Thứ Hai, 27 tháng 7, 2015

Actively preparing to join the ASEAN Economic Community


 Deputy Minister of Industry and Trade Nguyen Cam Tu
Deputy Minister of Industry and Trade Nguyen Cam Tu

NDO - Nhan Dan reporter Phan Hoang held a talk with Deputy Minister of Industry and Trade and General Secretary of the National Committee for International Economic Co-operation, Nguyen Cam Tu, on Vietnam's preparations for the upcoming establishment of the ASEAN Economic Community (AEC) in late 2015.
Q: The AEC, which will be formed at the end of 2015, is considered a historic milestone in ASEAN regional integration, lifting the region's economic connectivity to a new height. Can you please discuss how Vietnam is preparing for this significant turning-point?
A: Vietnam has prepared policies, mechanism, and a legal and technical framework in preparation for the establishment of the AEC in late 2015.
After the ASEAN Charter came into effect in 2009, the Vietnamese government signed Decision No.142/QĐ-TTg stipulating working regulations and co-ordination between Vietnamese agencies participating in ASEAN. Under the decision, the Ministry of Industry and Trade (MOIT) was assigned as the leading agency in co-ordinating Vietnam's activities in the ASEAN economic pillars and the AEC Council. Other Vietnamese ministries and sectors are actively co-ordinating with the MOIT to implement AEC contents and other ASEAN co-operation agreements.
Vietnam has been an earnest member in implementing AEC commitments since 2008, having completed 85%-95% of commitments, and sits with Singapore and Malaysia as the countries with the highest completion rates.
Remaining measures that Vietnam and other ASEAN countries need to fulfil are mainly related to trade facilitation, services, investment and transport. Vietnam and ASEAN member countries are in the process of building a post-2015 AEC Vision which requires a specific strategy to address the issues mentioned above.
Q: The AEC will not only open the goods and services market, but also the labour market, attracting much attention from the public. Labour agreements under the AEC commitments will affect the employment of Vietnamese workers. Could you please share your views on how the AEC will affect the labour market?
A: Like trade liberalisation, the gradual opening of the labour market will help ASEAN countries to better utilise their human resources. Vietnamese workers will have more opportunities to find jobs abroad. At the same time, Vietnam's labour market will also be open to foreign workers to supplement areas facing labour shortages.
In the framework of ASEAN free trade agreements, the transfer of labour between member countries will be governed by commitments to open service sectors and mutual recognition agreements. Such agreements will create more favourable conditions for skilled workers to work in the region. I emphasised that commitments within the AEC framework will impact the movement of skilled workers rather than unskilled workers.
As we lack skilled workers in many sectors, an open ASEAN labour market will help us address the problem thanks to labour forces from neighbouring countries, supporting industrialisation and modernisation.
In addition, opening the ASEAN labour market will facilitate the mobility of workers amongst ASEAN member countries. However, the mobility is not free and without regulations. Each nation, through its specialised management agencies and professional associations, will have appropriate measures to manage the labour force and direct it in line with the country’s development targets.
For the long term, the government has sought synchoronised solutions on improving the quality of the country’s labour force. The labour force should improve professional capacity, foreign language skills, life skills and health. These issues are being studied as part of the government’s renewal of education and vocational training.
Q: The AEC’s establishment will bring both opportunities and challenges to businesses. What solutions does the Government have to support them?
A: Businesses are both objects and subjects in international and AEC integration. The Community’s success in Vietnam depends on how businesses take advantage of opportunities brought by the process.
To help local production sectors with poor competitiveness have more time to prepare, the MIT is working with relevant ministries and agencies to negotiate consistently and explain Vietnam’s situation to ASEAN member countries to obtain flexibility for Vietnam in implementing open-door commitments on several sensitive products, together with extended deadlines, 2018 instead of 2015, to implement the commitments for more developed member countries.
To help businesses understand the situation of negotiations and open-door commitments, relevant agencies are regularly consulting and communicating through various means on the commitments’ contents.
Trade facilitation is considered a key solution to improve businesses’ competitiveness and help them take advantage of opportunities brought by the AEC. As tariff and non-tariff barriers are lifted, innovation and modernisation of procedures related to import and export are significant in helping businesses cut cost and time, contributing to improving their competitiveness in the region. In that spirit, the Government has asked the General Department of Customs (GDC) to work with relevant agencies and ministries to implement the ‘national one-stop shop’ to digitalise import and export procedures of ministries and agencies, and connect them to the GDC’s hub. ASEAN member countries will link the national one-stop shops together to form an ASEAN one-door mechanism. The mechanism’s implementation is a breakthrough in the country’s administrative reform process, significant to both ASEAN and international economic integration for Vietnam.
The AEC follows the ASEAN Free Trade Agreement (AFTA) and will facilitate ASEAN regional connectivity to continue to develop at higher levels. Opportunities and challenges brought by the process have generally been addressed. Vietnamese businesses have become familiar with the regional economic environment during nearly two decades of AFTA implementation. I believe that with the national tradition of creativity and resilience to overcome difficulties, Vietnamese businesses will make appropriate preparations and continue to achieve further success in regional co-operation.
Nhandan

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