Local aviation transport will be knocked into shape if a
Ministry of Transport draft decree gets the government’s thumbs-up.
Late last month, the Ministry
of Transport (MoT) submitted to the government a draft decree to supersede
Decree 76/2007/ND-CP dated May 9, 2007 on aviation transport business and
general aviation operations.
The draft decree will directly
affect eight business entities licenced to operate aviation transport and
general aviation services and eight individual and corporate entities having
valid aviation operation certificates.
Of the draft’s 30 clauses
distributed in four parts what grabbed aviation businesses’ special attention
relates to regulations pertaining to capital conditions towards foreign-
invested air carriers which are left void in current aviation business.
Relative to this sensitive
issue, in the draft’s clause 11, the MoT presented the government two
scenarios. In the first scenario, foreign-invested air carriers must satisfy
the conditions that the holding of the foreign party must not exceed 49 per
cent of total chartered capital and that of a foreign individual or corporate
entity must not exceed 30 per cent and a local individual or corporate entity
must hold a leading stake in the chartered capital.
In the second scenario, foreign
invested air carriers must satisfy the conditions that the holding of the foreign
party must not exceed 30 per cent of total chartered capital and that of a
foreign individual or corporate entity must not exceed 20 per cent and a local
individual or corporate entity must hold a leading share in the chartered
capital.
The second scenario will help
minimise the practice that firms open air carriers just to sell stakes to get
marginal profits like in the case of Indochina Airlines and Trai Thien air
cargo, according to the MoT.
In respect to regulations on
giving a stock bonus or stock transfer to foreign investors under direct
investment model, the draft regulated that stock transfer or giving stock bonus
could only take place two years after the foreign-invested airlines come into
service and must abide to regulations in Clause 11.
“If foreign investors hold a
ruling stake, parallel to the state losing an effective control over the
airline this could trigger transfer pricing cases like in other different
fields,” said MoT Minister Dinh La Thang.
The MoT also suggested hiking
aviation transport firms’ legal capital to avoid risks. Accordingly, to jump
into aviation, airlines operating up to 10 aircraft must have at least VND700
billion ($33.3 million) legal capital against former level of VND500 billion
($23.8 million) if they want to fly outbound and having at least VND300 billion
($14.2 million) if they want to fly local routes against VND200 billion ($9.5
million), according to the draft.
Besides, the airlines must have
at least two aircraft for commercial aviation transport and general aviation
services and the number of leased aircraft including pilots must not exceed 30
per cent of their fleet by the end of the third operational year.
Besides stringent requirements,
the draft envisages easing firms’ burdens when giving birth to a new process
under which investors can draft plans to open airlines and seek licences
without the need to showing business registration certificates and put legal
capital at banks as currently the case.
Anh Minh | vir.com.vn
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