Officers of the Coc Nam Customs Department in Lang Son province, which shares a border with China, perform a check on imported products. (Photo: VNA)
According to the Foreign Investment Agency under the Ministry of Planning and Investment, China invested about USD1.6 billion in Vietnam in the first fourth months of this year, making it the country’s fourth largest source of foreign investment.
Several large projects were funded by Chinese investors in the period including a tire manufacturing project with total registered capital of USD280 million in the southern province of Tay Ninh and another tire project of Advance Tire (Vietnam) Co. Ltd with registered capital of USD214.4 million in the southern province of Tien Giang.
China has been Vietnam’s biggest trade partner since 2004, and bilateral trade has been continuing its strong growth. China is currently Vietnam’s second largest export market after the United States. Vietnam is also China's largest trading partner in ASEAN and its eighth largest in the world. It is China’s fifth largest export market and ninth largest import market.
According to the Ministry of Industry and Trade, Vietnam–China trade turnover reached USD106.7 billion last year, up 13.5 percent compared to 2017. Vietnam exported goods worth USD41.26 billion, up 16.56 percent, while imports reached USD65.43 billion , up 11.68 percent.
Executive Director of the Vietnam National Garment and Textile Group (Vinatex) Cao Huu Hieu said one of the bright points contributing to the growth of Vietnam’s textile and garment industry was businesses’ efforts to boost exports to the Chinese market.
Hieu said Vietnam’s garment and textile export turnover to the Chinese market increased by 24 percent from USD3.2 billion in 2017 to USD4.1 billion in 2018. Yarn was the product most exported to China, making up 48 percent of all textiles.
However, he said many Vietnamese enterprises, including textile firms, face difficulties when attempting to export goods to China.
“The production scale of Vietnamese enterprises is relatively small, leading to a limitation on competitiveness of export goods,” Hieu said. “In addition, some enterprises have not actively explored consumption habits, market information or quality standards and quarantine testing in China.”
Le Hoang Oanh, head of the Ministry of Industry and Trade’s Department of Asian-African Markets, said the two countries’ border infrastructure had failed to meet the rapidly growing demand of bilateral commodity exchange.
China is the main export market for Vietnam’s agricultural and aquatic products.
However, “agricultural and aquatic products, which are allowed to be exported to China, are not yet abundant,” Oanh said. “The progress of negotiation to open the market for new products of Vietnam is still slow.”
Oanh added that businesses needed to organise the production of agricultural and aquatic products on an industrial scale with uniform quality to ensure compliance with quality standards required to sell goods in China.
“To promote the export of goods to the Chinese market, Vietnamese enterprises need to identify China as a key market and should not assume that it is easy market,” she said. “Businesses need to understand market demand in China to determine key products and key market areas./.”