Vietnam records fiscal deficit of over US$330 million in Jan-May

Jun 1st at 08:18
01-06-2020 08:18:48+07:00

Vietnam records fiscal deficit of over US$330 million in Jan-May

As of May 15, budget revenue collection reached VND529.6 trillion (US$22.7 billion), equivalent to 35% of the year's estimate.

Vietnam recorded a state budget deficit of VND7.8 trillion (US$334.33 million) in the year to May 15, 2020, a stark contrast from a budget surplus of VN77.9 trillion (US$3.33 billion) in the same period of last year, according to the General Statistics Office (GSO).

Data: GSO. Chart: Ngoc Mai.

As of May 15, budget revenue collection reached VND529.6 trillion (US$22.7 billion), equivalent to 35% of the year's estimate.

Upon breaking down, domestic revenue during the period stood at VND439.9 trillion (US$18.85 billion), equivalent to 34.8% of the year's estimate. Of the sum, the state sector contributed VND52.9 trillion (US$2.26 billion), or 29.7% of the year's estimate, the FDI sector made up VND79.5 trillion (US$3.4 billion), meeting 34.8% of the plan. 
Moreover, VND82.9 trillion (US$3.55 billion) was collected from non-state industrial, commercial and service taxes, equaling 30.6% of the plan, and VND19.5 trillion (US$835.83 million) from tax on environmental protection or 28.9%.

Revenue from import-export activities hit VND70.5 trillion (US$3.02 billion), or 33.9% of the year's estimate, and that from crude oil totaled VND18.9 trillion (US$810.12 million), meeting 53.7% of the year's plan.

Additionally, personal income tax contributed VND52.4 trillion (US$2.24 billion) to the state budget or 40.7% of the year's estimate, and land use rights VND48.5 trillion (US$2.07 billion), or 50.6% of the plan.

Data: GSO. Chart: Ngoc Mai.

Meanwhile, state budget expenditures as of April 15 totaled VND537.4 (US$23.03 billion), equivalent to 30.8% of the year's plan. Of the total, regular spending reached VND385 trillion (US$16.5 billion) or 36.4% of the plan. Capital expenditure reached VND103.8 trillion (US$4.44 billion) or 22.1%, and interest payment, VND45.6 trillion (US$1.95 billion) or 38.6%.

In a government meeting in early April, Minister of Finance Dinh Tien Dung said in case the pandemic ends within this quarter, the country's GDP growth would come in at 5.3% and if oil prices average at US$35 per barrel, the state budget may lose VND140 – 150 trillion (US$6 – 6.43 billion). The losses would be bigger if GDP grows by less than 5%.

Dung recommended government agencies, provinces and cities reduce recurrent expenditures, especially expenses related to meetings, conferences and working trips.

The Ministry of Finance estimated fiscal deficit could increase to 5 – 5.1% of GDP, significantly higher than the target of 3.4% (excluding debt principal repayments) set in December 2019.

Hanoi Times





NEWS SAME CATEGORY

Reference exchange rate down 10 VND on May 29

The State Bank of Vietnam set the daily reference exchange rate at 23,261 VND per USD on May 29, down 10 VND from the previous day.

VPBank confident of beating 2020 profit target

The Vietnam Prosperity Joint Stock Commercial Bank expects to beat the 2020 profit forecast despite the downturn caused by the COVID-19 outbreak, CEO Nguyen Duc...

Upcoming EVFTA to fortify lenders

European and Vietnamese banks alike could gain the upper hand down the road thanks to upcoming ratification of the historic trade deal between Vietnam and the EU.

Vietnam integrates enterprise tax declaration into National Public Service Portal

The General Department of Taxation on April 29 completed the upgrade of the electronic taxation application to integrate enterprise and individual tax declaration...

Vietnam parliament mulls over extending land lease exemption for farmers

The waived tax is estimated to reach US$326 million a year until 2025.

TPBank sees small profit gain, capital hike in 2020

Tien Phong Joint Stock Commercial Bank (TPBank) is targeting pre-tax profit growth of 5 per cent on-year to VND4.07 trillion (US$174.2 million) in 2020, lower than...

Vietnamese take increasingly to cashless payments

Non-cash payments have increased sharply, especially through mobile devices and the internet, according to the State Bank of Vietnam.

Protecting investors at head of consumer finance concern

With the rising market competition continuing to exert pressure on consumer finance’s profitability in Vietnam, industry insiders have urged local authorities to...

Vietnam gov't pushes for wider use of cashless payment

Cash has constituted 11.3% of total means of payment as of December 31, 2019.

Glimpse of the future: Cash going out of fashion

The number of mobile banking transactions tripled last year in Vietnam and their value increased by 210 percent.

Bank stocks

Insurance stocks


MOST READ


Back To Top