UNDP expert gives recommendations for Vietnam to overcome challenges
Hanoi (VNA) - As Vietnam is determined to take drastic measures to not just
recover the economy but also work hard toward development priorities, Vietnam
News Agency (VNA) asks Jonathan Pincus, UNDP Senior International Economist, for
recommendations to speed up the nation’s efforts and achieve its set targets.
VNA: As a development
partner that has helped Vietnam work its way toward human centered development
and sustainable growth, what’re your assessments on the current economic
situation in Vietnam? What are the challenges facing Vietnam right now?
Jonathan
Pincus: Vietnam has made tremendous
progress toward achieving the Sustainable Development Goals by 2030. The headcount
Multidimensional Poverty Index, which considers income and access to basic
services and amenities like healthcare, education, housing, clean water and
sanitation, fell by more than half from 2016 to 2022 from 9.2% to 4.3% of the
population. These gains were achieved despite the disruption of the Covid-19
pandemic and its impact on jobs and incomes.
Vietnam has made gains on other goals such as an increase in upper
secondary school enrolment rates and further declines in maternal mortality. Although
still a lower middle-income country, Vietnam achieved High Human Development
Status in 2021, signaling the country’s commitment to pro-poor growth, access
to health services and education.
More progress is needed on some of the SDGs, for example gender
equality and environmental protection. The sex ratio at birth in 2022 was 111.5
boys to 100 girls in 2022 as a result of the widespread practice of pre-natal
sex selection. Women are
under-represented in senior positions in government and the private sector, and
domestic violence remains a serious issue. Marine and coastal ecosystems are vulnerable
to over-exploitation and pollution from agriculture, industry and household
waste.
By far the greatest development challenge facing Vietnam is climate
change. As a country with a long coastline and two low-lying delta regions, Vietnam
is often listed among the countries most vulnerable to sea level rise, floods,
drought and extreme weather events. In the Mekong Delta region, rising sea
levels and saline intrusion could force millions of people to relocate.
Billions of dollars in investment will be needed to upgrade rural and urban
infrastructure to protect communities from storms and floods.
Like other countries, Vietnam
has embarked on a long-term journey from fossil fuel dependence to renewable
energy. The Government has
pledged to achieve net-zero carbon emissions by 2050 and eliminate coal-fired
power plants in the 2040s. The transition will deliver economic benefits
including energy security and cleaner air, and Vietnam’s green credentials will
bolster export industries.
The investment effort required to achieve net-zero is measured in the
hundreds of billions of US dollars. Mobilizing finance on this scale is an
unprecedented challenge. Traditional financial instruments like government
bonds, commercial banks and overseas development assistance will not be enough.
Vietnam will need to innovate to create larger, deeper domestic financial
markets and to use the government’s balance sheet to crowd in private investment,
especially from the domestic private sector.
VNA: What are UNDP’s recommendations for Vietnam to deal with those challenges in order to keep up the nation's remarkable progress that has been made over the years?
Pincus: UNDP policy recommendations to Vietnam and other
countries is based on the principle that development should Leave No One
Behind. We support policies to achieve equality of outcomes and human
development for all.
Vietnam has demonstrated that rapid economic growth is consistent with a
deep concern for equality. Since 2018, income growth for the poorest 40% of households
has been higher than average national income growth. The under-five child
mortality rate in 2021 was 20.6 per 1,000 live births, less than half of the
average of lower middle-income countries. Access to electricity and basic
sanitation is nearly universal, even in remote areas.
Some problems remain. Food
insecurity among ethnic minority children is stubbornly high at 32 percent of children
under five years of age. Elderly poverty is a rising concern, with 9 percent of
people over 65 years old living in poverty at the national poverty line and
another 15 percent vulnerable to poverty. Nearly half of elderly people are
still in work and 90 percent receive financial assistance from family members.
Social assistance programs are in place to help poor and vulnerable
individuals and households including children, the elderly and people living
with disabilities. However, Vietnam’s spending on social assistance at 0.7
percent of GDP is low compared to the rest of the Asia-Pacific region. Benefit
levels are also low, both in absolute terms and compared to other lower middle-income
countries.
The Government’s Master Plan for Social Assistance Reform and
Development (MPSARD), approved in 2017, identifies reforms to close these
emerging poverty gaps, including expanding social pensions and child benefit.
However, these innovations have not yet been funded.
UNDP proposes universal child benefit and social pensions as a policy
to ensure that all Vietnamese citizens benefit from development and to build
the resilience of households with young children and elderly members to manage income
loss due to economic headwinds, health emergencies like Covid-19 and other risks. Estimates compiled by scholars at the National
Economics University indicate that universal child benefit and social pensions
would be an affordable, effective means to eliminate poverty, build social
cohesion and prevent widening inequalities from undermining Vietnam’s
development gains.
The transition to renewable energy will generate benefits but will also
give rise to substantial economic costs for every activity, sector and region of
the country. The aim of achieving a Just
Energy Transition is to ensure that these costs and benefits are fairly
distributed, and in particular that the living standards of the poorest and
most vulnerable members of society are protected. UNDP is working closely with the government to understand
the social and economic implications of climate change and the energy
transition and to identify policies and programs to protect vulnerable citizens
and communities.
VNA: Vietnam has
determined to take drastic measures to not just recover the economy but also
work hard toward development priorities. As a long-term development partner of Vietnam,
what is UNDP’s plan to support Vietnam to achieve its goals?
Pincus: UNDP works closely with the Government and other partners to
support sustainable and inclusive economic growth, to help Vietnam increase
resilience and shocks and adapt to the effects of climate change and to promote
improvements to the quality of governance and access to justice for Vietnamese
citizens.
The Sustainable Development Goals and the principle of Leaving No One
Behind motivate UNDP’s work in Vietnam. We identify evidence-based policy
options with Government and other partners to help Vietnam accelerate progress
towards achieving all the SDGs. Gender equality and increasing economic opportunities
for young people have emerged as priority issues for UNDP and other United
Nations agencies.
As already noted, UNDP is engaged in work on social protection reform
and achieving a Just Energy Transition. We also work with Government to support
efforts to make public agencies more responsive to citizens’ concerns and
aspirations from central authorities to villages and towns. PAPI, a
national survey of local governance and public administration, provides
important insights on citizens’ needs and perceptions of public institutions.
The Vietnamese public is increasingly concerned about the quality of
the natural environment. The 2021 Law on Environmental Protection and the decision
on circular economy development in 2022 are important milestones. The new
environment law brings Vietnamese concepts and regulations in line with
international practice and provides a legal basis for carbon trading. Official
endorsement of circularity will have important implications for domestic
policies relating to solid waste management and for Vietnam’s key export
industries including textiles, footwear and electronics.
The experience of the COVID-19
pandemic has made us all more aware of the need to build resilience to disasters
and climate change, health impacts, and economic risks such as financial crises
or sudden weaking of external demand as we are experiencing at the moment. The
capacity to anticipate risks and respond effectively is an essential function
of government./.