Vietnam privatization efforts bogged down in new rules

Jul 12th at 15:46
12-07-2019 15:46:31+07:00

Vietnam privatization efforts bogged down in new rules

Vietnamese agencies have only equitized 35 of 127 enterprises with a 2020 deadline, and many are asking for more time.

The equitization of state-owned enterprises (SOEs) has reached only 27.5 percent of the government’s 2017-2020 plan, according to a report by the Steering Committee for Enterprise Renewal and Development.

Divestment of state capital from enterprises is also way behind, at 88 of 403 enterprises planned for the 2017-2020 period, or 21.8 percent of plan in the last two and a half years.

One of the problems cited by the enterprises is that they have to adapt to the Ministry of Finance's new regulations which require companies to make clear the usage of all land plots they and their subsidiaries possess as well as plans to use them in the future before equitizing. As such, it would not be possible to reach government targets this year.

Tran Manh Hung, chairman of Vietnam Posts and Telecommunications Group (VNPT), said the group's evaluation should have been completed last year. However, it has completed only 95.8 percent of dispositions of 4,270 land lots across the country as planned, so VNPT cannot get approval to equitize.

Without the approval, VNPT cannot hire consultants to value the business or costs of the equitization process. "Consultants’ work usually takes nine months, so the company will at best complete its valuation in December 2020, equitization will take place in 2021," Hung said.

Bui Thi Thanh Tam, general director of Northern Food Corporation, said that her company had virtually completed land and debt procedures by the end of the first quarter of 2019.

However, a new regulation was enacted by the Ministry of Finance, requiring the enterprise to process an additional 248 pieces of land. "We are not sure we can even finish the required land dispositions by the end of 2019," said Tam.

At a recent meeting on the issue, Deputy Prime Minister Vuong Dinh Hue admitted that the state has issued more stringent regulations in equitization, such as directing the State Audit to inspect SOEs. He said this was needed to ensure transparency and compliance, so it took longer for enterprises to equitize.

Additionally, the deputy PM pointed out that so far, 796 SOEs have been equitized but not listed on the stock market. According to Pham Hong Son, deputy chairman of the State Securities Commission, many SOEs are not listing because they have large debts and are afraid to go public.

Last month, National Assembly members criticized several companies, saying group interests had interfered with the equitization process, and authorities were slow to penalise violations.

vnexpress



NEWS SAME CATEGORY

FDI’s most profitable sector in 2017: White Book

Foreign direct investment (FDI) enterprises made more than VND384 trillion in profit in 2017, accounting for 43.8% of the total pretax profit of all enterprises in...

Local SMEs slow to respond to free trade pacts

Many local firms, particularly small and medium-d enterprises (SMEs), remain indifferent and are making no preparations to make the most of the European...

VN companies named among top 300 Asian businesses

Five Vietnamese companies are among the 300 largest and fastest-growing businesses in Asia, according to Nikkei Asia Review's exclusive ranking.

Prompt action needed to take advantage of FTAs

Opportunities provided by free trade agreements (FTAs) will only exist on paper if local authorities and enterprises do not take prompt and concrete actions to take...

First-ever White Book on Vietnamese Businesses launched

The first edition of the White Book on Vietnamese Businesses was launched at a ceremony in Ha Noi on Wednesday.

Binh Dinh focuses on investment in big projects in H2

The central province of Binh Dinh in the second half of this year will give priority to big labour-intensive projects with foreign or domestic investment, according...

Da Nang attracts $542 million of foreign investment in H1

More than US$542 million of foreign capital was invested in the central city of Da Nang in the first half of this year.

Placing Vietnam at the centre of US attraction

Vietnam-US investment relations have significantly strengthened over the past 25 years, illustrated by great success stories from world-famous groups such as Intel...

MoIT tightens supervision to avoid trade sanctions

Sectors which have seen high growth in the past few years such as wooden furniture, garments and textiles, seafood and steel are being placed under special...

New rules governing protection

The new free trade agreement between Vietnam and the European Union will grant Vietnam easier access to a market of over 500 million people, and with GDP of $15...


MOST READ


Back To Top