The Vietnamese Economy and Its Transformation to an Open Market System

The Vietnamese Economy and Its Transformation to an Open Market System
Author: William T. Alpert
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 232
Release: 2020-04-03
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9781317453970

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These previously unpublished papers by leading American and Vietnamese economists analyze the dramatic transformation of Vietnam's economy during the 1990s and its prospects for the future. The three main sections of the book discuss Vietnam's turbulent history, recent economic reforms, and the country's emerging role in the world economy and geopolitics. The contributors examine a myriad of issues, including specific reforms in agriculture, banking, and tax policy, as well as the attempts to create a business-oriented legal infrastructure, the development of foreign trade and a viable balance of payments, and U.S. policy reactions to Vietnam's rapid development in the last decade.

The Vietnamese Economy and Its Transformation to an Open Market System

The Vietnamese Economy and Its Transformation to an Open Market System
Author: William T. Alpert
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 135
Release: 2015
Genre: Vietnam
ISBN: 1317453964

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Vietnam the Incomplete Transformation

Vietnam  the Incomplete Transformation
Author: Peter Wolff
Publsiher: Psychology Press
Total Pages: 162
Release: 1999
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0714649317

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Peter Wolff analyzes the history and major economic features of the Vietnamese reforms since 1975. He focuses on the reform of enterprises and the financial sector and gives an overall picture of the reform efforts in the areas of rural development, the social sectors and environmental policy.

From Plan To Market

From Plan To Market
Author: Adam Fforde,Stefan De Vylder
Publsiher: Westview Press
Total Pages: 388
Release: 1996
Genre: History
ISBN: UOM:39076001771430

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This clear and accessible text explores Vietnam's successful transition from neo-Stalinist central planning to a market economy—“Vietnamese style.” After describing the north Vietnamese system prior to 1975 and its colonial and pre-colonial antecedents, the authors uncover the mechanisms of that changeover. They contend that the Vietnamese transition was largely bottom-up in character and that it evolved over a long enough period for the country's political economy to adjust. This explains in part the rapid shift to a high-growth, externally oriented development path in the early 1990s, despite the loss of Soviet aid and the lack of significant Western substitutes until 1992–1993. Based upon extensive in-country experience, a wealth of primary materials, and wide comparative knowledge of development issues, the book challenges many preconceived notions, both about Vietnam and about the general nature of transition processes.

The Political Economy of Vietnam s Industrial Transformation

The Political Economy of Vietnam   s Industrial Transformation
Author: John Walsh,Burkhard Schrage,Trung Quang Nguyen
Publsiher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 124
Release: 2021-03-01
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9789811601514

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This book presents an overview of political economic change in Vietnam during a period of significant social and economic change and an era of international turbulence. It combines various political economic perspectives to offer an integrated and comprehensive review of Vietnam’s recent development, discussing topics such as public administrative reform, labour markets and special economic zones, environmental management and other important contemporary issues. This concise and highly readable book includes a considerable amount of research, and as such provides valuable insights for scholars and researchers interested in political economic change and in Vietnam.

Skilling Up Vietnam

Skilling Up Vietnam
Author: Christian Bodewig,Reena Badiani-Magnusson,Kevin Macdonald,David Newhouse,Jan Rutkowski
Publsiher: World Bank Publications
Total Pages: 193
Release: 2014-07-02
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9781464802317

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The demand for workforce skills is changing in Vietnam’s dynamic economy. In addition to job-specific skills, Vietnamese employers value cognitive skills, like problem solving, and behavioral skills, like team work. This book presents an agenda of change for Vietnam’s education system to prepare workers to succeed in Vietnam’s modernizing economy.

Vietnam 2035

Vietnam 2035
Author: World Bank Group;Ministry of Planning and Investment of Vietnam
Publsiher: World Bank Publications
Total Pages: 406
Release: 2016-11-07
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9781464808258

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Thirty years of Ä?ổi Má»›i (economic renovation) reforms have catapulted Vietnam from the ranks of the world’s poorest countries to one of its great development success stories. Critical ingredients have been visionary leaders, a sense of shared societal purpose, and a focus on the future. Starting in the late 1980s, these elements were successfully fused with the embrace of markets and the global economy. Economic growth since then has been rapid, stable, and inclusive, translating into strong welfare gains for the vast majority of the population. But three decades of success from reforms raises expectations for the future, as aptly captured in the Vietnamese constitution, which sets the goal of “a prosperous people and a strong, democratic, equitable, and civilized country.†? There is a firm aspiration that by 2035, Vietnam will be a modern and industrialized nation moving toward becoming a prosperous, creative, equitable, and democratic society. The Vietnam 2035 report, a joint undertaking of the Government of Vietnam and the World Bank Group, seeks to better comprehend the challenges and opportunities that lie ahead. It shows that the country’s aspirations and the supporting policy and institutional agenda stand on three pillars: balancing economic prosperity with environmental sustainability; promoting equity and social inclusion to develop a harmonious middle- class society; and enhancing the capacity and accountability of the state to establish a rule of law state and a democratic society. Vietnam 2035 further argues that the rapid growth needed to achieve the bold aspirations will be sustained only if it stands on faster productivity growth and reflects the costs of environmental degradation. Productivity growth, in turn, will benefit from measures to enhance the competitiveness of domestic enterprises, scale up the benefits of urban agglomeration, and build national technological and innovative capacity. Maintaining the record on equity and social inclusion will require lifting marginalized groups and delivering services to an aging and urbanizing middle-class society. And to fulfill the country’s aspirations, the institutions of governance will need to become modern, transparent, and fully rooted in the rule of law.

Vietnam in the Global Economy

Vietnam in the Global Economy
Author: Thomas Jandl
Publsiher: Lexington Books
Total Pages: 316
Release: 2013-10-24
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9780739177877

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This book is, in essence, about incentives: the incentives for competing societal interest groups to cooperate with each other to benefit from a growing economic pie, rather than fighting over a bigger share of a smaller one. This is the conundrum of economic development. If elite interest groups have both incentive and ability to allocate resources toward themselves, and if such rent seeking causes a decline in economic inefficiency, how can economies ever grow? The book illuminates the mechanisms by which in one of the world’s recent economic success stories— Vietnam’s rapid industrialization and passage into the middle-income category—the interest in cooperating to grow the economy overrode the elites’ instinct to allocate resources through the use of political power. The book shows how the need to provide positive conditions for international investment altered pay-off structures and pushed the all-powerful Communist Party of Vietnam to engage in bargaining with provincial officials; provincial officials with international investors; and finally all coercive elites even with the working classes. It describes the emergence of a harmony of interest among societal groups in which each group benefits from a growing economy, and no one group can monopolize the benefits of growth without hurting itself. The Vietnam case validates Nobel-Prize winning economist Mancur Olson’s proposition that elite predation can only be kept in check when the elite itself suffers from the economic decline it causes at least as much as it gains from the rents it collects.