Redefining Vietnam’s growth model for the era of innovation

Jan 17th at 09:27
17-01-2026 09:27:58+07:00

Redefining Vietnam’s growth model for the era of innovation

Vietnam is moving to establish a new growth model centred on science, innovation and digital transformation, aiming to unlock double-digit growth and strengthen long-term competitiveness in a rapidly changing global environment.

At an international press conference on the 14th National Party Congress held on January 14, Nguyen Xuan Thang, Politburo member, director of the Ho Chi Minh National Academy of Politics, and chairman of the Central Theoretical Council, stated that Vietnam can no longer rely on growth driven by input-based resources or low-value comparative advantages such as cheap labour and land resources.

“The most fundamental drivers are science and technology, productivity, and the application of technology in new areas such as the digital economy, green economy and circular economy, allowing Vietnam to leapfrog as a latecomer into sectors like semiconductors, AI and cloud computing. We have even considered developing ultra-quantum technologies, rather than continuing along traditional paths,” he said.

To realise the goals of a new era, draft documents submitted to the 14th National Party Congress underscore the need for thinking across all areas of socioeconomic development, national defence, security, foreign affairs, Party building and the political system. A particularly critical focus is the establishment of a new growth model.

Redefining Vietnam’s growth model for the era of innovation and digital transformation (translated)

While earlier periods focused mainly on structural transformation and shifting growth from extensive to intensive modes, the draft documents for the 14th Party Congress elevate the issue to a higher level: creating an entirely new growth model capable of adapting to major global transformations and meeting the country’s development demands in the coming period.

Under this approach, the new growth model is built on clearly defined pillars in which science and technology, innovation, and digital transformation are identified as the primary drivers and the core of the country’s development strategy.

For the first time, the private sector is explicitly declared as one of the most important driving forces of the economy, alongside the development of suitable personnel and the effective leveraging of deep international integration.

To translate these objectives into reality, the draft documents clearly outline specific requirements and tasks.

Traditional growth drivers - land, natural resources, labour, exports, domestic markets and investment - together with total factor productivity (TFP), must be mobilised in a coordinated manner within a framework of innovation, industrialisation, modernisation and digital transformation.

A notable new element is the assessment that, based on current development conditions, Vietnam has sufficient room to target double-digit economic growth in the next term.

In light of the draft documents, achieving this ambition requires several key conditions. First, the investment-to-GDP ratio must exceed 40 per cent. Previously, Vietnam maintained an investment ratio of around 30-35 per cent of GDP, largely concentrated in traditional growth drivers.

The new model calls for scaling up effective investment, expanding green finance channels, technology bonds and innovation-oriented venture capital funds. Improving investment efficiency will require stricter project selection, greater automation and digitalisation in production processes, and rigorous project management.

Second, to sustain double-digit GDP growth, labour productivity must increase by approximately 8.5 per cent per year, a substantial leap from the current rate of 5-6 per cent.

This will require intensive training of digital engineers, research and development (R&D) specialists and high-tech project managers, as well as the establishment of strong linkages among research institutes, universities and enterprises to narrow skills gaps.

Third, TFP must contribute more than 5.6 percentage points to overall growth. As a measure reflecting the efficiency of capital and labour use and the impact of innovation, raising TFP necessitates building a robust innovation startup ecosystem, encouraging enterprises to invest in R&D, strengthening participation in global value chains and enhancing intellectual property protection.

Fourth, economic restructuring should focus on foundational and core industries, strategic sectors, green industries, high-tech agriculture, high-quality services and the digital economy.

From the design stage onward, each sector and project must meet low-emission standards and incorporate smart governance.

A supportive policy framework - encompassing R&D tax incentives, preferential credit, venture capital funds and administrative reforms to shorten licensing procedures - will serve as a critical catalyst for the successful implementation of the new growth model.

VIR

- 16:40 16/01/2026



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