NA query SOE sector involvement

November 24, 2014 | 14:52
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A regulation on the state investment scope in enterprises in the draft Law on Management and Use of State Capital Invested in Production and Business has come under fire from many National Assembly members.


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Article 10 of the draft currently discussed by the National Assembly explains that state capital shall be used for establishing enterprises providing essential products and services, operating in industries in service of national defence and security, operating in state monopolies, and enterprises with high technology and large-scale investment that can serve as an impetus for other sectors to develop.

However, many National Assembly deputies have expressed doubts, saying the proposal was so broad it would continue to allow the state and state-owned enterprises (SOEs) to do business in a huge variety of sectors, particularly when many SOEs were operating inefficiently.

Deputy Tran Ngoc Vinh from Haiphong city said the scope for state investment in Article 10 was “too broad”. It was also difficult to define the list of sectors in need of large-scale investment, and serving as a propellant for other sectors to develop. “Therefore it is vital to clarify the sectors that will wholly need state capital, the sectors that will partly need state capital, and the sectors that will need no investment from the state.”

“No government in the world like Vietnam wants to pour money into business, except for into key sectors,” said deputy Ngo Van Minh representing Quang Nam province. “Vietnam’s government should not invest for profit. I strongly recommend that the National Assembly reconsider this regulation.”

“What are essential products and services? I think it is necessary to have thorough quantitative analysis about these sectors, so that the state will not be able to use the term ‘essential’ as a pretext for all products and services, in order to hold a monopoly,” echoed deputy Do Van Duong from Ho Chi Minh City.

Currently SOEs operate in almost all economic sectors and monopolise production of the economy’s key products, with telecommunications (91 per cent), insurance (88 per cent), fertilizer (99 per cent), coal (97 per cent), gas and electricity (94 per cent).

“The state should focus its investment in national security and defence, not necessarily in essential and high-technology sectors which are currently done very well by local and foreign private enterprises,” said deputy Ha Sy Dong from Quang Tri province.

The regulation was actually discussed in May this year by the National Assembly, but almost nothing has been revised since then. At that time, the National Assembly’s Chairman Nguyen Sinh Hung stressed that the regulation would continue discouraging private enterprises from engaging in sectors currently dominated by the state and SOEs.

“Everything can be defined as being essential to society, from clothes, machinery, cement, steel, transport to education and health care. If this regulation is applied, the state may continue controlling these sectors that private enterprises want to engage in, and this is during a period when we are boosting SOE equitisation,” he stressed. “I highly recommend that the regulation be reconsidered.”

By By Thanh Dat

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