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Vietnam and the EU Mark One Year of the EU-Vietnam Free Trade Agreement

To mark the first anniversary of the implementation of the EU-Vietnam Free Trade Agreement (EVFTA), the European Chamber of Commerce hosted a webinar with more than 200 attendees and featuring special guest speakers from the Ministry of Industry and Trade (MOIT), the Vietnamese Embassy in the EU, and the EU Delegation to Vietnam.

 

This historic, new-generation free trade agreement was implemented on 1 August 2020. From the moment it entered into force, 65 per cent of EU exports to Vietnam and 71 per cent of Vietnamese exports to the EU became tariff-free. Over the next decade, this will rise to almost 99 per cent.

The webinar evaluated the first 12 months of implementation and discussed opportunities for further cooperation in the future. It heard from EuroCham Chairman Alain Cany; H.E. Mr Nguyen Van Thao, Ambassador and Chief of Mission of Vietnam to the EU; Dr Carsten Schittek, Charge d’affaires at the EU Delegation to Vietnam and Minister-Counsellor, Head of the Trade Section; and Mr. Luong Hoang Thai, Director General of MOIT’s Multilateral Trade Policy Department.

In the first six months of 2021, the value of the EU-Vietnam trade reached US$27 billion. That represents an increase of more than 18 per cent compared to the same period in 2020: a remarkable achievement in the midst of a global pandemic. And it should increase even further when the EU-Vietnam Investment Protection Agreement (EVIPA) enters into force, once it has been ratified in each EU Member State.

However, the EVFTA includes more than tariff reductions – essential though these are. It will also support Vietnam in areas such as environmental protection, legal reform, and sustainable development. Meanwhile, the agreement opens up market access for EU investment in other sectors and industries from higher education to computer services and from distribution to telecommunications.

Despite this progress, challenges still remain. While EuroCham’s Business Climate Index (BCI) shows that almost two-thirds of companies have benefitted from the EVFTA, it also shows that challenges such as administrative procedures and technical barriers to trade remain.

During the event, each of the four speakers reaffirmed the importance of the EVFTA and EVIPA to the future of EU-Vietnam trade and proposed greater cooperation and dialogue to ensure a smooth and successful implementation.


Source: EuroCham Vietnam





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