Vietnam’s FDI sector posts $34 bln trade surplus in 8 months

Foreign-invested enterprises (FIEs) in Vietnam recorded a trade turnover of $301.36 billion, including crude oil, resulting in a trade surplus of $34.21 billion in the first eight months of this year.

Foreign-invested enterprises (FIEs) in Vietnam recorded a trade turnover of $301.36 billion, including crude oil, resulting in a trade surplus of $34.21 billion in the first eight months of this year.

Overall, Vietnam’s import-export turnover fell 13.1% year-on-year to $435.23 billion in the eight-month period, according to the General Statistics Office. The foreign direct investment (FDI) sector accounted for 69.2% of the national total.

Vietnam posted export revenues of $227.71 billion, down 10% year-on-year, while imports dropped 16.2% to $207.52 billion, resulting in a trade surplus of $20.19 billion, nearly four times the $5.26 billion recorded in the same period last year. While the FDI sector made a trade surplus, the domestic sector had a trade deficit of $14.02 billion.

Trucks pass through Bac Luan II bridge, Quang Ninh province, northern Vietnam en route to the border with China. Photo courtesy of Voice of Vietnam newspaper.

Vietnam’s key exports in the first eight months included electronics, computers and components worth $36.15 billion, down 1.5% year-on-year; mobile phones and components worth $33.94 billion, down 15.4%; machinery and equipment worth $26.96 billion, down 10.3%; apparel-textiles worth $22.35 billion, down 15%; and footwear worth $13.49 billion, down 17.6%.

Products from the manufacturing-processing industry accounted for $201.31 billion of export revenue at 88.4% of the total; followed by farm produce and forestry goods at $17.87 billion, or 7.9%; fisheries at $5.71 billion, or 2.5%; and fuel and natural resources at $2.82 billion, or 1.2%.

The nation’s core imports were electronics, computers and components worth $53.83 billion, down 6% year-on-year; followed by machinery and equipment worth $26.68 billion, down 13%; fabric worth $8.39 billion, down 18.6%; steel-iron worth $6.45 billion, down 27.2%; and plastics worth $6.24 billion, down 29.9%.

Materials for production accounted for $194.65 billion, or 93.8% of total imports. The remaining 6.2%, or $12.87 billion, was spent on consumer goods.

China, the U.S. and ASEAN were Vietnam’s biggest trade partners with turnovers of $103.9 billion, $71.6 billion and $48.8 billion in the first eight months of 2023, respectively. Other top trade partners were South Korea with $48.3 billion, the EU with $39.2 billion and Japan with $28.9 billion.

China remained the biggest import market for Vietnam at $68.1 billion, while the U.S. was the biggest export market at $62.3 billion.