Foreign direct investment in HCMC drops 65%

July 26, 2016 - 11:00

Foreign direct investment (FDI) registered in HCM City has decreased by 65 per cent year-on-year, according to the municipal Statistics Office.

Electronics products manufactured at Japan-invested Mtex Vietnam in HCM City. The southern city attracted only US$863.6 million in investments as of July 15. — VNA/VNS Photo Thanh Vũ

HCM CITY – Foreign direct investment (FDI) registered in HCM City has decreased by 65 per cent year-on-year, according to the municipal Statistics Office.

As of July 15, the country’s major economic hub lured only US$863.6 million, much lower than $2.5 billion in the same period last year.

According to the office, real estate remained the most attractive sector to foreign investors, attracting $280 million or 43.7 per cent of the city’s total FDI. Trade ranked second with $185 million or 28.9 per cent.

In the period, the Cayman Islands were the city’s leading source of FDI with $231 million. It was followed by Japan with $96.1 million; Singapore ($87.2 million); South Korea ($51.2 million); British Virgin Islands ($45 million) and Taiwan ($30.3 million).

Deputy Director of the municipal Department of Planning and Investment Lê Thị Huỳnh Mai told Sài Gòn Giải Phóng (Liberated Sài Gòn) newspaper that the city’s FDI results did not reflect its overall picture of investment attraction because large-scale projects were often proposed by foreign investors in the second half of this year.

To create favourable conditions for investors, HCM City continued to allocate more cleared land for production and upgrade infrastructure at industrial parks and export processing zones, Mai said.

The city was expanding the second phase of the Sài Gòn Hi-Tech Park by 600ha and planned to expand Quang Trung Software Park. It also focused on speeding up administrative reforms, she said.

Earlier, Mai said that HCM City considered FDI important in its development.

The city would attract FDI in knowledge and technology industries, supporting industries and bio-technology to realise that city’s goal to become a knowledge economy, achieve green growth, and improve development quality and competitiveness, she noted. — VNS

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