Vietnam accelerates drive to launch businesses in India

In recent years, several pioneering Vietnamese firms have established legal entities or representative offices in India.

Wooden furniture a key export for Vietnam to major markets including the US, Japan, RoK, and India. (Photo: VNA)
Wooden furniture a key export for Vietnam to major markets including the US, Japan, RoK, and India. (Photo: VNA)

New Delhi (VNA) – A virtual seminar on accelerating drive to launch Vietnamese businesses in India was held by the Vietnam Trade Office in the South Asian country on July 25.

The event aimed to address a key challenge facing Vietnamese firms, setting up a legal presence in the country.

The webinar drew nearly 100 Vietnamese businesses from sectors such as food, seafood, agricultural processing, electronics, furniture, logistics, tourism, and technology.

Vietnam’s Trade Counsellor in India Bui Trung Thuong highlighted India’s vast potential as the world’s fourth-largest economy with over 1.46 billion people and a rapidly expanding middle class.

He noted that while Vietnam and India enjoy complementary economic ties, bilateral trade remains below potential, partly due to the limited presence of Vietnamese companies in India.

In recent years, several pioneering Vietnamese firms have established legal entities or representative offices in India.

Despite initial legal and administrative hurdles, these efforts have shown positive results, improving access to local partners and consumers.

Thuong stressed that expanding Vietnam’s direct business presence in India is crucial for deepening sustainable trade relations.

Manan Agarwal, Managing Director of KrayMan Consultants LLP, provided practical insights into the legal framework for foreign businesses in India. He outlined procedures for registering a company, taxation, FDI regulations, profit repatriation, and common mistakes for new entrants.

Vietnamese companies shared their experiences, including prolonged registration processes that delayed operations. Participants agreed that engaging experienced Indian consultancy firms would help streamline procedures, ensure legal compliance, and allow companies to focus on market entry and growth.

While some large Vietnamese corporations in services and electric vehicles have successfully set up in India, many small and medium enterprises still struggle due to differences in legal systems, complex tax and administrative requirements, among others.

The office pledged continued support through trade promotion, legal consultation, partner matching, and future thematic seminars./.

VNA

See more

The fruit and vegetable sector is also set to hit a record, with exports projected at around 8.5 billion USD in 2025. (Photo: VNA)

Agro-forestry-fishery exports poised to hit record high in 2025

Agro-forestry-aquatic exports totalled 64.01 billion USD in the first 11 months of 2025. If performance in the final month matches that of recent months, the figure could approach 70 billion USD, far exceeding the 65-billion-USD target set for the year.

A view of Dinh Vu port in Hai Phong city. (Photo: VNA)

Circular on domestic maritime transport permits for foreign vessels issued

Under the circular, which will take effect from February 1 next year, the Minister of Construction will grant the permits for cases such as transporting oversized or overweight cargo or other types of goods using specialised vessels; clearing congested cargo, passengers, and luggage at ports when Vietnamese ships are unable to handle them; and conducting disaster relief, disease control, or emergency humanitarian aid.

At a tax office in Hanoi (Photo: VNA)

Decree regulates corporate income tax incentives

A CIT rate of 15% applies to enterprises with a total revenue in the preceding year of not more than 3 billion VND (114,000 USD), while a CIT rate of 17% applies to enterprises with a total revenue in the preceding year of over 3 billion VND but not more than 50 billion VND.

Ho Chi Minh City’s downtown area and the Thu Thiem peninsula, where the International Financial Centre is being developed. (Photo: VNA)

GOE Alliance commits to partnering with HCM City IFC

The GOE Alliance was officially launched at the Autumn Economic Forum in November 2025, bringing together technology firms, financial institutions, policy experts and international partners, including Viettel Digital Services, Dragon Capital, Tether, Ava Labs, Sky Mavis, Republic and Onchain Academy. The alliance aims to pilot on-chain economic models within a policy-oriented legal framework.

Vietnam's foreign trade is projected to hit a record of over 900 billion USD in 2025, positioning the country among the top 15 global trade powers. - Illustrative image (Photo: dantri.vn)

Vietnam joins elite group of 15 largest trading countries

The country recorded its first trade surplus in 2012 and has maintained a continuous streak of surplus for 10 years since 2016. The surplus grew steadily, hitting 19.9 billion USD in 2020, a record of 28.3 billion USD in 2023, and 24.9 billion USD in 2024.

Officials visit a booth at the festival. (Photo: VNA)

Vietnam OCOP Festival 2025 opens in Hanoi

The festival functions as a space to bring together regional OCOP excellence, a forum connecting OCOP stakeholders with distributors, investors, experts and consumers, and a platform to spread pride in indigenous culture, local knowledge, and the aspiration for legitimate prosperity.

Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh (third from right) and officials launch the Ministry of Construction’s new information technology systems at the conference on December 21. (Photo: VNA)

Modern, comprehensive infrastructure – a need for fast, sustainable development: PM

The Party and State continue to define infrastructure development as one of the three strategic breakthroughs, with priority given to building comprehensive and modern infrastructure, particularly transport facilities, technological infrastructure, and green – digital transition infrastructure, to help realise the national target of double-digit growth, the PM said.