Viet Nam records trade surplus of $2.45b: GSO

Thursday, Sep 01, 2016 09:04

Viet Nam enjoyed a trade surplus of US$2.45 billion in the first eight months of this year, a report from General Statistics Office (GSO) has revealed. — Photo cafef.vn
HA NOI (Biz Hub) — Viet Nam enjoyed a trade surplus of US$2.45 billion in the first eight months of this year, a report from General Statistics Office (GSO) has revealed.

The eight-month trade surplus was totally contributed by the foreign-invested sector, which posted an export surplus of $15.18 billion, while the domestic sector witnessed a deficit of $12.73 billion, Le Thi Minh Thuy, head of GSO, said.

The country's trade revenue topped $221.93 billion in the period. Of the sum, exports contributed $112.19 billion, surging 5.5 per cent against same period last year.

The above-mentioned growth was, however, equal to two thirds of the target set earlier by the State, Thuy said.

Export revenue of the domestic sector reached $32.62 billion, up 4 per cent year-on-year, while that of the foreign-invested sector stood at $79.57 billion, up 6.1 per cent year-on-year. Among the key export items witnessing significant turnover increases were mobile phones and components ($22.3 billion, up 11 per cent), garments and textiles ($15.5 billion, up 4.2 per cent), electronics, computers and parts ($11.1 billion, up 11.2 per cent) and footwear ($8.6 billion, up 8.1 per cent).

Meanwhile, several other products witnessed export revenue reductions, including crude oil (some $1.5 billion, down 46.2 percent), rice ($1.5 billion, down 14 per cent), rubber ($887 million, down 4 per  cent) and cassava ($698 million, down 26 per cent).

The US remained the largest importer of Vietnamese goods with revenue of $24.6 billion. It was followed by the EU with $21.9 billion, China with $12.6 billion, Japan with $9.3 billion and South Korea with $7 billion, GSO said. From January to August, the country's imports saw a yearly modest decline of 0.3 per cent to $109.74 billion. Imports of the foreign-invested sector plunged by 1 per cent to $64.39 billion, while that of the domestic sector experienced a slight increase of 0.5 per cent to $45.35 billion. — VNS

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