Posted on 10 Jun 2008
The economy widely hailed last year as
Credit rating agencies Standard & Poor’s, Fitch and
Moody’s and several investment banks have revised downward their outlooks for
Aseambankers Research said “the worst-case scenario would be
for
Analyst Adam Le Mesurier wrote for consultancy DSG
Many investors and donors in
“It’s too easy to get excited and claim that
“But I’m not sure it’s very wise and very balanced...
Nonetheless, the turnaround in investor perception has been
stunning.
Domestic investors gambled on a sky-rocketing stock
exchange, the government went on a spending spree, and banks lent freely,
fuelling rapid credit growth.
The wheels started to come off about half a year ago, when
inflation hit double digits as the economy tried to digest US$6 billion in
foreign direct investment (FDI) disbursed last year, or 8.4 percent of GDP.
Since the start of the year prices have galloped, driven by
global food and energy costs, to 25 percent year-on-year inflation in May.
Wage demands sparked 300 labor strikes in the first quarter
alone.
“The wage-price spiral that appears to be beginning, if it
becomes embedded, could make matters much worse,” said an HSBC report that
predicted a rise to 30 percent inflation amid hoarding of commodities.
Another alarm bell sounded when surging imports drove the
trade deficit to $14.4 billion in May, compared to $12 billion for all of 2007.
The stock market has tumbled amid tighter credit and falling
investor confidence, turning from the world’s best to worst performing bourse.
Last week it crashed below 400 points, from its high of over
1,100 in March 2007.
Many investors have bought gold or offloaded their
value-losing dong for greenbacks, briefly sending the black market rate in
Standard Chartered Bank said recently that the “Vietnamese
dong has come under downward pressure, and such pressure is likely to persist
until solid improvement is seen in the trade balance.”
Some observers now fear a banking crisis amid tighter
liquidity, depositor-flight and non-performing loans.
“Urgent action is required in the financial sector,” said
Michael Pease, chairman of the Vietnam Business Forum.
“Vulnerability of some financial institutions threatens not
just the domestic financial sector but also the confidence of foreign
investors.”
The government – which has adopted a fight-inflation-first
strategy and pledged other economic fixes – has lowered its 2008 economic
growth target to 7 percent from last year’s blistering 8.5 percent.
IMF country chief Benedict Bingham has suggested
While Bingham said the IMF was “encouraged” by government
plans to fix the economy, he called for “a concrete and convincing policy
package that will bolster investor confidence and restore macroeconomic
stability.”