Textile/garment machinery market large enough for all investors

Oct 8th at 15:42
08-10-2015 15:42:11+07:00

Textile/garment machinery market large enough for all investors

Vietnam’s textile and garment industry needs $3.9 billion worth of machines for production, but domestic mechanical engineering companies cannot satisfy demand.


In the past, the Saigon Garment & Trade Company (GMC) needed 50 workers for cloth cutting and spreading, because the work was done manually. But since it began using cutting machines from Nhat Tin Technology JSC, productivity has improved significantly and the number of workers needed has been cut to eight.

GMC managers believe they made the right decision to buy new cutting machines.

Other textile and garment companies also tend to spend more money on upgrading technologies. This is why Nhat Tin’s sales of cloth spreading machine have increased by 300 percent compared with the same period last year, according to Nhat Tin’s president Nguyen Tan Thanh.

However, domestically made products are still far from satisfying the demand from the textile and garment industry. At present, most machines used in the industry are imports.

Vietnam is one of the biggest garment exporters in the world with $24 billion worth of exports in 2014. To put out such big volume of goods, it has to import nearly 100 percent of machines and input materials needed to make finished products.

European machines are the most expensive and the best ones for textile and garment companies. Mid-grade machines are from South Korea, Japan and Taiwan. Meanwhile, Chinese machines are the cheapest, and are the choices of most small- and medium-d enterprises.

According to Nguyen Viet Thang, director of Viet Tin Technology JSC, 50 percent of machines and equipment being used in the textile and garment industry are from China.

Vietnamese businesses prefer Chinese machines not only because they are affordable, but also because Chinese suppliers can offer products of different types and at different price levels.

According to Nguyen Van Tuan, deputy chair of the Vietnam Textile and Apparel Association (Vinatas), the industry needs 6.5 billion meters of cloth more a year.

In order to make out the volume of cloth, it will need $6.5 billion worth of investment capital, 60 percent of which would be spent on machines. This means that Vietnam would need $3.9 billion worth of machines for the textile and garment industry.

Having realized the high demand in Vietnam, foreign manufacturers are now trying to exploit the market.

Japanese Tsudakoma Group, a textile machine manufacturer, has been contacting many Vietnamese enterprises to discuss the supply of machines. Vietnam, together with China and India, are the largest markets for the Japanese group.

vietnamnet



NEWS SAME CATEGORY

Toyota Vietnam launches “Welcome Home” programme for service customers

Toyota Motor Vietnam (TMV), in tandem with its nationwide dealer network, today launched the “Welcome Home” incentive programme for the customers doing periodic...

TPP helps small, medium businesses: experts

The Trans-Pacific Partnership deal (TPP) will offer more business opportunities for local small- and medium-d enterprises (SMEs) though many challenges still...

Survey to find best places to work

Jobs recruiter Anphabe and market research firm Nielsen Viet Nam have launched the Viet Nam Best Places to Work 2015 survey with extended scale, deeper analysis and...

Foreign firms outpay domestic ones

Base salaries at foreign companies and Vietnamese companies show a marked difference, a survey conducted by human resources firm Mercer and its partner Talentnet...

VN slips in Global Dynamism Index

Viet Nam ranks 28th, down a place from last year, in the Global Dynamism Index recently released by consulting firm Grant Thornton.

Sales through mobile devices on the rise

Market survey reports all show that shopping via mobile devices is becoming more and more popular among Vietnamese.

IMF puts 2015 growth at 6.5% for Vietnam

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) released its October 2015 World Economic Outlook (WEO) in Lima, Peru, on October 6, which stated that Vietnam’s economic...

Information disclosure of SOEs compulsory next month

The Government has issued Decree 81/2015/ND-CP dated September 18 which governs the contents, orders, procedures, and responsibilities for information disclosure of...

Vietnam strong enough to afford TPP: lead negotiator

The Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) is a game Vietnam can afford to play, as it has 20 years of experience in economic integration with the world, the lead...

New regulations on investment abroad

Investors in overseas projects are allowed to transfer abroad an amount of foreign currencies not more than 5 percent of their total capital contribution to the...


MOST READ


Back To Top