NIKKEI ASIAN REVIEW
31-3-19’
Vietnam's economy gains as companies flee China in trade war GDP grew
6.79% in first quarter as exports to US surged
TOMOYA ONISHI, Nikkei
staff writer HANOI -- The U.S. trade
war with Beijing continues to boost the Vietnamese economy as companies
dodge tariffs by relocating production here from mainland China, fueling
a sharp increase in exports to America. Vietnam's real gross
domestic product climbed 6.79% on the year during the first three months
of 2019, the government said Friday. The country enjoyed its second
strongest first-quarter growth in the past decade, surpassed only by the
7.45% rate in 2018. Though January-March
growth slowed from the 7.31% rate in the previous quarter through
December, that period capped a full year when the economy grew by 7.08%,
the largest annual expansion since the global economic crisis hit in
2008. Exports to the U.S., the
country's largest trading partner, jumped 26% on the year in the first
quarter. Apparel performed particularly well as textile companies move
operating sites to Vietnam from China, echoing a trend in other
industries. Exports to China dropped by 7% amid the northern neighbor's
economic slowdown. The Sino-U.S. trade war
will lift Vietnam's economic output by about 0.5 percentage point, the
largest margin among Asian countries, Mizuho Research Institute
predicts. "Even if the global
economy slows down, relocation from China will continue, and we can
expect an offsetting effect to a certain extent," said Hiromasa
Matsuura, an economist at the institute. But Vietnam's overall
exports rose just 4.7% during the first quarter, an outcome that owes
almost entirely to Samsung Electronics. Foreign-owned enterprises are
responsible for two-thirds of Vietnamese exports, and the South Korean
technology group accounts for 40% within that category. Samsung runs two
smartphone factories in northern Vietnam. But the company reported a 30%
drop in operating profit for the October-December quarter, and has
issued a surprise warning about earnings for the first quarter of 2019.
Samsung's financial woes have hurt Vietnam's GDP, and exports of
cellphones and electronic components dipped 4.3% from a year earlier. Underpinning the economy
is consumer spending, which accounts for nearly 70% of the GDP. Final
consumption expenditures, which include private consumption, gained by
7% in the first quarter. Vietnam boasts the
third-largest population in the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian
Nations, along with an expansion of its upper- and middle-income
earners. Vingroup, the nation's largest conglomerate, is opening
convenience stores at a rate of 1,000 outlets yearly. That growth, along
with the addition of new supermarkets, is helping boost private
consumption. The manufacturing
industry grew 12.3%, thanks largely to the sector diversifying beyond
Samsung. Vingroup put the nation's first electric motorcycles on the
market in November, and the group will enter the automaking business in
June. Vietnam's second-ever oil refinery, the Nghi Son Refinery, began
commercial operations in December. |