A
key piece of legislation is proving a major roadblock for high-tech investors
entering Vietnam.
The headache is caused by the Law on High
Technology taking effect in 2008, which sets out tough conditions for projects
hoping to be classified as high-tech projects and thus to receive special tax
incentives.
The biggest stumbling blocks for investors are
legal requirements, saying that high-tech projects spend at least 1 per cent of
their total annual turnover in the first three years of operation on research
and development (R&D) and more than this amount from the fourth year on.
Also causing problems is the requirement that the number of workers with university
or higher degrees personally involved in R&D activities must account for at
least 5 per cent of a project’s total workforce.
In addition, average turnover from high-tech
products in the first three years must equal at least 60 per cent of total annual
turnover of the firm. This figure lifts to at least 70 per cent from the fourth
year.
The hi-tech project must also apply
environmentally friendly and energy-saving solutions to production and product
quality management, thus meeting Vietnam’s standards or technical regulations.
In cases where Vietnam does not yet have standards or technical regulations,
the standards of international specialised organisations apply.
These tough conditions have seen even
well-known high-tech firms like Intel, Samsung and Nokia failing to meet
criteria under the Law on High Technology, despite having already been
recognised as high-tech enterprises after special approval from the prime
minister.
A senior Ministry of Planning and Investment
(MPI) official said the prime minister had agreed to recognise those firms as
high-tech ones in Vietnam because they “are well-known brands and will have a
positive impact” on Vietnam’s industrial development and foreign direct
investment attraction in hi-tech sectors.
Intel received an investment certificate in
Vietnam in 2006 to build a $1 billion chipset factory in Ho Chi Minh City.
However, it only started production in Vietnam in October 2010. Samsung started
production in Vietnam in October 2009, while Nokia is planning to manufacture
mobile-phones in Vietnam from 2013.
Nokia once stated it could move its
manufacturing project to China from Vietnam if it was not recognised as a
high-tech enterprise, said the MPI official.
Do Hoai Nam, director of the Ministry of
Science and Technology’s Department of Technology Appraisal, Examination and
Assessment, admitted that the criteria, especially regulations on expenditure
on R&D and percentage of labourers working in R&D activities was a
large barrier for foreign investors.
“As I understand it, most foreign
manufacturers in Vietnam meet the criteria of manufacturing high-tech products,
but don’t meet the criteria of being a high-tech enterprise,” said Nam.
According to Nam, enterprises which
manufacture hi-tech products enjoy highest incentives in land rentals and
import taxes while hi-tech enterprises are given with highest incentives in
corporate income tax, land rentals, value-added tax and import-export taxes.
“Actually, 1 per cent of total annual turnover
spent on R&D is a very large amount of money, especially for exporters.
Secondly, it is not easy to recruit university-qualified 5 per cent of total
labourers working in R&D activities in the context that Vietnam still lacks
a well-trained workforce,” Nam added.
Kim Yong Seok, planning director of Samsung
Electronics Vietnam, admitted 1 per cent of total revenue was a big amount of
money because the company’s revenue would increase year-by-year. South-Korean
Samsung is planning to build an R&D centre in Hanoi to develop new high-tech
products.
Last year, the revenue of Samsung’s factory in
northern Bac Ninh province was approximately $7 billion, according to a source
at Samsung Electronics Vietnam. That means Samsung would have had to spend
about $70 million on R&D in Vietnam last year to meet the regulations in
the Law on High Technology.
Samsung expects to achieve $16 billion in
export turnover in 2015. By that time, if Samsung wants to continue enjoying
the highest incentives, it must spend at least $160 million on R&D, or
$453,296 each day.
To make the matter worse, foreign investors
are increasingly investing in manufacturing facilities in Vietnam, and they are
still facing a serious shortage of well-trained workforce. Nam said the
high-tech criteria should timely be reconsidered because those did not
encourage high-tech firms to invest in the country.
Ngoc Linh | vir.com.vn
Business & Investment Opportunities
YourVietnamExpert is a division of Saigon Business Corporation Pte Ltd, Incorporated in Singapore since 1994. As Your Business Companion, we propose a range of services in Consulting, Investment and Management, focusing three main economic sectors: International PR; Healthcare & Wellness;and Tourism & Hospitality. We also propose Higher Education, as a bridge between educational structures and industries, by supporting international programs. Sign up with twitter to get news updates with @SaigonBusinessC. Thanks.
No comments:
Post a Comment