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India jumps on TPP bandwagon in Vietnam

India jumps on TPP bandwagon in Vietnam

Tuesday, July 21, 2015, 19:01 GMT+7

That the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) trade agreement, of which Vietnam is a member, will come to a conclusion late this year has turned the Southeast Asian country into a so popular destination for investment for export.

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The TPP is a proposed regional free trade agreement aimed at eliminating tariffs and lowering non-tariff barriers that is being negotiated by 12 countries throughout the Asia-Pacific region, which collectively contribute almost half of global output and over 40 percent of world trade.

The 12 countries are Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, the United States and Vietnam.

Many other countries outside of the TPP have already poured billions into the group to grasp the chances for exporting to the remaining eleven members, especially the U.S., which almost every country in the world wants to sell their goods to.

India is the latest to signal that it will take seriously the opportunities to invest in Vietnam for export to the other TPP member countries.

The Indian government last week launched a preferential credit package worth US$300 million for investments in the garment and textile sector of Vietnam over ten years, according to the Vietnam Textile and Apparel Association (VITAS).

Accordingly, India will support investment projects in the garment and textile sector using Indian-made equipment and service up to 75 percent of the total funding estimated for a single project.

The entire credit package, with an interest rate of two percent per annum for a 10-year term, is conducted through Vietnamese Eximbank under the guarantee of the Ministry of Finance, the VITAS said.

The package will help Indian businesses develop new factories in Vietnam, as well as promote cooperation between Vietnamese and Indian partners in the same field.

This is also an opportunity for businesses to gain more advantages after Vietnam joins the TPP trade pact, the VITAS said, citing a document from the Indian government. With the huge credit support from the Indian government, Vietnamese textile enterprises will have a golden opportunity to access Indian capital and technology, the association commented.

India is the world's second largest supplier of garment and textile materials, second only to China, so the credit package also means guaranteed supply for Vietnamese enterprises, according to the VITAS.

The Indian garment and textile industry earns $100 billion annually, of which exports, mainly cotton, silk, cloth and cotton cellulose, account for $40 billion

The Consul General of India in Ho Chi Minh City last week also recommended that Indian enterprises, apart from expanding trade with Vietnam, should invest in the Southeast Asian country to make use of future trade agreements.

Vietnam will soon sign many large-scale free trade pacts with important partners like the EU and the U.S., which will make the country more attractive as a destination for investment to serve ASEAN and other big foreign markets, Smita Pant, Consul General of India, said at a trade promotion and investment event held in the city on July 14.

In April, Vinod K. Ladia, chairman of the Synthetic and Rayon Textiles Export Promotion Council of India, said India is planning to establish a $300 million industrial park specializing in garment and textile material production near the southern Vietnamese economic hub of Ho Chi Minh City.

"It is important for Indian companies to take the initiative on the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal, which will offer a boost to the Vietnamese garment and textile industry,” Ladia said.

Attraction of foreign direct investment (FDI) in the first half of 2015 dropped sharply by nearly 20 percent year on year, but FDI inflows to the garment and textile industry saw a spike, with $1.12 billion out of the total new and expanded capital worth $5.85 billion, according to the Vietnamese Ministry of Planning and Investment.

The newly registered FDI projects in the garment and textile industry included the $660 million Hyosung fiber processing project of a Turkish investor in the southern province of Dong Nai, the largest-ever of its kind in Vietnam.

In addition, there was the $300 million Worldon garment plant of British investors in Ho Chi Minh City and the $160 million Lu Thai fiber plant of an investor from Hong Kong in neighboring Tay Ninh Province.

In late June, Binh Duong Province licensed a $274 million project by Far Eastern Polytex Ltd Vietnam to build a factory producing fibers, knitted fibers and synthetic fibers.

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Thoai Tran/Tuoi Tre News

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