Vietnam Economy Moderates in Early 2023

Vietnam’s GDP growth rate moderated to a pace of 3.3% y/y in the
first quarter of 2023, after rapid GDP growth of 8.0% y/y in 2022.
Vietnam’s manufacturing export sector has faced increasing
headwinds due to slowing growth in the US and EU, which are two key
export markets accounting for over 40% of Vietnam’s goods exports.
Vietnam’s goods exports fell by 11.9% year-on-year in the first
quarter of 2023.

Vietnam is expected to resume rapid economic growth over the
medium-term economic outlook, as a key beneficiary of the shift in
global manufacturing supply chains towards competitive Southeast
Asian manufacturing hubs.

Vietnam’s GDP Growth Softens as Exports
Weaken

Vietnam’s real GDP grew by 8.0% in 2022, as the economy
rebounded strongly from the economic disruption caused by the
COVID-19 pandemic during second half of 2021. However economic
growth momentum has moderated to 3.3% y/y in the first quarter of
2023, reflecting the impact of weakening growth in industrial
production and exports.

Vietnam’s goods exports rose by 10.6% in 2022. However, the
economic slowdown in the US and EU, which together account for 42%
of Vietnam’s total goods exports, has resulted in a significant
weakening in exports during the first quarter of 2023, with goods
exports declining by 11.9% y/y.

The US remains Vietnam’s largest export market, accounting for
29.4% of total merchandise exports. Vietnam’s exports to the US
rose by 13.6% in 2022, with the bilateral trade surplus with US
increasing to USD 95 billion.

Vietnam’s industrial production rose by 7.8% y/y in 2022, with
manufacturing output up by 8.0% y/y. However, the manufacturing
sector has slowed in early 2023, with industrial production
declining by 6.3% y/y for the first two months of 2023.

The S&P Global Vietnam Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’
Index™ (PMI®) fell to 47.7 in March 2023, down from 51.2 in
February and below the 50.0 neutral mark for the fourth time in the
past five months. The March reading signaled contractionary
business conditions.

The March survey indicated a decline in both total new orders
and new export orders. The decline in overall new orders was the
fourth in the past five months, while new business from abroad
dipped for the first time in three months. In turn, backlogs of
work decreased at the fastest pace since last November. Matching
the weakening picture for new orders, manufacturing production also
dropped in March following a rise in February. The reduction was
only modest, however. Investment goods production increased, but
falls were seen in the consumer and intermediate goods
categories.

The March PMI survey also indicated that inflationary pressures
eased at the end of the first quarter of 2023. Although increased
supplier charges meant that input costs continued to rise, the rate
of inflation was the softest since last October, ending a spell of
accelerating cost inflation. With input prices rising at a slower
pace and firms keen to price competitively in order to stimulate
demand, output prices increased marginally in March.

The CPI inflation rate moderated to 3.4% y/y in March 2023,
compared with a rate of 4.3% y/y in February.

In response to rising inflation and the strengthening USD versus
the dong, Vietnam’s central bank, the State Bank of Vietnam (SBV),
raised its policy rate by 200bps in two 100bp steps during
September and October 2022. However, with Vietnam’s economy slowing
significantly in early 2023, the SBV has started easing monetary
policy. The SBV cut its policy rates by 100bps on March 15th and
again by 50bps on April 3rd as concerns have increased about the
impact of rising interest rates on the property sector, which has
faced rising liquidity pressures.

Medium term growth drivers

Over the medium-term outlook for the next five years, a number
of key drivers are expected to continue to make Vietnam one of the
fastest growing emerging markets in the Asian region.

Firstly, Vietnam will continue to benefit from its relatively
lower manufacturing wage costs relative to coastal Chinese
provinces, where manufacturing wages have been rising rapidly over
the past decade.

Secondly, Vietnam has a relatively large, well-educated labor
force compared to many other regional competitors in Southeast
Asia, making it an attractive hub for manufacturing production by
multinationals.

Third, rapid growth in capital expenditure is expected,
reflecting continued strong foreign direct investment by foreign
multinationals as well as domestic infrastructure spending. For
example, the Vietnamese government has estimated that USD 133
billion of new power infrastructure spending is required by 2030,
including USD 96 billion for power plants and USD 37 billion to
expand the power grid.

Fourth, Vietnam is benefiting from the fallout of the US-China
trade war, as higher US tariffs on a wide range of Chinese exports
have driven manufacturers to switch production of manufacturing
exports away from China towards alternative manufacturing hubs in
Asia.

Fifth, many multinationals have been diversifying their
manufacturing supply chains during the past decade to reduce
vulnerability to supply disruptions and geopolitical events. This
trend has been further reinforced by the COVID-19 pandemic, as
protracted disruptions created turmoil in global supply chains for
many industries, including autos and electronics. Supply chain
diversification has been further driven by renewed manufacturing
supply chain delays in China during 2022, due to COVID-19 related
disruptions to production and logistics in some Chinese cities.

For example, the Japanese government has introduced a subsidy
program in 2020 for Japanese companies to help reduce supply chain
vulnerability by relocating production out of China either back to
Japan or to certain other designated nations. Vietnam has been one
of the preferred destinations for Japanese firms choosing to shift
their production to the ASEAN region in the first round of subsidy
allocations announced by the Japanese government.

Free trade agreements

Vietnam is also set to benefit from its growing network of free
trade agreements. As a member of the ASEAN grouping of nations,
Vietnam already has benefited considerably from the ASEAN Free
Trade Agreement (AFTA), which has substantially removed tariffs on
trade between ASEAN member countries since 2010. ASEAN also has a
network of free trade agreements with other major Asia-Pacific
economies, most notably the China-ASEAN Free Trade Area which
entered into force in 2010. This network of free trade agreements
has helped to strengthen Vietnam’s competitiveness as a low-cost
manufacturing export hub.

Vietnam is also a member of the Comprehensive and Progressive
Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) among 11 Pacific
nations, including the G-20 economies of Canada, Mexico, Japan and
Australia. In March 2023, the UK Government substantially concluded
negotiations on the UK’s accession to the CPTPP. As the UK is the
world’s fifth largest economy, its accession would significantly
increase the overall economic size of the CPTPP grouping, providing
Vietnam with substantial competitive advantages for exporting to
the UK market as well as attracting UK foreign direct
investment.

A very important trade deal that took effect in 2020 is the
EU-Vietnam Free Trade Agreement (EVFTA). The EVFTA is an important
boost to Vietnam’s export sector, with 99% of bilateral tariffs
scheduled to be eliminated over the next seven years, as well as
significant reduction of non-tariff trade barriers. For Vietnam,
71% of duties were removed when the EVFTA took effect on 1st August
2020. The scope of the EVFTA is wide-ranging, including trade in
services, government procurement and investment flows. An
EU-Vietnam Investment Protection Agreement has also been signed
which will help to strengthen EU foreign direct investment into
Vietnam when it is implemented. In 2022, Vietnam’s exports to the
EU reached USD 56 billion, up 10.2% y/y.

Vietnam will also benefit from the Regional Comprehensive
Economic Partnership (RCEP) free trade agreement that was
implemented from 1st January 2022. The fifteen RCEP countries are
the ASEAN ten nations, plus China, Japan, South Korea, Australia
and New Zealand. Vietnam has already ratified the RCEP agreement
and will therefore benefit immediately from the date of RCEP
implementation. The RCEP agreement covers a wide range of areas,
including trade in goods and services, investment, e-commerce,
intellectual property and government procurement.

US bilateral trade frictions

The US deficit for trade in goods with Vietnam reached USD 55.8
billion in 2019, with the deficit widening by 41.2% compared to
2018. This was slightly mitigated by the USD 1.2 billion surplus in
favor of the US for trade in services, but still left the overall
bilateral trade deficit at USD 54.5 billion in 2019.

In 2020, the US trade deficit with Vietnam for trade in goods
further widened, reaching USD 69.7 billion, with the overall
bilateral trade deficit for goods and services at USD 68 billion.
In 2021, the bilateral deficit for trade in goods widened
considerably further, reaching USD 91 billion, boosted by Vietnam’s
growing exports of electronics and machinery to the US. Vietnam had
the third largest goods trade surplus with the US in 2021. By 2022,
the bilateral trade deficit for trade in goods had increased to USD
116 billion.

Reflecting the persistent large bilateral trade surplus that
Vietnam has with the US, the Office of the US Trade Representative
(USTR) announced on 2nd October 2020 that the US government has
launched an official investigation into acts, policies, and
practices by Vietnam that may contribute to the undervaluation of
its currency and the resultant harm caused to US commerce, under
section 301 of the 1974 Trade Act.

As part of its investigation on currency undervaluation, USTR
consults with the US Department of the Treasury as to issues of
currency valuation and exchange rate policy. The US Treasury has
informed the US Department of Commerce that Vietnam’s currency was
undervalued by 4.7% in 2019, partly due to intervention by the
Vietnamese government. In December 2020, the US Treasury named
Vietnam as a “currency manipulator”.

USTR also launched an investigation into Vietnam’s acts,
policies, and practices related to the import and use of timber
that is assessed to be illegally harvested or traded.

However, in its April 2021 semiannual Report on Macroeconomic
and Foreign Exchange Policies of Major Trading Partners of the
United States, the US Treasury determined that with reference to
the Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act of 1988, there was
insufficient evidence to make a finding that Vietnam manipulates
its exchange rate for either of the purposes referenced in the 1988
Act, and dropped its labelling of Vietnam as a “currency
manipulator”.

Nevertheless, consistent with the 1988 Act, the US Treasury
considers that its continued enhanced engagements with Vietnam, as
well as a more thorough assessment of developments in the global
economy as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, will enable the US
Treasury to better determine whether Vietnam intervened in currency
markets to prevent effective balance of payments adjustment or gain
an unfair competitive advantage in trade.

US government concerns about currency manipulation have been
further addressed following a bilateral agreement in July 2021
between the US and Vietnam whereby Vietnam has committed to refrain
from competitive devaluation of the dong. The agreement was
announced in a joint statement by US Treasury Secretary Janet
Yellen and State Bank of Vietnam Governor Nguyen Thi Hong. In its
December 2021 and June 2022 semiannual reports, the US Treasury
stated that it continues to engage closely with the State Bank of
Vietnam to monitor Vietnam’s progress in addressing the US
Treasury’s concerns and is thus far satisfied with progress made by
Vietnam.

Economic Outlook

Due to the severe economic impact of lockdowns triggered by the
COVID-19 Delta wave in mid-2021, the pace of Vietnam’s economic
growth moderated to 2.6% in 2021, compared with the 2.9% growth
rate recorded in 2020. There was a strong rebound in GDP growth
momentum in 2022, at a pace of 8.0 % y/y, as domestic demand and
manufacturing export production returned to more normal levels.

The economic outlook from 2023 to 2026 is for rapid economic
expansion, with GDP growth forecast to grow at a pace of around
6.5% in 2023, with sustained strong growth at a pace of around 6.7%
per year over 2024-2026. However, Vietnam’s economy faces near-term
risks from the slowdown in key export markets, notably the US and
the EU.

Over the medium-term economic outlook, a large number of
positive growth drivers are creating favorable tailwinds and will
continue to underpin the rapid growth of Vietnam’s economy. This is
expected to drive strong growth in Vietnam’s total GDP as well as
per capita GDP.

With strong economic expansion projected over the next decade,
Vietnam’s total GDP is forecast to increase from USD 327 billion in
2022 to USD 470 billion by 2025, rising to USD 760 billion by 2030.
This translates to very rapid growth in Vietnam’s per capita GDP,
from USD 3,330 per year in 2022 to USD 4,700 per year by 2025 and
USD 7,400 by 2030, resulting in substantial expansion in the size
of Vietnam’s domestic consumer market.

Vietnam’s role as a low-cost manufacturing hub is also expected
to continue to grow strongly, helped by the further expansion of
existing major industry sectors, notably textiles and electronics,
as well as the development of new industry sectors such as autos
and petrochemicals. Vietnam already has a domestic automaker of
electric vehicles, Vinfast, which launched its first EV in Vietnam
in 2021. In March 2022, Vinfast announced a USD 2 billion
investment to build an auto manufacturing plant in North Carolina,
for manufacturing EV buses and SUVs, as well as EV battery
manufacturing, with construction expected to commence in 2023.

For many multinationals worldwide, significant supply chain
vulnerabilities have been exposed by the protracted disruption of
industrial production in China as well as some other major global
manufacturing hubs during the COVID-19 lockdowns. This will drive
the further reshaping of manufacturing supply chains over the
medium term, as firms try to reduce their vulnerability to such
extreme supply chain disruptions. With US-China trade and
technology tensions still remaining high, this is likely to be a
further driver for reconfiguring of supply chains. A key
beneficiary of the shift in global manufacturing supply chains will
be the ASEAN region, with Vietnam expected to be one of the main
winners.

Rajiv Biswas, Asia Pacific Chief Economist, S&P
Global Market Intelligence

[email protected]

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Purchasing Managers’ Index™ (PMI™) data are compiled by IHS Markit for more than 40 economies worldwide. The monthly data are derived from surveys of senior executives at private sector companies, and are available only via subscription. The PMI dataset features a headline number, which indicates the overall health of an economy, and sub-indices, which provide insights into other key economic drivers such as GDP, inflation, exports, capacity utilization, employment and inventories. The PMI data are used by financial and corporate professionals to better understand where economies and markets are headed, and to uncover opportunities.

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