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Vietnam: The China trade war winner's economy is suffering

Once a star, business confidence is fast waning. The property market looks more bust than boom. Power blackouts in northern areas are hurting big manufacturers. Vietnam's downturn has been aggravated by an anti-graft drive that's seen hundreds of party members prosecuted

June 07, 2023 / 10:05 IST
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When tensions between Beijing and Washington escalated during Donald Trump's presidency, Vietnam became the toast of think tanks and investment banks. (Source: Bloomberg)

Rarely has winning looked less appealing. Widely hailed in the past few years as a big beneficiary of US-China economic rivalry, Vietnam is stumbling. Its recent performance is so anemic that China's much-derided recovery looks relatively vigorous. Hanoi can't escape the gravity of slowing global growth — combined with some homegrown setbacks.

That the nation's travails have received minimal attention says a lot about how narratives can get stuck. When tensions between Beijing and Washington escalated during Donald Trump's presidency, Vietnam became the toast of think tanks and investment banks. It had proximity to China. The country was busy enmeshing itself in supply chains that dotted Southeast Asia, especially in electronics. Its Communist rulers had developed cordial ties with the US. Real estate was booming. Things that might go wrong were glossed over if ever considered at all.

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Disappointment with China's expansion is pervasive; almost every piece of data is scrutinised for flaws. This has tended to crowd out the deterioration in Vietnam. Export figures for May were spun as positive because the decline was limited to single digits; they had tumbled 21.3 percent in January from a year earlier. Gross domestic product rose just 3.3% in the first quarter, making China's 4.5 percent clip appear muscular. Business confidence is waning. The property market looks more bust than boom. Power blackouts in northern areas are hurting big manufacturers. (Like much of Southeast Asia, Vietnam is suffering from a heatwave that’s straining power grids.)

The central bank cut interest rates last month, one of the few monetary authorities anywhere to do so. There may be more to come: Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh said last week that with inflation under control, officials need to turn their attention to stoking growth.