In this photo taken April 10, 2011 photo, a boat passes by the abandoned Van Phong port in southern Vietnam. All that remains of a plan by Vietnam to build a major deep water port is 114 exposed pilings trailing into the South China Sea and a barge full of rusty machinery. Foreign investors stayed away from the $3.6 billion project and the indebted state-owned company overseeing it bungled the job. Earlier this month, Sept., 2012, the government accused the company of "financial incompetence" and suspended the project. The prospects for ever reviving it are dim. (AP Photo/TuoI Tre Newspaper, Van Ky) VIETNAM OUT
HANOI,
Vietnam - All that remain of Vietnam's plan to build a major deep-water
port are 114 exposed pilings trailing into the South China Sea and a
barge full of rusty machinery.
Foreign
investors stayed away from the $3.6 billion project and the indebted
state-owned company overseeing it bungled the job. The government
accused the company of "financial incompetence" and suspended the
project this month. The prospects for ever reviving it are dim.
The
abandoned port in southern Vietnam stands as a symbol of the
inefficiency of the country's Communist rulers and the need to reform a
massive web of state-owned enterprises weighing down a once-booming
economy.
Critics say it also
shows how provincial governments and state-owned companies are allowed
to pursue expensive, misguided and often corruption-laced
infrastructure projects that result in riches for the few, but not
economic growth that would benefit the country of 87 million people.
The
government is asking foreign and domestic investors to bankroll its
flagship Van Phong port now that the Vietnam National Shipping Lines,
or Vinalines, is out of the picture. But analysts say that's unlikely
because the project, which was slated to have 37 wharves, isn't near
any important manufacturing bases in the region and was impractical
from the start.
A better
option, they said, would be developing road and rail around ports in
greater Ho Chi Minh City and also developing a deep-water port near the
northern city of Hai Phong. A proposed large port near Hai Phong has
spurred controversy lately over escalating costs and potential dredging
problems.
Vu Tu Thanh, Vietnam
representative for the Washington-based US-ASEAN Business Council, said
Vietnam has lost the reputation it enjoyed a few years ago for being
among the most attractive destinations for investment in Asia. Would-be
investors, he said, want the government to push through large-scale
economic reforms that will weed out the most inefficient state
businesses.
"There's nothing
inherently wrong about having state-owned enterprises involved in big,
capital-intensive projects like ports," said Thanh, whose advocacy
group represents American companies in Southeast Asia. "The problem is:
Do you have the right SOE there?"
"The typical answer in Vietnam is: You don't."
Vietnam
has a coastline of 3,200 kilometres (1,988 miles) — longer than
American's west coast — and a prime location on the South China Sea,
which includes some of the world's biggest shipping channels. But its
lack of connected infrastructure puts its ports at a competitive
disadvantage compared with long-established global trade hubs such as
Singapore, Shanghai and Hong Kong.
As
a result, manufacturers here are often forced to first send containers
to those larger ports from where they are then shipped to Europe and
North America.
Businessmen and
observers say the port sector is a good example of how political
patronage and entrenched corruption are undermining the country's
development.
Vietnam has about
three dozen seaports and several high-quality terminals that welcome
international shipping lines, but no major port with swift connections
to efficient roads and rail.
"All
the coastal provinces want a deep-sea port," said Nguyen Xuan Thanh,
director of public policy programs at the U.S.-funded Fulbright
Economics Teaching Program in Ho Chi Minh City. "The central government
needs political support from these provinces, so they don't say no to
these proposals."
"Everybody wants a piece of the action," he said.
In
2010, state-owned ship builder Vinashin came close to collapse with
debts of $4.5 billion, leading to a sovereign credit rating downgrade
and sounding the alarm on a major pressure point in Vietnam's economy.
Last month, police arrested two former senior executives at one of the
country's largest banks. The banking industry has run up massive bad
debts in recent years, many of them made to state-owned companies.
Vinalines
has also come under scrutiny. In March, police arrested several of its
executives and accused them of mismanagement in the purchase of a
floating dock that resulted in losses of about $5 million. In May,
government inspectors issued a report saying the company had five
defaulted loans worth $1.1 billion and had bought 73 foreign vessels,
many of which had run up millions of dollars in losses. Earlier this
month, Vinalines' former head, Duong Chi Dung, was arrested in a
neighbouring country after an international manhunt.
The
problems at the banks and the state-owned enterprises have played a
major role in Vietnam's economy slowing from 7 per cent growth in 2010
to just over 4 per cent in the first half of this year. Foreign
investment is also down amid inflation and the inability of the country
to build the roads, electrical grid and bridges businesses need to
prosper.
"It's very important
that the government continues to put infrastructure very high on the
agenda," said Peter Smidt-Nielsen, general director for Vietnam and
Cambodia at global shipping company Maersk Line.
"If
you have growing trade and you don't do anything about the
infrastructure, you'll have more and more delays and congestion, and
that all leads to added costs for exporters and importers," he said.
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