VN aims for 100,000 digital technology companies by 2030
VN aims for 100,000 digital technology companies by 2030
Viet Nam hopes to develop 100,000 digital technology companies by 2030 which will contribute 20 per cent to the country’s gross domestic product (GDP).
This was a highlight of the draft national strategy for developing Vietnamese digital technology companies which the Ministry of Information and Communications recently made public for comments.
Digital technology companies are expected to play an important role in making Viet Nam a developed and industrialised country with rapid, sustainable and inclusive economic development as well as turning Viet Nam into a high-income country by 2045.
The Vietnamese Government estimated Viet Nam would need at least 100,000 digital technology companies to develop a digital economy, smart urban areas, e-Government and promote the application of digital technology advancements in socio-economic fields as well as accelerate national digital transformation.
Under the draft strategy, Viet Nam will focus on developing four types of digital technology companies, namely those developing core technologies, developing digital technology products, providing digital technology solutions and digital-technology start-ups.
By 2025, Viet Nam hopes to have 70,000 digital technology companies with a workforce of 1.2 million. Digital technology companies are expected to have revenue growth 1.5-2 times higher than the country’s GDP expansion rate and export growth at 10-20 per cent per year.
Digital companies are expected to contribute 10 per cent of GDP and to bring Viet Nam into the top three countries in ASEAN and the top 70 in the world for technology and innovation ranking.
The draft strategy aims for the country to have 100,000 digital technology companies by 2030 with a workforce of 1.5 million. Digital companies would contribute 20 per cent of GDP and Viet Nam would be one of the top two countries in ASEAN and the top 50 in the world in technology and innovation ranking.
According to the Ministry of Information and Communications, about 43,000 enterprises currently operate in the information and technology sector together with 17,000 others doing business in distributing and providing IT products and solutions.
The ministry said hitting 100,000 digital technology companies would be challenging, given the country's heavy dependence for core technology on foreign countries, the low added value of IT products and limited innovation capacity and competitiveness, together with increasing competition from international IT companies.
Viet Nam’s competitive advantage of cheap labour was being undermined by breakthroughs in new technologies, the ministry said.
It was critical to develop a national strategy for digital technology, stressed the ministry.
The ministry said the first solution would be improving the legal framework to create a favourable environment for digital technology companies.
The country will also focus on strengthening research and development capacity, developing a robust market for digital technology companies, building a data industry and digital technology ecosystem. Developing human resources in digital technology was also important.
The draft also said the Government’s digital technology projects would aim to create a spillover effect.