Taking Stock [electronic resource] : An Update on Vietnam's Recent Economic Development.

By: World BankContributor(s): World BankMaterial type: TextTextSeries: Economic Updates and Modeling | World Bank e-LibraryPublication details: Washington, D.C. : The World Bank, 2012Subject(s): Access to Information | Accounting | Administrative Procedures | Air Pollution | Audits | Banking Sector | Biodiversity | Blindness | Capacity Building | Child Health | Child Mortality | Commercial Banks | Debt Markets | Developing Countries | Disabilities | Early Childhood | Economic Growth | Economics | Environment | Environmental Economics & Policies | Expenditures | Family Health | Family Planning | Finance and Financial Sector Development | Fiscal & Monetary Policy | Food Processing | Foreign Direct Investment | Health Education | Health Monitoring & Evaluation | Health Outcomes | Health, Nutrition and Population | Household Surveys | Hygiene | Indoor Air Pollution | Insurance | International Cooperation | International Food Policy Research Institute | Labor Costs | Land Tenure | Legal System | Legislation | Living Standards | Macroeconomics and Economic Growth | Market Economy | Marketing | Maternal Mortality | Migration | Millennium Development Goals | Mortality | Multilateral Organizations | Natural Resources | Nutrition | Pesticides | Poverty Line | Primary Education | Property Rights | Quality of Education | Remittances | Reproductive Health | Rural Development | Rural Population | Rural Poverty | Sanitation | Savings | Secondary Education | Securities | Technical Assistance | Urban Areas | Urban Poverty | Waste | WorkersOnline resources: Click here to access online Abstract: The authorities' determined implementation of stabilization measures over the past year has helped to avert a macroeconomic crisis. If the deterioration of the macroeconomic environment in 2010-11 was rapid, the improvement in the situation in the past twelve months has been equally swift. Regaining macroeconomic stability has been costly, but not stabilizing the economy would have led to even bigger losses. Real gross domestic product (GDP) growth has decelerated from 6.8 percent in 2010 to 5.9 percent in 2011, and further to 4 percent in the first quarter of 2012 as higher prices has lowered domestic demand, affecting sectors such as construction, manufacturing and utilities. Industrial production has slowed, inventory for key industrial products has accumulated, and a number of small and medium enterprises have either closed, been liquidated or temporarily suspended their operations. While the stabilization efforts may have contributed to a cyclical slowdown, Vietnam's trend growth rate has been on a downward path for the last 5-6 years, largely on account of the slow pace of structural reforms. Inefficiencies in state-owned enterprises, banks and public investments have been a drag on the country's long-term growth potential. With gains from macroeconomic stabilization still recent and fragile, especially in an external environment that is fraught with uncertainty, the government needs to be careful not to shift to an expansionary stance prematurely.
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
    Average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
No physical items for this record

The authorities' determined implementation of stabilization measures over the past year has helped to avert a macroeconomic crisis. If the deterioration of the macroeconomic environment in 2010-11 was rapid, the improvement in the situation in the past twelve months has been equally swift. Regaining macroeconomic stability has been costly, but not stabilizing the economy would have led to even bigger losses. Real gross domestic product (GDP) growth has decelerated from 6.8 percent in 2010 to 5.9 percent in 2011, and further to 4 percent in the first quarter of 2012 as higher prices has lowered domestic demand, affecting sectors such as construction, manufacturing and utilities. Industrial production has slowed, inventory for key industrial products has accumulated, and a number of small and medium enterprises have either closed, been liquidated or temporarily suspended their operations. While the stabilization efforts may have contributed to a cyclical slowdown, Vietnam's trend growth rate has been on a downward path for the last 5-6 years, largely on account of the slow pace of structural reforms. Inefficiencies in state-owned enterprises, banks and public investments have been a drag on the country's long-term growth potential. With gains from macroeconomic stabilization still recent and fragile, especially in an external environment that is fraught with uncertainty, the government needs to be careful not to shift to an expansionary stance prematurely.

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.

Powered by Koha