VDF-MOI
Joint Missions to Thailand & Japan
The Vietnam Development Forum (VDF) and the
Department of Planning of Vietnam's Ministry of Industry (MOI) are conducting a
joint research project to study the methodology of industrial policy
formulation under global integration and market orientation. We have
organized two foreign missions, Bangkok (Feb.-Mar. 2005) and Tokyo (May.-Jun.
2005), to examine the experiences of other countries. The findings of the Thai
mission were reported at the VDF Symposium on Industrial Policy Formulation in
Hanoi on March 24, 2005 attended by MOI Minister H.E. Hoang Trung Hai and NEU
Rector Prof. Nguyen Van Thuong, among others. We plan to go to Malaysia
in the near future for the same purpose.
<Highlights of Thai
Mission> full report
(PDF123KB)
Top-down policy making
Mr. Thaksin's current government has a
top-down, business-like decision making style. This is affecting the entire
working of the Thai government. Under his leadership, policies are faster and
more flexible, and concerned ministries talk to each other more.
No preference for any nationality
Thailand is seriously committed to integration
and FTAs. Localization requirements are already abolished, and firms of all
nationalities are welcome. There is no law that requires technical transfer. On
the other hand, the government also recognizes that local human resources and
SMEs are weak and want to strengthen them.
Targeted industries
Thailand has slogans for targeted industries:
Detroit of Asia (automobile), Kitchen of the World (food
processing), Hub of Tropical Fashion (fashion), and so on. It also wants
to promote high value-added services and IT. There is a shift from export
orientation to domestic value and jobs.
Government-business cooperation
The private sector is deeply involved in policy
design, implementation and review. The government has established
industry-specific government committees and industry-specific non-profit
institutes to accelerate joint policy making between government and businesses.
Comparing automobile master plans
The mission compared the auto master plans of
Thailand and Vietnam (this study is still ongoing). The Thai version is longer
and more detailed in action plans than the Vietnamese. The Vietnamese master
plan has numerical targets for each type of cars, buses and trucks but Thailand
specifies the output and export of the entire industry only.
Centralized FDI promotion
The Board of Investment (BOI) promotes FDI like
MPI in Vietnam. Laws are revised every five years but always for better. BOI
sets uniform FDI policy for the entire country and local governments are not
allowed to offer better conditions or approve projects. FDI outside Bangkok is
encouraged through the zone system. BOI's marketing activity is very effective.
<Highlights of Japan
Mission>
full report
(PDF171KB, Final version)
Businesses lead, government supports
The Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) generally provides
supporting and coordinating functions while the private sector makes
business strategies. This was true in the early postwar period
as well as today. In the case of automobiles, for example, METI is concerned
with air pollution, fuel efficiency, traffic safety and FTA negotiation but there
is no master
plan to guide investment or R&D.
No quantitative restriction on cars
Although Japan had road congestion, air pollution and
many traffic
accidents in the past, it never imposed production quotas or registration
bans. METI believes that congestion and accidents are traffic control
problems which should be separated from the production side.
Channels with the private sector
Like Thailand, Japan's policies are designed in close cooperation with
businesses. Deliberation councils and industrial associations (JAMA,
JEITA, etc) play important roles. In addition, METI contacts individual
companies by phone, email and informal meetings when necessary. Prior to
drafting new laws or negotiating FTAs, business opinions are always
collected and summarized.
Quick implementation and revision
In the case of IT policy (e-Japan Strategy
initiated in 2001), content evolves rapidly and flexibly as situations
change and early results are achieved. Key targets are revised annually and
new goals are introduced constantly. A special study council issued a report
to significantly change policy orientation only after two years.
Vietnam in the eyes of MNCs
Japanese multinational corporations are
always trying to introduce new products in each key market (global
innovation chain) and achieve high-quality, low-cost and speed (global
supply chain). They regard Vietnam as one of the potential production
sites which work together with other factories located all over the world.
Japan & Vietnam: ideal production
partners?
According to Prof. T. Fujimoto (Tokyo Univ),
Japan's competitiveness is enhanced if it links up with countries which can
perform "integration-based" manufacturing. This requires local capability in
design and engineering and high-level human resources. If Vietnam improves its
manufacturing capability, it can become a perfect partner for Japan.
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