Firms to absorb price hikes

Aug 8th at 12:27
08-08-2012 12:27:40+07:00

Firms to absorb price hikes

Increasing prices of essential goods will not preclude the Government from helping businesses in need of assistance, an official of the Ministry of Industry and Trade said at an online meeting held by the ministry on Monday.

The increase in prices of goods such as petrol, oil, gas and electricity is unrelated to the Government's support for troubled enterprises, said Vo Van Quyen, head of the ministry's Domestic Market Department.

Increases or decreases in the prices of those products stemmed from changes in the world market. They were not related to the current production and business difficulties, said Quyen. If enterprises experienced business hardships, the Government would have a support system in place.

"For instance, if a business has a high inventory, this is due to the market system rather than to price, he said. If enterprises do not choose suitable markets for their products, price changes cannot be blamed for their elimination," he said.

"However, the Government still controls the schedule and rate of the adjustment in prices for the essential goods made by the dealers according to market rules," he said.

Dang Huy Cuong, head of the ministry's Electricity Regulation Department, said electricity was a special case, so any price increases for the product were always considered carefully.

In November 2011, Electricity of Viet Nam proposed to increase the price of electricity by 10 per cent. But after careful deliberation, the ministries of Industry and Trade and of Finance decided that the electricity price would have two instances of increase – December 20, 2011 and July 1, 2012 – and would increase by 5 per cent each time.

The rate of 5 per cent would have the lowest macroeconomic impact, Cuong said.

When electricity prices increased on July 1, EVN would retain different rates for different kinds of customers, he said. The price for poor and low-income people remained unchanged, while business would pay 0.5 per cent more.

"That means the increase will have a negligible impact on production industries," Cuong said.

vietnamnews



NEWS SAME CATEGORY

Viet Nam invests billions abroad

Viet Nam has 214 projects worth US$3.45 billion in Laos and 112 projects worth $2.36 billion in Cambodia, according to the Foreign Investment Agency.

Foreign investment declines sharply

Foreign direct investment has decreased sharply, figures released recently by the Ministry of Planning and Investment show.

SOEs urged to divest from non-core sectors in 3 yrs

The state-owned enterprises, or SOEs, have been given three years to completely divest from non-core sectors, or those that have little relation to their main...

Inflation falls from 23% to 5% in one year

Policymakers have signalled that they are willing to take necessary actions to move the economy forward,the Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank (HSBC) has said in its...

VN seeks US preferences

Deputy Prime Minister Hoang Trung Hai said here yesterday he hoped the United States would offer a scheme of tariff preferences to Viet Nam and create favourable...

No tax funds for business bailouts

The Government will not use funds from tax collections to bail out enterprises, Government Office Minister Vu Duc Dam told a televised Q&A session on Sunday.

VN and S Korea seek free-trade

Vietnamese Minister of Industry and Trade Vu Huy Hoang and Minister for Trade of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade of the Republic of Korea (RoK) Bark Tae...

Economists anticipate dark days with price rises and production stagnation

The prices of the three most essential goods – petrol, electricity and gas – just within one month has made housewives worried stiff. Meanwhile, sources all have...

NA committee warns against SOE debts

The National Assembly (NA) Economic Committee warns that State-owned enterprise (SOE) credit is emerging as a threat to public debts of Vietnam.

VN’s manufacturing index continues slide in July

 The Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) of some manufacturing industries in Vietnam continued to decline in July, according to the latest report from the Hong Kong –...


MOST READ


Back To Top