Ministry supports 50% cut on auto registration fees

The Ministry of Industry and Trade (MoIT) said that it is necessary to devise a 50% cut on auto registration fees and extend the payment of the excise tax on locally-assembled and manufactured cars to stimulate consumer demand and ease the burden on businesses.

The above suggestion was announced by the MoIT’s deputy minister Phan Thi Thang in a written document sent to the Ministry of Finance for consideration on April 25.

In the document, the MoIT said that the risk of economic turmoil had had a great impact on businesses, including domestic automobile assemblers and manufacturers. In addition, pressure from tightened credit policy, high interest rates, and market liquidity problems also have influence on consumer psychology as many people have decided to tighten their spending.

In the first three months this year, Vietnam Automobile Manufacturers Association (VAMA) members sold a total of nearly 77,090 units, down 31% compared to the same period last year.

By the end of March 2023, the sales of domestically-assembled cars decreased by 34% while the number of imported cars dropped by 4% compared to the same period last year.

After seeing a decline in sales of most car manufacturers in the first quarter, car manufacturers and dealers have applied preferential and promotional policies that focus on supporting registration fees or cutting prices for car buyers to stimulate demand. However, sales volumes have remained far below expectation.

To assist businesses in stabilising their production and maintaining revenue, the MoIT strongly believes that it is essential to cut registration fees for domestically- manufactured and assembled vehicles until the end of 2023.

Months ago, VAMA and the Vietnam Association of Mechanical Industry (VAMI) asked the Government to halve the registration fee for locally assembled or manufactured cars during the first half of the year to boost market demand.

The two associations also jointly asked for an extension of the deadline to pay the excise tax. Both policies should be imposed in the first quarter or early second quarter 2023.

The Government then requested the Ministry of Finance to consider conducting a plan for a car registration fee cut. However, the Ministry of Finance rejected the request for the 50% registration fee reduction for domestically manufactured and assembled vehicles for fear of affecting local budget revenue and violating international commitments.

Regarding the extension of the excise tax payment, the Ministry of Finance has planned to extend the deadline to pay the excise tax for domestically-manufactured and assembled vehicles.

The Ministry of Industry and Trade agreed with the plan and asked the Ministry of Finance to allow an extension for excise tax payment in October 2023 instead of applying for the payable excise tax arising in the June, July, August and September tax period only./.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Vietnamese students share study experience in Russia

A seminar was held within the framework of the Vietnam Week in Russia on April 23, offering a chance for Vietnamese students to share their experience in studying the Russian language, as well as mastering knowledge during their study there.

Vietnamese students need to make a great effort in learning the language and researching Russian culture, thus promoting their communication skills and serving their special studies, they stressed.

Tran Duc Tung, a post-graduate from Plekhanov Russian University of Economics, said over the past 12 years, he has studied in a friendly environment with modern facilities and has had the opportunity to learn from many local professors and scholars.

Participants expressed the hope that more and more Vietnamese students will study in Russia in the coming time in the context that the Russian government provides 1,000 scholarships for Vietnamese students annually.

Lasting from April 17 to 23, the Vietnam Week in Russia featured roundtable discussions on economy, science and education.

A series of cultural and art performance activities were arranged within the event, helping bring Vietnam closer to Russian friends.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Hanoi works to improve computer using skills for students

The Hanoi Department of Education and Training on April 13 had a meeting with the Irish Embassy in Vietnam and the Global Management Organisation of the International Computer Driving Licence (ICDL), the world's leading computer skills certification, to seek measures to improve computer skills for students in the capital city.

The cooperation is expected to contribute to the development of informatics teaching skills and professional knowledge for experts and teachers in the city.

Tran The Cuong, Director of the Department of Education and Training, highly appreciated achievements the organisation has obtained in training and supervising digital technology capabilities in many countries in general and in Vietnam in particular.

He also hoped the ICDL will share experience in managing and implementing international programmes and projects in countries around the world, thereby helping to improve the quality of professional capacity for the city's managers, experts and teachers of informatics.

ICDL Director Damien O'Sullivan said the organisation is ready to accompany, support and advise the city’s education sector to build skilled and capable human resources for the fourth Industrial Revolution, as well as organisation and management models for informatics teaching in accordance with the requirements of the digital era.

He expected to bring the ICDL Digital Student programme to students in the city. The programme is designed specifically for elementary, secondary and high school students with a selective knowledge system, focusing on three areas: information and communication technology, computer science, digital competency.

The students will have the opportunity to take the ICDL Digital Student International Certificate of Informatics. This certificate is valid for life, and it is recognised and widely used in many countries around the world such as the US, the UK, Italy, Ireland, Portugal, Singapore and Thailand.

On this occasion, the ICDL presented 100 scholarships to the department with the aim of improving local students' computer using skills./.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Poor Khmer households, students given gifts on Chol Chnam Thmey festival

Hundreds of poor households and students of the Khmer ethnic minority group in Ho Chi Minh City on April 6 received gifts from the Vietnam Fatherland Front Committee of Ho Chi Minh City and Nguoi lao dong (The Labourers) newspaper on the occasion of their traditional Chol Chnam Thmey festival.

Recipients include 260 poor, near-poor, or disadvantaged households in the districts of Tan Binh, Binh Chanh, Cu Chi, and Can Gio and 135 poor and studious Khmer students.

The donation is from the "For the Poor" fund of Ho Chi Minh City and the newspaper’s programme "Scholarships to students of ethnic minorities and poor students", local companies, and individuals.

Phan Kieu Thanh Huong, Vice Chairman of the Vietnam Fatherland Front Committee of Ho Chi Minh City, said that over the years, the city has always cared for, supported and created the most favourable for the more than 50 ethnic minority groups in the city to develop and improve the quality of life of the local people./.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Students offer innovative solutions to global problems

Students from engineering technology universities in Vietnam have developed innovative projects following the Engineering Projects in Community Service (EPICS) model to provide engineering solutions for real world problems, including supporting the vulnerable, sustainability, agricultural productivity, plastic recycling, reducing CO2 emission and green energy.

Carrying their innovations from the Maker to Entrepreneur curriculum, the student teams advanced their EPICS projects into viable products and shared their early market traction at the Innovation & Entrepreneurship Challenge Showcase.

The showcase was co-organised by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) Building University-Industry Learning and Development through Innovation and Technology (BUILD-IT) Alliance and the Dow Vietnam STEM Program in Ho Chi Minh City on April 5.

The programme brought opportunities for students to improve independence, creativity, determination, business savvy, and communication skills to take their idea from inception to complete the pitch deck and present to the panel of judges.

In the first round of the Innovation Showcase, 28 student teams showcased their innovative prototypes to a panel of judges from government, industry, and academia. The top 10 teams with the highest scores proceeded to the Presentation round, in which the students demonstrated how engineers can learn to use market forces to prove that their early-stage products have market demand.

Team Euphoria from the Da Nang University of Technology won the first prize award with a project that designed remote power quality data collection to monitor power-quality data in real time, predict power consumption, and ensure power quality and power system operation.

Team MechaLog from HCM City University of Technology won second prize with a project developing a low cost, automatic camera that will measure traffic density, then calculate a suitable waiting time. The result of this project aims to reduce CO2 emission, while also lower human resources and energy cost, and improve overall on-road experience.

Team O.L.M.A from the HCM City University of Technology won third prize with an Algae Lamp project, which focuses on the efficient absorption of CO2 by algae, house illumination and oxygen production.

Team BKM-AI from the Da Nang University of Technology won the second third prize with a project to build a robot applying AI, especially facial recognition for management and monitoring of areas that require high security.

Team Goldstein Birds from the Da Nang University of Technology won the award for the best female-led project with a project of creating a board product recycled from bagasse which can replace natural material products.

For the sixth year in a row, the BUILD-IT Alliance, implemented by Arizona State University and partnered with the Dow Vietnam STEM Program, has joined forces to support student-led innovation and bring industry-linked applied projects in innovation, entrepreneurship, and research to undergraduates across Vietnamese universities. To date, Dow Vietnam has leveraged over 200,000 USD to provide more than 1,000 opportunities for students to gain the confidence and capacity to engineer social innovations./.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Agribank contributes to boosting hi-tech agriculture

In the hope of making contributions to the growth of a clean and high-value agricultural sector, the Vietnam Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development (Agribank) has taken an active role in providing capital, consultations and other support to farmers in promoting technology. This move is seen as crucial for the sector to develop in a sustainable and effective direction.

Obvious trend

Agricultural development based on innovations in science and technology is considered as one of the key solutions to challenges as the sector grows. Insiders believe the superiority of biotechnology, greenhouse technology, drip irrigation technology, sensor technology, automation, and the Internet of things is helping the sector save production costs, increase productivity, and improve the quality of farm produce, thus actively contributing to environmental protection. Experts and scientists agreed that this is an important measure to make breakthrough progress in agricultural development, assisting agricultural restructuring and enhancing farmers’ lives.

A report from the Ministry of Science and Technology (MoST) showed that science and technology advances have contributed over 30% to the added values in overall agricultural production, and 38% to the production of plant and livestock varieties, while considerably reducing the loss in agricultural production (to under 10% in rice production).

The level of mechanisation at the stage of tillage for annual crops (such as rice, sugarcane, maize and vegetables) has reached about 94%, while that in the rice harvest stage has been 50%, and even 90% in delta localities.

Many high-tech agricultural enterprises and farms have been mastering technologies and reducing product costs, while replicating technological processes transferred to producers in all fields, thus increasing labour productivity and economic efficiency by 15-30%, and promoting agricultural production in an industrial manner.

According to the MoST, thanks to science and technology, the productivity in the production of some livestock and plants in Vietnam is higher compared to that in other countries in the region and the world. Specifically, Vietnam ranks first among ASEAN countries in rice productivity (more than one-and-a-half times higher than Thailand). On the global scale, the country comes second in coffee production only after Brazil, first in pepper production, second in rubber after India, and first in tra fish with a production of 500 tonnes per hecrares.

Right time, right way

Amid changing mindset in modern agriculture, open mechanism and ready workforce, the engagement of Agribank in providing loans for high-tech agriculture in that context is timely, helping provide full resources for the growth of a sustainable agriculture.

However, despite favourable conditions for its development, high-tech agricultural industry has difficulties. The high-tech agricultural model requires relatively large production scale and adequate investment in infrastructure and technologies, while investment capital poured into the sectors is modest.

In order to promote the credit demands of businesses and farmers, Agribank has applied lending interest rates at 0.5% to 1.5% on customers depending on specific cases.

Along with that, customers who borrow money under Agribank’s high-tech and clean agriculture development programme will receive free money transfers within the bank’s system, and a 50% reduction of Agribank’s current prescribed fee for money transfers outside the bank’s system.

At the same time, Agribank has actively improved its lending process and methods, aiming to reduce cost for businesses and make it easier for them to access credit. Alongside, the project to shorten the appraisal time for projects and loan plans and raise the lending norms for customers, coordinate with local authorities to remove loans for customers to access loans immediately. Since its inception, efforts have been taken to shorten verification time for projects and investment plan, and raise the loan limit for customers. The bank has also coordinated with local authorities to remove obstacles facing customers in getting loans right from the project establishment.

From November 2016 when the Prime Minister launched the programme to strengthen loans for high-tech agriculture to November 30, 2022, Agribank contributed over 30 trillion VND (1.27 billion USD) to the programme with an outstanding loan reaching over 5 trillion VND (212.02 million USD) for nearly 4,000 customers, including nearly 100 corporate customers and 3,900 individual ones.

Among large-scale projects that Agribank has invested in include factories to process fruits, vegetable and food for export in An Giang and Vinh Long provinces, with a capital of more than 4.1 trillion VND; shrimp fry and shrimp production, and dairy cow breeding projects in Ninh Thuan, with more than 3.7 trillion VND; and clean animal feed production project in Ha Nam with a loan of nearly 5 trillion VND.

The bank has also engaged in developing vegetable, flower and fruit production models in Lam Dong; a vegetable and fruit processing project in Ninh Binh; animal feed production, pig and chicken breeding projects in Binh Phuong and Thanh Hoa; and passion fruit, safe fruits and vegetable production projects in Dak Nong and Kon Tum. The efforts have been fruitful, continuing to affirm Agribank’s role in high-tech agriculture investment and development.

For sustainable agricultural development

Defining agriculture and rural development as prioritised fields for credit provision, in the time to come, Agribank plans to increase loans for major areas in association with products meeting the criteria of the OCOP (One Commune-One Product) Programme – one of the important standards for Vietnamese farm produce.

Having OCOP products will help rural residents increase their income, contributing to eliminating backward farming habits and heading to a market-oriented economy. It will also help to improve the reputation of cooperative products and trademarks, opening a new, modern development direction with higher productivity in production and trade of traditional products. It will also enable them to reach larger markets. This is expected to help restructure the organisation of rural financial and economic structure.

In its orientations, along with providing direct credit capital to production households, Agribank will supply loans for the production of finished products and the development of value chains in agricultural and commodity production associated with the development of OCOP products

The bank will also focus on applying the Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) criteria during its operations, replicating the model of safe agricultural production, thereby, changing consumers’ perception of the quality and safety of Vietnamese agricultural products.

At the same time, in order to meet the diverse demand of customers in payment transactions, Agribank has applied many policies to strengthen human resources and technology systems, while focusing on developing diverse mobile payment services suitable to conditions in all regions of the country.

Meanwhile, Agribank’s cross-border payment services are being expanded to many banks and partners, diversifying preferential mechanisms, thus better supporting businesses and people, especially those engaging in exporting high-tech agricultural products.

With a network of transactions covering many countries, Agribank’s payment services are fast and convenient, acting as an extension arm bringing Vietnamese agricultural products closer to the world. The activity serves to create fundamental changes in agricultural production and promoting the growth of many industries and services, contributing to boosting socio-economic development in localities and improving people’s living conditions.

With its roles and high sense of responsibility, Agribank is committed to always accompanying the business community and farmers to build a modern and advanced Vietnamese agriculture. This is part of the banks’ efforts to meet the expectation of society, as well as the responsibility, rights and development motivation for the bank itself in the period of innovation and integration./.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Vietnam, Thailand beef up sci-tech, educational collaboration

Thailand will further promote sci-tech and education cooperation with Vietnam, including a plan to teach Vietnamese at some local universities, affirmed Minister of Higher Education, Science, Research and Innovation (MHESI) Anek Laothamatas in a working session with Vietnamese Ambassador Phan Chi Thanh in Bangkok on March 20.

Thanh proposed the minister direct relevant departments to discuss the organisation of the first meeting of the Vietnam-Thailand Joint Committee for Science and Technology Cooperation. He said via the meeting, the sides will agree on contents serving the promotion of their engagements in the time to come and on a mechanism of co-financing joint research cooperation tasks, especially in the fields of digital transformation, green transformation, biotechnology, and automation.

He suggested Thailand support the teaching of the Vietnamese language in Thailand and informed his host that the Hanoi University of Vietnam is building a project to study the establishment of a Vietnamese language and education centre in Thailand.

The diplomat recommended the Thai side help expand the Thai language education programme in Vietnam. Currently, Thailand is assisting five Vietnamese universities in teaching the language, with the Thailand International Cooperation Agency (TICA) granting scholarships for Vietnamese lecturers to join training courses in Thailand as well as offering the universities related teaching and learning materials.

He also proposed that the MHESI introduce Thai schools for forming twinning relations with Vietnamese schools, thereby enhancing exchanges of students, teachers and educational administrators at the grassroots level.

Agreeing with Thanh’s proposals, the Thai minister pledged to push for the early organisation of the first meeting and underscored Thailand’s readiness to grant scholarships for Vietnamese students studying sci-tech disciplines in the country, especially concerning the health

The MHESI supports the establishment of the Vietnamese centre and the teaching of Vietnamese at Thai universities. He asked the Vietnamese side to soon decide on the related teaching programme, send experts, and support the training of teachers and lecturers in Thailand./.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Technicians, managers trained for operating Ho Chi Minh City’s Metro Line No1

Nearly 30 technicians and managers attended a training class on March 18 as a preparation for the operation of urban railway Metro Line No1 (Ben Thanh-Suoi Tien) in Ho Chi Minh City.

According to Akira Hosomi, operation and maintenance specialist of NJPT Contractors Consortium, Ho Chi Minh City’s Metro line No. 1 using Japanese technologies is the first project in Vietnam that Japanese experts have transferred the know-how to Vietnamese operators.

The first generation of trainees will act as the core human resources to support the development of the future urban railway system in Vietnam in general and in Ho Chi Minh City in particular, he said.

He said that the trainees will be equipped with sufficient knowledge, skills to safely and effectively operate and exploit the metro line as well as prepare for the next step of the project.

According to the Urban Railway Management Board, work on Metro Line No1 has been completed by 94.38%.

Metro Line No. 1, nearly 20km long, has a total investment of over 43.7 trillion VND (1.9 billion USD). It consists of 14 stations, three underground and 11 elevated, and runs through District 1, Binh Thanh district, Thu Duc City, and neighbouring Binh Duong province.

The train on this line can run at speeds of up to 110km per hour on the elevated section and 80km underground.

The project was initially scheduled for completion in late 2021 to run commercially in 2022, but then delays hit due to the pandemic and procedural problems./.

Source: Vietnam News Agency