Businesses “lubricate” civil authorities with bribes

Nov 17th at 15:51
17-11-2014 15:51:35+07:00

Businesses “lubricate” civil authorities with bribes

In order to create one dong of profit, businesses have to pay VND0.7-1 for “under-the-table fees”.

Nguyen Hoang Anh, director of a private civil engineering company headquartered in a northern mountainous province, complained that he has been cheated by local state officials.

Some months ago, Anh heard that the province had decided to allocate a big budget for the project to build a new road. He tried to contact officials of the state agencies involved in the project, saying that he wanted to become the contractor.

Anh said he had to pay a lot of money to the officials who promised him he would win the bid. However, he was not named the contractor. Anh thinks the other company won the bid because it offered more money to officials.

Anh said he would not report the bribery case to the police because he thinks it is normal for state officials to receive money from businesses.

Unlike Anh, 11 directors in Thanh Hoa province denounced the heads of the provincial port authorities for taking bribes from businesses.

Information about the bribery has stirred up the public, while the Minister of Transport Dinh La Thang has ordered an investigation.

The stories of Anh and the 11 directors in Thanh Hoa show that paying money to lubricate the civil authority apparatus is “quite a normal thing” in Vietnam.

A Hanoi-based bank told T&C, a consultancy firm which conducted a survey on the business environment as per the request of DFID (Department for International Development), that the bank has inspection tours twice a year.

When receiving inspectors, the bank always has to give “gifts” and “envelopes with money inside” to the inspectors to reward their “hard inspection work”.

T&C quoted the banker as saying that the value of the gifts and envelopes given to inspectors depend on the seriousness of the bank’s problems.

The banker revealed that every inspector receives VND30 million on average for every inspection campaign.

A representative from another business told T&C that civil servants always try to find minor mistakes and ask for more documents from enterprises. And in order to get their documents approved, businesses have to pay money to help “improve officers’ health”.

A T&C report showed that in 2009-2011, every surveyed business had to spend VND400-600 million on “unofficial expense items”, but still could make a pre-tax profit of VND512-646 million every year. As such, the underground fee is equal to 78-107 percent of businesses’ pre-tax profits.

vietnamnet



NEWS SAME CATEGORY

Techcombank’s 3Q2014 profit gallops

Techcombank just reported its rapid profit growth in the last three quarters, with pre-tax accumulated profit soared 55.1 per cent on year to VND 1,163 billion...

SBV tightens rules for foreign currency transactions

Financial institutions have to report international online transactions worth more than US$1,000, or the equivalent in other currencies, to the State Bank of Viet...

Bank, firms tackle money laundering

The Viet Capital Bank, the technology consulting firm Komtek Corporation and FircoSoft signed a cooperation agreement yesterday that would help the bank prevent...

Central bank inspection aims to uncover credit violations

The State Bank of Viet Nam (SBV) has announced that its current inspection of banking operations was focusing on fields of high risk, especially credit activity and...

Buyback plan boosts ACB share prices

Asia Commercial Bank (ACB) has announced its plan to repurchase 17.5 million of its own shares, thereby attracting the attention of investors.

No ASEAN goods surge with tariff cuts

The reduction of tariffs under the ASEAN Trade in Goods Agreement (ATIGA) next year won't lead to a surge in ASEAN goods to Viet Nam, an official of the Ministry of...

Vietcombank's lending grows by 10.2%

Vietcombank's credit growth reached 10.2 per cent in the first nine months of 2014, with loans totalling VND302.18 trillion (US$14.39 billion), according to its...

ACB to buy back up to 17m shares

Asia Commercial Bank (ACB) announced on November 12 that it would buy back about 523,800 to 17.46 million shares between December 2 and 31.

Most banks raise dollar exchange rates

On November 13 morning, most banks increased their dollar exchange rate by VND5 to VND15 (0.02 pence to 0.07 pence) higher than on November 12, reported business...

Vietcombank sells Vinalines’ debt

Vietcombank has sold the debt owed to it by the Vietnam National Shipping Lines (Vinalines), which is undergoing a mandated restructuring process as requested by...

Bank stocks

Insurance stocks


MOST READ


Back To Top