As Vietnam's population moves to the cities, the poor struggle for the
most basic of human needs. Will they be left behind?
Vietnam has the highest
urbanization rate in Southeast Asia. Just a decade ago, only 24% of its
population lived in cities, with 65% of the labor force employed in rural
agriculture. Today, already more than 30 million people live in urban areas,
accounting for approximately 34% of Vietnam’s total population.
The country is witnessing a rapid
proliferation of urban areas, with the number of towns or cities at 755 and
rising. Planners
estimate that Vietnam’s cities will be home to more than 46 million
people by the year 2020. The largest of these cities, Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh
City, are the growth engines of the country, supported by a relatively low
urban unemployment rate of 4.6%.
With its newly attained status as
a middle income country and its ambitions to achieve higher levels of human
development, Vietnam needs to address challenges in basic social service
provisions for both rural and urban populations. In particular, Vietnam will
have to cope with rural-urban migration, a global megatrend that will continue
to trouble city planners for the foreseeable future.
Many poor rural Vietnamese will
try their luck in the thriving urban centers, perceiving them to be full of job
opportunities for both skilled and unskilled workers. Urban planners need to
find a way to accommodate this influx of migrants and account for the fact that
most of them are ill-equipped to participate in the urban economy.
The latest infographic (see
below) from the Asian
Trends Monitoring (ATM) team tells a story about Hanoi, the capital of
Vietnam, and how it fares in its struggle to provide basic services for its people.
The numbers and information in the infographic are a combination of secondary
data from the World Bank, primary data from the ATM poverty profile survey, as
well as information from interviews ATM conducted in the field in September
2012.
This infographic highlights the
emerging issues that Hanoi’s poor must contend with. Although Vietnam’s GDP is
growing and income levels among the poor are rising, it does not necessarily
translate into improved access to services. There are several limitations to the
government’s service provision capacity, which leads to things like a strict
“poor list” of eligible households.
The services available to Hanoi’s
poor are extremely limited and often inaccessible to those most in need.
Migrants and seasonal workers, often among the city’s poorest residents, are by
default not eligible for the poor list because they are not official Hanoi
residents. Furthermore, they are unable to access decent housing and financial
services.
As most of Hanoi’s poor are
self-employed in the informal sector, they often require loans for working
capital and consumption. Unfortunately, microfinance services in urban areas
are rarely available. The survey data confirms the lack of choice when Hanoi’s
poor are in need of credit. The overwhelming majority of respondents, 73.9%,
take private loans from relatives or friends. Even the services of informal
money lenders, often the next most popular alternative when the formal
financial system is inaccessible (compare with ATM
Bulletin 17 “Manila’s Poor”), are only used by 7.8% of these individuals.
The poor are also deprived when
it comes to health services. If they are unable to afford health insurance at
market rates, they are forced to pay out-of-pocket for every treatment. An
ongoing commercialization of health services has further worsened the gap
between the affluent and the poor. The UNDP
Human Development Report notes that attempts to ensure sustainable
social service funding have led “to the increasing commercialization of public
social services, and over-reliance on user fees by service delivery
organizations.”
More than 50% of respondents have
difficulties in paying for health treatments. As a result, many choose to
self-medicate or leave their ailments untreated. Moreover, over a third (36%)
of those who make use of locally available clinics are dissatisfied with the
service quality.
As we explain in our new report, ATM
Bulletin 18 “Empowering Hanoi’s Poor”, there are a number of viable
strategies to narrow the service gap and reduce urban poverty in Vietnam’s
capital. These include a stronger focus on building social enterprises– for
example, in the service and tourism sector– as well as comprehensive access to
financial services for micro-entrepreneurs through affordable
microfinance.
Both of these strategies focus on
empowerment rather than direct provision of services. Although building clinics
and schools for the poor can be effective at times, microfinance institutions
provide the poor with the capital they need to start and grow their own
businesses. Secondly, these approaches are also more financially sustainable
because they are run on a for-profit basis and allow the organizations to
expand their services both in reach and in duration.
The resulting improvements in
household income will, in the long run, enable the beneficiaries to access and
pay for existing services, without depending on handouts from the government.
Taufik Indrakesuma & Johannes
Loh
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 Strategy, Investment and Management, focusing Healthcare and Life Science with expertise in ASEAN. Since we are currently changing the platform of www.yourvietnamexpert.com, you may contact us at: sbc.pte@gmail.com, provisionally. Many thanks.
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