US paper: macroeconomic outlook of Vietnam bright
The macroeconomic outlook of Viet Nam is bright as the country has witnessed strong domestic consumption, received foreign direct investments and maintained a surplus in trade balance with other countries, wrote an article recently published on the US’s seekingalpha.com.
Illustrative image (Photo: VNA) |
Viet Nam's real GDP growth is forecasted to exceed 8% in 2022.
In a time when other major world economies are curtailing fiscal and monetary policy support in an effort to contain inflation, Viet Nam is in a position to support its growth. In January 2022, Viet Nam passed a fiscal stimulus package of 15.4 billion USD at almost 4% of its GDP to support its 8 percent growth target for the year. The stimulus is generally viewed as a positive for the country's GDP growth trajectory for the year, it said.
Viet Nam's currency and interest rates also appear relatively stable compared to other countries. A sharp recovery in personal consumption along with strong export growth contributed to the country's impressive Q3 GDP growth of 13.67%. Viet Nam's strong macroeconomic position is expected to lift its population out of poverty as more than half of the Vietnamese population is projected to join the global middle class by 2035.
“The country has been able to remain attractive to foreign investors and received foreign direct investment (FDI) net inflows totaling 15.3 billion USD in 2021, or 4.2% of GDP, up from 3.2% of GDP in 2013. We believe the strong FDI further solidifies the country's macro outlook”, the article said.
According to the author, Viet Nam's regulators are vying for an upgrade to emerging markets status by global index providers. The State Securities Commission of Viet Nam is working with global agencies such as the World Bank and FTSE as well as Viet Nam's ministries, associations and market members to address concerns on foreign ownership limits.
The country's regulators are willing to make markets more accessible to foreign investors and boost the infrastructure support needed to run a healthy and functioning market. An upgrade to emerging markets status could potentially attract foreign active and passive asset inflows into the local Vietnamese market, it concluded.
Source: VNA