Foreign
investors are warning of a slump in foreign direct investment if Vietnam’s
policy-makers green-light a controversial rule.
The proposed regulation is part of a Ministry
of Planning and Investment’s (MPI) draft decree guiding the implementation of
the Investment Law. The draft decree would amend and supplement Decree
108/2006/ND-CP issued five years ago and might land on Prime Minister Nguyen
Tan Dung’s desk for approval next month.
Under the draft, investor equity must not be
lower than 30 per cent of the total investment capital of one project. If the
investor fails to meet this requirement, local authorities will not rubber stamp
his application for an investment certificate. The regulation arrives in the
wake of growing concern over bad debts made by foreign investors at local
banks. The latest case involves Taiwanese furniture maker Kenmark Investment
and Development Company in northern Hai Duong province, which said it was
having trouble repaying $50 million to three Vietnamese banks.
Do Nhat Hoang, director of MPI’s Foreign
Investment Agency, said the regulation would help ensure foreign investors
would bring full wallets to Vietnam rather than drawing on the funds of local
banks.
Last month, the MPI urgently asked local
authorities to send in reports on loans and bad debts of foreign investors at
local banks and the ministry plans to use these documents as grounds for approval
of the regulation.
Nguyen Thanh Ha, managing partner at BD
Lawyers and also a member of the bi-annual Vietnam Business Forum, said this
regulation would staunch foreign direct investment inflow into the country. “If
the investor is forced to take time to prepare enough equity, he may lose out
on a business opportunity,” said Ha. The regulation has also met with fierce
opposition from foreign investors. Shutoh Norita, chairman of Japanese Business
Association in Vietnam, said he felt upset about this new plan by policymakers.
But the policy is not actually new. The 30 per
cent legal capital regulation was applied for joint venture companies set up in
Vietnam from 1987 to 2005, prior to the introduction of the existing Investment
Law. “Now if Vietnam returns to the 30 per cent regulation, we will have to
recognise that the Vietnamese legal framework lacks consistency,” said Norita.
Meanwhile, Nguyen Mai, chairman of Vietnam
Association of Foreign Invested Enterprises, was against the regulation because
“it is against a market economy mechanism.” He blamed a failure on the part of
local banks for the rising bad debts of foreign investors in the country.
“Banks must be responsible for appraising
investment projects as well as financial ability of investors, not the
government,” Mai said.
Ngoc Linh | vir.com.vn
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