 percent of the group's 2013 target.
In 2011, VNPT earned a profit of 10 trillion VND (476 million USD), marking a surge of 6.15 percent on the previous year's results. Last year, profits dropped by 1.5 trillion VND to 8.5 trillion VND, said VNPT Chairman Pham Long Tran.
Tran stated his group had outlined business plans for better growth but had still failed to achieve positive results.
He attributed the group's low growth to global and domestic economic difficulties, adding that the group also incurred large losses due to decreasing demand for its fixed-line telephone services.
He said being a State-owned business, VNPT had to be involved in many public telecoms services for fields such as national security and defence, as well as natural disaster prevention.
In addition, many of the businesses subscribed to VNPT had suffered losses amidst the global economic turmoil or went bankrupt, causing a huge decrease in the group's revenue.
Tran said another factor was that being a State-run business, VNPT was burdened with cumbersome apparatus and had been slow to renovate itself across a number of areas.
This year, the group set a growth target of 10 percent compared to 2012, said the Chairman. He hoped with the new business model submitted to the Government and the Ministry of Information and Communications, VNPT would have more opportunities to renew its business and develop further.-VNA
PM Dung made the request at a working session with the group on August 8 in Hanoi , just days after Tran Manh Hung replaced Vu Tuan Hung.
The restructuring process is essential to comply with measures outlined in Vietnam's comprehensive plan to restructure State-run enterprises (SOEs), focusing on economic groups and corporations between 2011–15 with a view to turning the group into one of the country's strongest telecoms giants.
In the first half of 2013, the group posted total revenues of 54.2 trillion VND (2.5 billion USD), a year-on-year increase of 2.6 percent, bringing a total profit of 4.418 trillion VND (210 million USD). The profit equates to nearly 48 percent of the group's 2013 target.
In 2011, VNPT earned a profit of 10 trillion VND (476 million USD), marking a surge of 6.15 percent on the previous year's results. Last year, profits dropped by 1.5 trillion VND to 8.5 trillion VND, said VNPT Chairman Pham Long Tran.
Tran stated his group had outlined business plans for better growth but had still failed to achieve positive results.
He attributed the group's low growth to global and domestic economic difficulties, adding that the group also incurred large losses due to decreasing demand for its fixed-line telephone services.
He said being a State-owned business, VNPT had to be involved in many public telecoms services for fields such as national security and defence, as well as natural disaster prevention.
In addition, many of the businesses subscribed to VNPT had suffered losses amidst the global economic turmoil or went bankrupt, causing a huge decrease in the group's revenue.
Tran said another factor was that being a State-run business, VNPT was burdened with cumbersome apparatus and had been slow to renovate itself across a number of areas.
This year, the group set a growth target of 10 percent compared to 2012, said the Chairman. He hoped with the new business model submitted to the Government and the Ministry of Information and Communications, VNPT would have more opportunities to renew its business and develop further.-VNA