Vietnam offers special incentives to attract scientists, experts in global integration

The June 30 decree covers civil servants, public employees, officers of the armed forces, personnel engaged in foreign affairs and international integration, alongside scientists, experts in global integration, and educational establishments specialising in international integration.

Vietnamese scientists and experts will receive a monthly allowance equal to 300% of their base salary. Illustrative image (Photo: VNA)
Vietnamese scientists and experts will receive a monthly allowance equal to 300% of their base salary. Illustrative image (Photo: VNA)

Hanoi (VNA) – The Vietnamese Government has issued a decree detailing several mechanisms and policies to channel resources into deeper global integration under the National Assembly’s Resolution 250/2025/QH15.

The June 30 decree covers civil servants, public employees, officers of the armed forces, personnel engaged in foreign affairs and global integration, alongside scientists, experts, and educational establishments specialising in the field.

Eligibility requirements for global integration specialists

Ministers, heads of ministry-level agencies and chairpersons of provincial People's Committees will designate priority sectors based on national and local strategic orientations.

A scientist on global integration must have at least Level-4 proficiency in a foreign language under Vietnam’s six-level framework and a minimum of 10 years of experience in foreign affairs and global integration, or 10 years of teaching and research in the field. A doctorate degree from a reputable international establishment, authorship or co-authorship of a globally recognised scientific work with proven practical impact are also required.

An expert must also hold Level-4 language skills and meet at least one additional bar: 10 years of experience or a management role at a reputable international or regional organisation, at home or abroad; leading or co-leading of a state-level research project on foreign affairs or global integration rated “excellent”, serving as deputy minister or higher with deep policy-making and negotiation experience, being nominated by the Vietnamese Government to an international professional body; or being recognised by the head of a ministry, ministerial-level agency or provincial People's Committee.

When needed, they can establish councils to assess candidates and propose recognition as global integration experts. They will make the final appointment decisions and notify the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MoFA).

Perks for talent at home and abroad

Vietnamese scientists and experts of working age seeking permanent roles in bodies directly and regularly handling foreign affairs and international integration can be recruited as civil servants or public employees under current rules.

They will receive a monthly allowance equal to 300% of their base salary, on top of other statutory benefits.

Those past retirement age or who opt out of the civil service system can be hired on employment or service contracts if agencies have a need.

Ministries, ministry-level agencies, and provincial People's Committees will conduct annual performance reviews for scientists and experts alongside regular civil service assessments, using the results to decide whether to continue the monthly support.

Foreign scientists and experts will get priority access to training, research and international cooperation programmes under contracts with pay set by mutual agreement and benefits compliant with Vietnamese law.

When necessary and with their home agency’s consent, scientists and experts from ministries and provinces can be mobilised by the MoFA to support Party and State’s diplomatic and integration activities coordinated by the ministry, or join training and teaching.

Diplomatic Academy to become national centre of excellence

The decree charts a course for the MoFA’s Diplomatic Academy of Vietnam to become the country’s top specialised higher education establishment for foreign affairs and global integration.

It will serve as the central hub for training, professional development, strategic research and scholar diplomacy.

Beyond its current remit, the academy will advise the foreign minister on approving and rolling out training courses for civil servants, foreign affairs staff and candidates for international posts. It will coordinate curriculum design, faculty training, undergraduate and postgraduate courses, resource sharing and professional support for training establishments nationwide.

The academy will undertake strategic and theoretical research, forecast global trends and supply scientific analysis to shape and enforce Vietnam’s foreign policy and integration strategies. It will also serve as the national focal point for scholar diplomacy and deepen international cooperation in education, research and academic exchanges in the field.

The MoFA will give the academy priority in resource allocation to support’s key Party and State’s political missions, strategic research and digital transformation, and ease its access to foreign affairs and global integration information.

The monthly support for personnel directly and regularly working in foreign affairs and global integration, scientists, experts and speakers of rare foreign languages will take effect retroactively from January 1, 2026, the date Resolution 250/2025/QH15 came into force./.

VNA

See more

Images celebrating the 50th anniversary of Saigon–Gia Dinh officially being renamed Ho Chi Minh City (July 2, 1976 – 2026) are displayed on large electronic billboards in some of Seoul's busiest commercial and tourist areas. (Photo: VNA)

Ho Chi Minh City images illuminate Seoul to mark 50 years of bearing late President's name

The RoK is one of the leading economic, investment and tourism partners of Ho Chi Minh City and Vietnam in general. Over the years, the Vietnamese locality has established cooperative and sister-city relationships with many Korean localities, including Seoul, laying a foundation for boosting economic, trade, cultural, educational cooperation, and people-to-people exchanges.

Foreign and Vietnamese reporters working at a sports centre in Bac Ninh province. (Photo: VNA)

Vietnam issues new rules governing foreign media activities

Under Decree No. 262/2026/ND-CP, which took effect on July 1, all press activities by foreign media agencies, foreign representative offices, and foreign organisations in Vietnam must receive approval from the competent authorities and comply with Vietnamese law. They are also required to coordinate with provincial-level People's Committees where reporting activities take place.

Traffic police in Khanh Hoa conduct alcohol breath tests on foreign tourists. (Photo: VNA)

No exceptions for foreign visitors violating law: Officials

According to provincial police, 16 traffic accidents involving foreign nationals have been recorded since the beginning of the year, resulting in three deaths and 16 injuries. Investigations concluded that foreign nationals were directly at fault in six of the cases.

Editor-in-chief of Nhan Dan newspaper Le Quoc Minh (right) signs an agreement with Rossiya Segodnya Media Group (Photo: VNA)

Vietnam, Russia strengthen media cooperation

The agreement was inked by Le Quoc Minh, member of the Party Central Committee (PCC), Deputy Head of the PCC’s Commission for Information, Education and Mass Mobilisation, President of the Vietnam Journalists Association, and Editor-in-Chief of Nhan Dan, and Sergei Kochetkov, First Deputy Editor-in-Chief of Rossiya Segodnya.

Delegates explore agricultural extension applications and low-emission rice production solutions at the seminar. (Photo courtesy of the Hai Phong Department of Agriculture and Environment)

Public-private partnerships drive low-emission rice farming

Experts agreed that integrating nutrient management, biotechnology, mechanisation and digital technologies will enhance productivity, reduce greenhouse gas emissions and accelerate the transition towards greener, more sustainable rice production.

Rescuers search for survivors trapped beneath the rubble. (Photo published by VNA)

Venezuela quake: Vietnamese team intensifies search efforts

Personnel from the Vietnam People's Army and the People's Public Security Force were deployed to different locations. In addition to their assigned missions, they also responded to requests from victims' families by searching nearby areas for those still missing.

The humanitarian aid handover ceremony on June 30 (Photo: VNA)

Vietnam delivers humanitarian aid to earthquake-hit Venezuela

The total volume of relief supplies amounted to 45.6 tonnes, including 35 tonnes of emergency rations, 4 tonnes of medicines, 2 tonnes of canned meat, four generators, 500 tents, 10 large relief shelters, and 50,000 rolls of medical bandages.