Vietnamese corporates in new era: The reborn dragon
Vietnamese businesses have had a long journey with great achievements, and this path will continue and blossom in years to come.
Vietnamese businesses have had a long journey with great achievements, and this path will continue and blossom in years to come.
A prominent issue for many Vietnamese businesses concerns the proposed narrowing of the 0 per cent VAT rate for export services.
While the core principle of OKRs (objectives and key results) is "shared goals lead people", in many Vietnamese businesses, OKRs remain "managers lead people". This indicates that goal management in Vietnam is highly subject to cultural factors and intuitive judgements.
Vietnamese businesses has prepared for Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) implementation very early, even before when the Law on Environmental Protection 2020 was approved.
EZLand hopes to help clear the path and inspire fellow Vietnamese businesses to rethink their responsibility to the environment and society.
If Vietnamese businesses know how to seize the opportunity from EVIPA and EVFTA they will succeed in investment cooperation with EU investors.
Resilient regional trade, domestic economic performance and strong FDI inflows fuel Vietnamese businesses' optimism.
Even China awaits after the US elections to devise appropriate strategy so Vietnam must wait for response accordingly.
The current situation makes Vietnamese businesses understand that innovation is pivotal, which is a positive signal of the economic transformation in the country.
Re-skill the labour force, strengthen digital connectivity and boost cooperation between public and private sector are the way forward for Vietnamese businesses to promote sustainable growth in 4.0 industrial revolution, according to Dinh Thi Quynh Van, General Director of PwC Vietnam.
Eight leading multinational enterprises including Bosch, Canon, Datalogic, Denso, Ford, General Electric, Panasonic, and Toyota have joined a program supporting 45 Vietnamese businesses to get the chance of becoming their suppliers.
Being a billionaire by owning billions of dollar of assets, many Vietnamese businesses use these assets to secure their loans or related companies at banks.
The amount of interest and fees that Vietnamese businesses have to pay in this year is about US$1.56 billion.
During a visit and seeking bilateral investment cooperation opportunities, at a meeting between representatives of more than 150 South Korean and Vietnamese businesses taking place in early June, Choi Moon Soon, Governor of Gangwon Province and also head of Korean business delegation have shared with the Investment & Brand many interesting information.