US-China trade war brings more challenges than opportunities
(Photo: VNA)
HCM City (VNS/VNA) - Many Vietnamese enterprises are keeping a close eye on the escalating US-China trade war and have said the challenges from it outnumber the opportunities for them.
China
has recently announced plans to impose additional duties on 75 billion USD worth
of American goods on September 1 and December 15.
US President Donald Trump tweeted the same day his
administration would raise tariffs on 550 billion USD worth of Chinese imports.
The latest round of announcements means that by
the end of the year essentially all Chinese goods exported to the US will be
subject to duties.
Dinh Cong Khuong, Director of Khuong Mai Steel JSC
said that the HCM City Steel Business Club held its first “entrepreneurs' café”
programme on August 24 to discuss opportunities and challenges faced by the
industry this year, reported the Nguoi Lao Dong (The Labourer) newspaper.
Most steel companies are aware that as the trade
war escalates, opportunities are less than challenges for them since they face
a decrease in demand, he said.
Producers cannot reduce output since blast
furnaces have to operate non-stop, but demand is slowing down globally, and
competition is becoming intense, he said. “If the trade war prolongs, it
will affect Vietnamese enterprises."
Diep Thanh Kiet, Vice Chairman of the Vietnam
Leather and Footwear Association, said the US President’s order that US
companies should immediately start looking for alternatives to China, including
bringing their companies home, would have both positive and negative impacts on
Vietnam.
The Vietnamese footwear industry has a capacity of
over one billion pairs of shoes a year and needs 10 years to double it.
Meanwhile, China exports 1.7 billion pairs
annually to the US. If even half of this is shifted to Vietnam, the industry
could not manage it, he said.
"Vietnam’s footwear industry exports 460
million pairs of shoes to the US annually, and if the exports suddenly surge,
the risk of attracting anti-dumping tariffs is very large."
According to experts and businesses, Chinese
businesses in other sectors such as garment and textile, seafood and
electronics too want to switch their production to Vietnam to avoid the impacts
of the trade war.
The shift poses challenges to Vietnamese firms who
would face fierce competition from the Chinese in many areas, from getting
human resources and land to prices, they warned.
Dr. Tran Dinh Thien, a member of the National
Monetary and Financial Policy Advisory Council, said the trade war had caused
negative effects on the trade, investment and monetary policies of many
countries, including Vietnam.
This requires the Government and businesses to
forecast the long-term negative impacts to come up with appropriate measures,
he said.
Tran Du Lich, member of the Economic Advisory
Group to the Prime Minister, said the US President’s order to US companies to
immediately start looking for an alternative to China would offer Vietnam the
opportunity to attract investment from the US.
But for that, the country needs to further reform
its institutions, he added.-VNS/VNA