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Vietnam confident of hitting 6.7% goal

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Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc said he is confident economic growth this year will meet a government goal of 6.7 percent without adding to inflation, despite weak expansion last quarter.

Vietnam is taking steps to bolster the economy as the nation seeks to retain its status as one of the world’s fastest-growing economies, the premier said in an interview at the Government Office in Hanoi on May 27.

“Main economic indicators in May are all very good with a strong pickup in exports, foreign investment and agriculture production, laying ground for faster growth in the third and fourth quarters,” Phuc said in an interview with Bloomberg Television’s Haslinda Amin. The gross domestic product growth target “is difficult but it is possible,” he added.

The government must balance efforts to spur the economy with ensuring inflation doesn’t exceed its 2017 target of 4 percent, according to Phuc. “We must curb inflation at the mandate number as we have committed to the National Assembly,” he said.

Inflation eased to a nine-month low of 3.19 percent in May, the statistics office reported on Monday. Exports rose 17.4 percent in the first five months from a year earlier while pledged foreign direct investment increased 10.4 percent. 

The prime minister’s 2017 economic assessment is “realistic,” said Adam McCarty, chief economist with Mekong Economics in Hanoi. Foreign investment will remain strong and the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation meeting in Danang this November will put a positive spotlight on Vietnam, making it more attractive to potential foreign investors, he said.

Phuc said tourism is expected to grow 30 percent this year, agricultural exports will beat the $32 billion shipped last year, and electronics exports are going to surge”•counter forces to the economic headwinds the nation faced in the first quarter. Growth eased to 5.1 percent in the three-month period after Samsung Electronics Co. cut production, underscoring the nation’s reliance on exports.

The benchmark VN Index has risen 12.4 percent this year in Ho Chi Minh City, outpacing the 6.6 percent gain in the Bloomberg Asia Pacific Airlines Index.

Faulty Phone

“The first quarter growth slowed due to a few reasons. Firstly it’s because of a big drop in our crude oil” output, Phuc said. “The second reason is because of the electronics industry”•we suffered a loss of about $1 billion worth of exports from Galaxy Note 7” when Samsung recalled its faulty smartphone last year, he said.

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