WB: EVFTA could lift Vietnam’s exports by 12 percent by 2030

Hanoi (VNA) - The World Bank (WB) has predicted that the EU-Vietnam
Free Trade Agreement (EVFTA) could help Vietnam’s GDP and exports grow 2.4 percent
and 12 percent, respectively, by 2030, the Ministry of Industry and Trade
(MoIT) has reported.
The deal is also expected to bring 100,000 to 800,000 people out of
poverty.
The WB believes Vietnam could enjoy greater benefits from joining the EVFTA
and the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP)
if it conducts overall economic and institutional reform to comply with their conditions.
WB Country Director in Vietnam Ousmane Dione said Vietnam could optimise
the deals and reap unprecedented benefits.
Requirements on the rules of origin is one of the challenges Vietnam
needs to overcome, he said, as a number of Made-in-Vietnam products still rely
on imported materials - 62 percent in electronics and 53 percent in automobiles.
He suggested that Vietnam improve links between domestic suppliers and
foreign enterprises that lead global supply chains.
Vietnam will become a destination for EU and global investors because of
the EVFTA, he added. When FDI increases, however, the number of trade
complaints will also pile up.
He therefore advised Vietnam to launch a systematic mechanism to deal
with complaints between the State and investors. At the same time, priority
should be given to key currency earners post-COVID-19.
MoIT will partner with the Ministry of Science and Technology this year to
supplement and amend the revised Law on Intellectual Property 2009 and review
decrees relating to the EVFTA.
From 2021-2025, it will work with the Ministry of Finance to supplement
and amend the revised Law on Insurance Business 2010.
In the near future, it will popularise the complaint settlement
mechanism in the EVFTA and other FTAs to which Vietnam is a member./.