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Strategies & Market Trends : Asia Forum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: GUSTAVE JAEGER who wrote (9876)11/14/2000 11:10:55 PM
From: Rolla Coasta  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 9980
 
U.S. Business Seeks Vietnam Market

dailynews.yahoo.com

By MARTIN CRUTSINGER, AP Economics Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) - American business is hungry for a share of the
Vietnam market, seeking to meet its demand for soft drinks, consumer
products and high-tech telecommunications services and to gain a foothold in
the massive rebuilding of a country heavily damaged by U.S. warplanes a
quarter-century ago.

More than 50 U.S. corporations are sending executives to Vietnam during
President Clinton (news - web sites)'s three-day visit. The list reads like a
who's who of multinational concerns including Boeing, Citigroup, Coca-Cola,
General Electric, General Motors, Cisco Systems, Nike and Proctor &
Gamble.

The companies either already have operations in Vietnam or want to get
involved in a country they see as a vast untapped market of 78 million
people, about the size of the population of Germany.

``This trip looks to the future as part of building a lasting relationship with an
important country with vast potential,'' said Lionel Johnson, an executive of
Citigroup. The giant banking corporation wants to expand its foothold in
Vietnam - two branch banks limited to offering services to foreign companies
in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City.

The business leaders, who are paying their own way, will hear from Clinton
and other Cabinet officials during a business forum scheduled for Ho Chi
Minh City. The president also plans to tour a container loading facility to
emphasize the potential for trade between the two nations if Congress next
year approves the trade deal his administration signed with Vietnam in July.

That agreement will grant Vietnam the same low U.S. tariffs enjoyed by
virtually all other nations, although Vietnam's trade privileges will be subject
to annual review by Congress. That was the same status China had for the
past two decades before Congress this year granted it permanent normal
trade relations.

The normal trade tariffs average around 3 percent, a sharp reduction from the
40 percent average border duty Vietnamese goods now face.

In exchange for access to the world's largest market, Vietnam agreed to
sharply lower its trade barriers to American goods, including cutting tariffs on
a large number of farm products and manufactured goods, easing current
barriers that keep U.S. banks and telecommunications firms out of the
country and providing increased protection for U.S. investment and
intellectual property rights.

It took a full year after negotiators had reached an agreement in principle to
get the trade deal signed. Economic reformers in Hanoi had to overcome stiff
resistance from communist hard-liners who wanted to protect the country's
inefficient state-run companies.

Just as in China, the administration is hoping a U.S. policy of economic
engagement will allow free-market capitalism and democracy to take hold.

But even the strongest boosters of increased economic ties with Vietnam
concede that U.S. companies have faced numerous obstacles in the six years
since Clinton lifted the U.S. trade embargo.

Frances Zwenig, a senior director at the US-ASEAN (Association of
Southeast Asian Nations) Business Council, said Vietnam's decision to sign
the trade deal showed that ``they want to join the global economy. ... Now
businesses are willing to look at Vietnam again.''

Through July, U.S. imports from Vietnam totaled $448 million, a gain of
nearly 60 percent from the same period a year ago, while U.S. exports to
Vietnam totaled $223 million, also up by nearly 60 percent.

Major U.S. exports to Vietnam are industrial and office machinery, fertilizer,
leather and other parts for shoes and telecommunications equipment.

Among the leading imports from Vietnam are coffee, fish and crude oil. But
once the tariffs are lowered, the World Bank predicts that Vietnamese
clothing shipments to the United States could jump 10-fold in just the first
year.

It is that forecast that has U.S. labor unions worried, believing that the real
reason American companies are interested in closer economic ties with
Vietnam is to tap into that nation's low-wage work force to export back to
the United States.

Nike, the U.S. shoe manufacturer, already produces around 10 percent of its
total world output in Vietnam. Those shoes end up mainly in Europe because
of the high U.S. tariffs.

Thea Lee, a trade economist with the AFL-CIO, which opposed permanent
normal trade relations with China, said unions will fight the Vietnam deal
because it does not include safeguards for worker rights and the environment.
However, the agreement should face less trouble in Congress than the China
deal because the Vietnamese economy is much smaller.

Analysts caution that businesses should not get carried away in their
expectations, at least for the immediate future.

``American companies want to get on the ground floor so they don't lose out
to competitors, but Vietnam still has a way to go economically,'' said Franklin
Vargo, vice president for trade at the National Association of Manufacturers.

-

On the Net:

US-ASEAN Business Council: us-asean.org

Office of U.S. Trade Representative: ustr.gov