Vietnamese exporters struggle with rising material prices

HCM City (VNA) - Vietnamese manufacturers and exporters are struggling to cope with rising material prices despite posting high export volumes in the first four months of the year.
Data from the General Statistics Office (GSO) show that exports were estimated at 103.9 billion USD during the period, up 28.3 percent year-on-year. Up to 19 types of goods earned more than 1 billion USD in export revenue each, or 84.5 percent of the total.
As
of late April, garment exports were up 9 percent year-on-year to 9.5 billion
USD while footwear shipments had hit 6.4 billion USD, an 18.7 percent increase.
The Ministry of Industry and Trade has forecast that exports and imports will
continue to thrive in the near future as new free trade agreements with
preferential tariffs are implemented, including the Comprehensive and
Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP), the EU-Vietnam
Free Trade Agreement (EVFTA), and the UK-Vietnam Free Trade Agreement (UKVFTA).
Companies, however,
face challenges caused by rising material and transportation costs as well as the
uncertainties over COVID-19 in the region.
Nguyen Quoc Anh, Director of the Duc Minh Rubber Company and Chairman of the Ho Chi Minh City Rubber Plastic Manufacturers Association, said that since early this
year the price of materials, chemicals, and rubber additives have soared 60
percent and show no signs of stabilising.
Many partners are hesitant to place orders and are
waiting for prices to decline. Meanwhile, if companies were to sell their products
at previous prices they would incur losses despite rising volumes, he said.
Experts have suggested building industrial zones designed exclusively for manufacturing apparel and footwear materials as well as devising a strategy to develop the supply of domestically-made materials for production and export, thus helping firms control costs and tap the advantages contained in free trade deals./.