Vietnam is currently planning to shift to a mid-to-high-end industrial chain. In terms of industrial chain and economic connection supply system, Vietnam is similar to a system of China's overseas provinces. The degree of industrial connection between Vietnam's two major economic centers in the north and south is relatively low.
I remember that about 80% of Vietnam's trade surplus in tradable goods last year was caused by agricultural trade. The manufacturing industry may still be in deficit. I don't know if Vietnam's trade structure has changed this year. Vietnam's exports account for a high proportion of GDP. In a sense like a transit base trading port (Hong Kong, Singapore nature)
If there's " underdeveloped infrastructure and transportation " like you said, I think foreign companies would've not invested that much in your country then the number of 750 B would never come to life.
Vietnam has a long coastline and numerous seaports. The majority of provinces and cities have access to the sea and ports, which has compensated for the incomplete transportation infrastructure. Vietnam builds various types of medium-sized and large cargo ships. As of 2024, the completion of the North-South expressway will further attract foreign investment.
Bangladesh is only equivalent to Thailand. Vietnam is recalculating its GDP scale according to the recommendation of the UNSD and is expected to surpass Thailand, ranking second in Southeast Asia after Indonesia. Vietnam has surpassed Bangladesh.
Total exports are of little use, the key is net exports. The total exports are large and the total imports are also large, that is, importing foreign components and assembling them locally. Total exports include the value of foreign parts and components, while only the value of local assembly is created
Sao không mở mắt mà nhìn nhà máy sản xuất của người ta hàng ngàn con robot đang làm việc. Đừng tỏ vẻ ngạo mạn đáng ghét đúng bản chất tàu khựa, nhận vơ cả thế giới của mình
@@angkhoanguyen6114Ý tôi là tổng xuất khẩu lớn không có nghĩa là GDP lớn. Xuất khẩu ròng là GDP. Nếu tổng xuất khẩu tăng trưởng nhanh có nghĩa là ngành chế biến, lắp ráp (tạo ra giá trị nội địa) cũng tăng trưởng nhanh nên kinh tế sẽ tăng trưởng nhanh. Tôi không nói rằng toàn bộ Việt Nam đều được lắp ráp nhưng chắc chắn nước này chiếm một phần lớn trong xuất khẩu. Chủ yếu, bạn luôn nói rằng Samsung đã biến Việt Nam thành nhà máy sản xuất điện thoại di động và xuất khẩu điện thoại di động của Samsung chiếm một phần rất lớn trong xuất khẩu của Việt Nam. Xuất khẩu điện thoại di động của Samsung sang Việt Nam bao gồm việc nhập linh kiện từ nước ngoài rồi lắp ráp để xuất khẩu. Để thực sự nhìn vào xuất khẩu của Việt Nam, chúng ta cần xem những nhà sản xuất linh kiện nào đã xây dựng nhà máy tại Việt Nam.
@@angkhoanguyen6114What I mean is that a large total export does not mean a large GDP. Net exports are GDP. If total export growth is fast, it means that processing and assembly (local value creation) is also growing fast, so the economic growth will be fast. I'm not saying that all Vietnam is assembled, but it certainly accounts for a large part of exports. Mainly, you always say that Samsung has turned Vietnam into a mobile phone factory, and Samsung’s mobile phone exports account for a very large part of Vietnam’s exports. Samsung’s mobile phone exports to Vietnam involve importing components from foreign countries and then assembling them for export. To really look at Vietnam’s exports, we need to look at which component manufacturers have built factories in Vietnam.
@@MinhNguyen-yu2mjmade in Vietnam có 2 nghĩa đó 1 là hàng có thương hiệu Việt Nam và sản xuất ở Việt Nam 2 là thương hiệu nước ngoài đặt nhà máy tại Việt Nam nên cũng ghi là made in Vietnam. Nhưng điểm chung là nguyên liệu hầu như là nhập từ Trung Quốc
Cheap labour, cheap electricity, FTA with most developed markets, huge talent pools, smooth transportation from China materials to Vietnam factory. All contribute to the success of Vietnam boom in export. A lot of cheaper alternative, Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Philipines but Vietnam are still the top choice after China.
@@thuankhong Stop talking bullshit and nonsense. Are you representing for all Vietnamese? For me and also government we welcome high quality investment from China or any country.
Và nó chỉ là tạm thời. Muốn phát triển hơn nữa thì phải hỗ trợ doanh nghiệp nội địa chiếm áp đảo trong nước và giúp hàng hóa nội địa vươn tầm thế giới.
Give me a credible source for number "90%". All countries in the world depend on cheap Chinese-made spare parts. Our government give incentives for local supporting companies to join global supply chain of foreign-invested firms. Everything need to take time before we can grow up later on.
How do you see Vietnam's position in the global supply chain in the future? Let us know down below!
Vietnam will become increasingly important
Good to see Vietnam thriving in its economic development. But, what about its human development?
@@youxkioYes, we need human rights of religion, freedom of the press, more decentralization, transparency, NO corruption and multi-party elections.
@@luongo7886??
@@luongo7886/// à
I like Vietnam's decentralization development mindset, no one left behind and spread wealth to other provinces.
Except that it’s actually led to widespread disparity in opportunities. The difference between the richest and poorest province is huge.
What are you talking about
Are you sure?
Keep growing Vietnam.
Vietnam is currently planning to shift to a mid-to-high-end industrial chain. In terms of industrial chain and economic connection supply system, Vietnam is similar to a system of China's overseas provinces. The degree of industrial connection between Vietnam's two major economic centers in the north and south is relatively low.
So happy for Vietnam as it is not a bully like China.
Vietnam exports are really Chinese exports. Chinese materials & components into Vietnam with cheap Vietnamese labor is win win
All thanks to the bamboo diplomacy strategy of the General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong
It's good right now but we have to develop our own technology ,brand (ex:vinfast) and industry.
We depend a lot of Samsung
Samsung just a piece of product can be replace every time
@@davidgibson3631 Undoubtedly, Samsung is still a foreign company, replacing their holdings was the problem of time.
vinfast?😂😂😂😂
@@gaosunibu yes vinfast , do you know that a lot of ignorant like you were laughing when they saw first Japanese or Korean cars ?
@@gaosunibu too bad for you, more Vingroup like companies are growing stronger in Vietnam and will expand significantly into the world. 😎😎😎😎😎😎
We are basically what China was 2 decades ago, cheap labor, cheap electricity and a stable goverment whose policies attach foreign investment
"We" have had peace since 1949. How far have "we" gone compared to S. Korea and Taiwan??? What's the point of bragging, we're still very far away?
What products are considered "cheap labor"? How many products considered "highend labor"?
@@thuankhong 1949 ? you smoking something Bolero boy?
@@thuankhong1949, we were still busy fighting the french. Go back to learn some history lil boy😂
I remember that about 80% of Vietnam's trade surplus in tradable goods last year was caused by agricultural trade. The manufacturing industry may still be in deficit. I don't know if Vietnam's trade structure has changed this year. Vietnam's exports account for a high proportion of GDP. In a sense like a transit base trading port (Hong Kong, Singapore nature)
1,000% of Chinese trade surplus in tradable goods was high -tech products.
Agricultural product exports are only $22.5 billion out of a total export turnover of $371 billion.
80%? Surely wrong stats, check again
might that have something to do with a famous euro-asian conflict? they do not sell petrol, but ....
not related
@@angkhoanguyen6114 well, there are hundreds of billions to be had, so its a very lucky completely unrelated coincidence.
@@bigbarry8343 do not have enough refinery to sell refined oil, only crude oil
越南🇻🇳就是未来的日本🇯🇵韩国🇰🇷❤️😊👍
Maybe in the dream😂
一个加强版的韩国,大概只有日本的½左右
*Is there any country with underdeveloped infrastructure and transportation that imports and exports 750 billion USD?*
Well, that’s impressive if Vietnam can managed to do with such underdeveloped infrastructure like you said.
If there's " underdeveloped infrastructure and transportation " like you said,
I think foreign companies would've not invested that much in your country then the number of 750 B would never come to life.
@@luxor9339it is upgraded but it need to be much better to keep up with the rate of development right now
@@luxor9339 PPP vietnam 2023 is 1,550 Billion
Vietnam has a long coastline and numerous seaports. The majority of provinces and cities have access to the sea and ports, which has compensated for the incomplete transportation infrastructure. Vietnam builds various types of medium-sized and large cargo ships. As of 2024, the completion of the North-South expressway will further attract foreign investment.
I'm impressed by Vietnam's growth, I think it will surpass Bangladesh soon
Bangladesh has only Garments industry.
I love india
Bangladesh is only equivalent to Thailand. Vietnam is recalculating its GDP scale according to the recommendation of the UNSD and is expected to surpass Thailand, ranking second in Southeast Asia after Indonesia. Vietnam has surpassed Bangladesh.
Ha ha ha😅😅😅
Already has a long time ago.
Total exports are of little use, the key is net exports. The total exports are large and the total imports are also large, that is, importing foreign components and assembling them locally. Total exports include the value of foreign parts and components, while only the value of local assembly is created
Sao không mở mắt mà nhìn nhà máy sản xuất của người ta hàng ngàn con robot đang làm việc. Đừng tỏ vẻ ngạo mạn đáng ghét đúng bản chất tàu khựa, nhận vơ cả thế giới của mình
Still why did Vietnam have high development rate?
@@angkhoanguyen6114Ý tôi là tổng xuất khẩu lớn không có nghĩa là GDP lớn. Xuất khẩu ròng là GDP. Nếu tổng xuất khẩu tăng trưởng nhanh có nghĩa là ngành chế biến, lắp ráp (tạo ra giá trị nội địa) cũng tăng trưởng nhanh nên kinh tế sẽ tăng trưởng nhanh. Tôi không nói rằng toàn bộ Việt Nam đều được lắp ráp nhưng chắc chắn nước này chiếm một phần lớn trong xuất khẩu. Chủ yếu, bạn luôn nói rằng Samsung đã biến Việt Nam thành nhà máy sản xuất điện thoại di động và xuất khẩu điện thoại di động của Samsung chiếm một phần rất lớn trong xuất khẩu của Việt Nam. Xuất khẩu điện thoại di động của Samsung sang Việt Nam bao gồm việc nhập linh kiện từ nước ngoài rồi lắp ráp để xuất khẩu. Để thực sự nhìn vào xuất khẩu của Việt Nam, chúng ta cần xem những nhà sản xuất linh kiện nào đã xây dựng nhà máy tại Việt Nam.
@@angkhoanguyen6114我的意思是总出口很大不代表GDP很大。净出口才是GDP。如果总出口增速快的话,意味着加工组装(本地价值创造)增速也快,这样经济增速就会快。我不是说越南全部都是组装,但那肯定也是占很大一部分出口。主要你们总是说三星把越南变成了一个手机工厂,三星手机出口占越南出口非常大部分。而三星的越南手机出口就是从外国进口零组件然后组装再出口。要真看越南出口,要看哪些零组件厂商在越南建厂了
@@angkhoanguyen6114What I mean is that a large total export does not mean a large GDP. Net exports are GDP. If total export growth is fast, it means that processing and assembly (local value creation) is also growing fast, so the economic growth will be fast. I'm not saying that all Vietnam is assembled, but it certainly accounts for a large part of exports. Mainly, you always say that Samsung has turned Vietnam into a mobile phone factory, and Samsung’s mobile phone exports account for a very large part of Vietnam’s exports. Samsung’s mobile phone exports to Vietnam involve importing components from foreign countries and then assembling them for export. To really look at Vietnam’s exports, we need to look at which component manufacturers have built factories in Vietnam.
Đến cái quần lót đang mặc của t còn made in china thì phát triển kiểu gì đây ?
nhưng giày vs túi đi chợ t xài mua ở châu âu thì made in vietnam 😂
No one uses high-end Chinese products because the quality is very poor .
Nghèo thế à cali 😂
@@MinhNguyen-yu2mjmade in Vietnam có 2 nghĩa đó
1 là hàng có thương hiệu Việt Nam và sản xuất ở Việt Nam
2 là thương hiệu nước ngoài đặt nhà máy tại Việt Nam nên cũng ghi là made in Vietnam.
Nhưng điểm chung là nguyên liệu hầu như là nhập từ Trung Quốc
Đi xe Nhật,Hàn,dùng TV Nhật Hàn, máy tính Đài loan,Made in China chỉ gồm đò lót ,không thấy xấu hổ à?
Vietnam export also depends on cheap labour
Cheap labour without stable politics, strong and smart workforce and attractive supports is useless.
China and Japan, Korea used to go the same path, I see nothing wrong for Vietnam to go that way.
Come to Africa pls
@@HoangNguyen-dv3yzAfrica is too unstablized
Cheap labour, cheap electricity, FTA with most developed markets, huge talent pools, smooth transportation from China materials to Vietnam factory. All contribute to the success of Vietnam boom in export. A lot of cheaper alternative, Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Philipines but Vietnam are still the top choice after China.
Depending on the US only is very bad..
100% of Vietnamese people want the government to say "NO" to investment from China.
@@thuankhong Stop talking bullshit and nonsense. Are you representing for all Vietnamese? For me and also government we welcome high quality investment from China or any country.
总出口没啥用,关键要看净出口。总出口大总进口也大,就是进口外国的零组件然后在本地组装一下。总出口包括了外国零部件的价值,而本地只是创造的组装的价值
You understand the point
Và nó chỉ là tạm thời. Muốn phát triển hơn nữa thì phải hỗ trợ doanh nghiệp nội địa chiếm áp đảo trong nước và giúp hàng hóa nội địa vươn tầm thế giới.
@@angkhoanguyen6114Có thể trong khoảng 20 năm nữa
@@angkhoanguyen6114大概20年后应该会实现
@@angkhoanguyen6114It should be possible in about 20 years
At least 90% of this is just china rerouting product. For example, Vinfast is just assembled Chinese parts.
Stupid
this idiot doesnt know anything about Vinfast or Vietnam
a Chinese pretending to be Vietnamese dare to lsander Vinfast, pathetic
Vinfast 60% parts are domestics. 40% parts are from Europe.
Give me a credible source for number "90%". All countries in the world depend on cheap Chinese-made spare parts. Our government give incentives for local supporting companies to join global supply chain of foreign-invested firms. Everything need to take time before we can grow up later on.