HCM City: Industry expands, targeting 7% growth
Ho Chi Minh City’s industrial development index in 2015 saw higher growth than in previous years, especially by four key industries, with the ratio of the processing and manufacturing sectors increasing and the labour-intensive and polluting industries decreasing.
The processing and manufacturing sectors grew 8%, spearheading the rise in the index.
It enabled the creation of 2% more new jobs compared with 2014.
The number of new businesses rose by 29% while closures fell by 3.9%.
In 2015, the share of the city's four key industries in overall manufacturing output increased marginally to 60%.
Electronics and IT accounted for just 4.1% of the production but grew by a high 11%.
Chemicals, rubber and plastics changed its development trend by becoming more environment-friendly. The industry accounted for 18.6% of manufacturing output and grew by 1.9%. Products like automobile and motorbike tyres and tubes were exported to many foreign markets.
The food and beverages industry, the last of the four, focused on quality as it accounted for nearly 17% of total industrial value and achieved growth of 11.1%.
Two other strong, traditional industries, footwear and textile and garments, each continued to account for 17.7% of manufacturing value. The former grew by 4.6% and the latter by 8.2%.
The department also pointed out many shortcomings faced by the manufacturing sector.
"Industrial production growth is below potential," a department spokesperson was quoted as saying by ThoibaoKinhte Viet Nam (Viet Nam Economic Times) newspaper.
The quality, efficiency, and competitiveness of the industrial sector improved, but not strongly enough, he said. It was changing rapidly towards the right mix, but value-addition and the ratio of processing, which is not labour-intensive or polluting, remain low, he admitted.
This year the city again targets 7% growth overall for industry, and 7.2% for the four key industries, he said.
To achieve the targets, the department would continue support efforts to reduce the ratio of labour-intensive and polluting industries and promote knowledge-based, high-tech, energy-saving and environment-friendly industries, he said.
The four key industries and supporting industries would get assistance in terms of funding and training human resources.