Nationwide conference rolls out implementation of Party Congress resolution
VOV.VN - Vietnam’s Politburo and Party Secretariat on February 7 convened a nationwide conference to study, disseminate and implement the resolution adopted at the recent 14th National Congress of the Communist Party of Vietnam (CPV).
The conference was held in a hybrid format, connecting live from the National Assembly’s Dien Hong Hall in Hanoi to 31,097 locations nationwide, including central agencies, provinces and cities, communes, special administrative units, and Party organisations in the military, police and state-owned enterprises. More than 1.9 million delegates participated, according to organisers.
The event was broadcast live on Vietnam Television, Voice of Vietnam and multiple digital platforms.
Participants focused on the core content, key priorities and new points in the documents of the 14th Party Congress through 10 thematic reports. These reports covered issues including the main innovations and lessons from 40 years of Đổi mới (Renewal), the action programme to implement the Congress Resolution, Party building and enforcement of the Party Charter, and the review of the 10-year socio-economic development strategy for 2021–2030 and the plan for 2026–2030.
Other themes addressed national unity, new thinking on national defence and security, foreign policy development in a new era, the outline for reviewing 100 years of Party leadership (1930–2030) and orientations for the following century, as well as reforms in inspection and supervision to strengthen discipline.
On February 6, the Office of the Party Central Committee released the full set of documents of the 14th National Congress, including the Congress Resolution, the Political Report, the report reviewing 40 years of renovation, and the report summarising 15 years of implementation of the Party Charter.
According to the Resolution, Vietnam aims for average annual GDP growth of at least 10% during 2026–2030, with GDP per capita reaching about US$8,500 by 2030. Manufacturing and processing industries are targeted to account for around 28% of GDP, while the digital economy is expected to contribute about 30%.
The Resolution outlines a new growth model driven by science, technology, innovation and digital transformation, with an emphasis on developing the digital, green and circular economies. It also underscores building a revolutionary, regular, elite and modern people’s army and police force, and firmly safeguarding national independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity.
Vietnam reaffirmed its foreign policy of independence, self-reliance, multilateralism and diversification, while identifying institutional reforms, human resources development and infrastructure as its three strategic breakthroughs.