Vietnam's economic growth forecast at 7.5% in 2022: World Bank

Vietnam’s GDP growth is forecast to expand 7.5% in 2022 and 6.7% in 2023, with resilient manufacturing and a robust rebound in services serving as the driving forces for economic recovery.
Vietnam's economic growth forecast at 7.5% in 2022: World Bank ảnh 1At the press conference to release the report. (Photo: WB Vietnam)
Hanoi (VNA) - Vietnam’s GDP growth is forecast to expand7.5% in 2022 and 6.7% in 2023, with resilient manufacturing and a robustrebound in services serving as the driving forces for economic recovery. 

According to the latest economic update by World Bank (WB) for Vietnam,the country’s economy expanded 5.2% in Q4 of 2021, and respectively 5.1% and7.7% in Q1 and Q2 of 2022. Inflation is projected to average 3.8% over the year. 

Carolyn Turk, WB Country Director for Vietnam, said that thebi-annual report “lays out a set of policy recommendations that could helpmitigate the impact of these risks and make the economy more resilient goingforward.”

Titled “Taking Stock: Educate to Grow”, this edition underlinestransforming the higher education system as the key to boosting the country’sproductivity and achieving its development goals, in the context where thecountry re-emerges from the pandemic and into a challenging global environment.

The report’s co-author Dorsati Madani said that while Vietnam’seconomic recovery had been relatively stable, not all sectors witnessed thesame situation. 

The impact on workers and households during the crisis was seriousand lasting, with about 45% claiming lower incomes in December 2021 than theprevious year.

The impact of the pandemic is still present with businessesreporting broad-based labour shortages as of March 2022, which were felt moreacutely in services and manufacturing, and in the Ho Chi Minh City area.

This, in addition to growth slowdown or stagflation in main exportmarkets, further commodity price shocks, continued disruption of global supplychains, or the emergence of new COVID-19 variants, are hindering Vietnam’s fullrecovery. 

Statistics revealed that Vietnam’s population has an average 10.2years of schooling, second only to Singapore among the Association of SoutheastAsian Nations (ASEAN) countries.

Vietnam’s human capital index is 0.69 out of a maximum of 1, thehighest among lower middle-income economies.

However, low skills relevance of the university graduates put thecountry in the bottom third of the 140 countries listed in the 2018Competitiveness Index on skills relevance of university graduates. 

A World Bank skills and enterprise survey published in 2019 alsosaid that 73% of sampled Vietnamese firms report difficulties in recruitingemployees with leadership and managerial skills, 54% with socio-emotionalskills, and 68% with job-specific technical skills.

Focusing on tertiary and higher education, the WB’s reportrecommends reforming the education system to improve quality and access, andthus provide the necessary skills to the population.

Reforms to Vietnam’s higher education system could help supportdevelopment objectives, the report says. 

The increasing financial costs of pursuing higher education andthe perception of diminishing economic returns from pursuing higher educationhave weakened demand. 

While efforts to enhance the business environment are crucial toenabling job creation, policymakers should also take steps to reduceskill-mismatches and improve the quality of Vietnam’s labour force. 

Turk said: “To sustain economic growth at the desired rate, Vietnamneeds to increase productivity by 2-3% every year.

“International experiences have shown that higherworker productivity can be achieved by investing in the education system,as an important part of a basket of investments and reforms. A competitiveworkforce will generate much-needed efficiency for Vietnam in the long term.”/.
VNA

See more

The VSS reported that total accumulated reserves across the social, health, and unemployment insurance funds now top 1.5 quadrillion VND. (Illustrative photo: VNA)

VSS pledges tighter fund management, diversified investments

The VSS will also impose stricter financial discipline in fund management, while pursuing broader diversification of investment portfolios, as guided by the principle of “safety, sustainability, and efficiency”. This approach aims to secure strong liquidity for prompt benefit payouts and support growth in Vietnam’s capital markets and overall economy.

The ceremony unveiling AFT Connect portal (Photo: nhandan.vn)

AFT Connect portal links Vietnamese clean food producers

The platform is expected to serve as shared digital backbone enabling stakeholders in the clean food sector to gradually digitise, standardise, and publicly disclose information, ultimately aiding the fight against unsafe products and protecting consumer interests.

A Vietcombank employee guides a client in biometric process (Photo: qdnd.vn)

Vietnam's biometric surge powers digital banking overhaul

As the Party identified breakthroughs in science – technology and innovation as a key driver of national progress, the mastery and adoption of biometric technologies must go hand in hand with safeguarding public trust, data security, and citizens’ interests, all aligned with the people-first philosophy guiding the country's digital agenda.

A spring fair kicks off in the central Da Nang city on January 22, 2026 (Photo: VNA)

Da Nang 2026 spring fair features 200 booths

The fair features a diverse range of products and services, focusing on items for Tet such as food and beverages, regional specialties, OCOP products, and rural and industrial goods; fashion, footwear, cosmetics, and sports equipment; health care products and beauty services; household items, interior and exterior décor, and handicrafts; as well as equipment, technology, and services in sectors like electronics, automobiles, and telecommunications.

The Ministry of Finance is working to establish a mechanism for regular and ongoing dialogue with international credit rating agencies, including Fitch, Moody’s and S&P. (Illustrative image: VNA)

Fitch Ratings upgrades Vietnam’s senior secured long-term debt rating to BBB-

The rating for Vietnam’s secured long-term debt was raised to BBB-, equivalent to investment grade, one notch higher than the country’s long-term foreign-currency rating on unsecured debt, which remains at BB+. The upgrade followed Fitch’s review under its revised Sovereign Rating Criteria issued in last September, said the Ministry of Finance.

A view of the site where the Ninh Thuan 1 Nuclear Power Plant is located in Phuoc Dinh commune, Khanh Hoa province (Photo: VNA)

Nuclear experts urge century-long commitment at 14th Party Congress

VietNuc’s executive board, including Chairman Bui Nguyen Hoang from the Électricité de France SA (EDF) (EDF), Ung Quoc Hung from Setec Nucléaire Group, and Vu Minh Ngoc from French National Radioactive Waste Management Agency Andra, hoped that the Congress would refine mechanisms and policies to better tap OV nuclear talents.

Ahmad Haikal Hasan, Head of the Halal Product Assurance Organising Agency (BPJPH) of Indonesia, speaks at the seminar (Photo: VNA)

Indonesia ready to cooperate with Vietnam in halal sector

Ahmad Haikal Hasan, Head of the Halal Product Assurance Organising Agency (BPJPH) of Indonesia, described Vietnam as a “potential supplier” of halal products with the capacity to play a larger role in the market, particularly in the fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) sector. He revealed a plan to visit Vietnam next week to discuss the country’s progress in the global halal industry.

Delegates perform the opening ceremony. (Photo: VNA)

Thailand Week 2026 opens in Hanoi

The event brings together more than 100 companies, including Thai enterprises and Vietnamese importers, across about 120 booths. It features a wide range of Thai products aligned with consumer trends in Vietnam, including food and beverages, health and beauty, mother-and-baby and pet products, fashion and jewellery, household goods and tourism services.

Illustrative image (Photo: VNA)

Vietnam remains Singapore’s third-largest seafood supplier in 2025

Data released by the Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority of Singapore (ACRA) show that Singapore spent 125.5 million SGD (97.7 million USD) importing seafood from Vietnam last year, up 10.7% year on year, accounting for 10.3% of the city-state’s total seafood import market.