Conference promotes investment, trade with Cuba

Tuesday, Feb 06, 2018 14:00

Speakers take questions from business executives attending a conference in HCM City on February 5 on the Cuban market. — VNS Photo

Viet Nam-Cuba investment and trade ties have great untapped potential, a conference heard in HCM City on February 5.

Speaking at the conference, titled Cuba – a potential market for Vietnamese enterprises, the country’s consul general in HCM City, Indira López Arguelles, said her government is soliciting foreign investment, especially in the Mariel Economic Development Zone, which offers good conditions for Vietnamese firms to invest.

Tourism, renewable energy, bio-technology, light industry, food, property, agriculture, and infrastructure are among the sectors in which it seeks foreign investment, she said.

Pham Thiet Hoa, director of the Investment and Trade Promotion Centre of HCM City, said: “The Cuban market offers great potential for Vietnamese businesses in sectors like tourism, agriculture, telecommunications, consumer goods, footwear, and garments and textiles, areas in which Viet Nam has strength.

Cuban firms are strong in the pharmaceutical, training, medical, and construction sectors, and can enhance co-operation with their Vietnamese counterparts in these fields, he said.

Trade between Viet Nam and Cuba has increased significantly in recent years, but remains modest compared with the potential, he said.

Of the $250 million trade in 2016, Viet Nam’s exports to Cuba accounted for $240 million, he said.

Tran Ngoc Thuan, deputy general director of Thai Bình Investment Trading Corp, which has 20 years’ experience in the Cuban market, said Cuba’s imports from Viet Nam account for a very small portion of its total imports, and there is still a lot of scope for Vietnamese firms to promote exports to the country, he said.

Cuba has to import 60-65 per cent of its food needs while Vietnamese firms are strong in the sector, he said.

Businesses from the two sides can co-operate in agriculture to serve the Cuban market and also export to Latin American countries, the conference heard.

With Cuba seeking to boost domestic production to gradually reduce imports, investors should think of the long term by investing in production there instead of focusing just on trading, delegates said.

They said investment and trade in each other’s countries remains modest due to the limited market information and investment policies of enterprises.

Besides, difficulties in making payments and the use of dual currencies and foreign exchange rates are among other obstacles to trade, Arguelles said.

Viet Nam and Cuba are negotiating a free trade agreement to facilitate trade, she said.

Some Vietnamese firms have invested in Cuba, she said, hoping more would do so.

Hoa said the ITPC would organise a visit by a business delegation to Cuba next month to enable Vietnamese firms to understand more about that market and seek partners.

Viet Nam’s main export items to Cuba are rice, coffee, chemicals, ceramics, and machinery and parts. It imports vaccines and pharmaceutical products. — VNS

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