by Dmitriy Belyanin
Introduction
On May 29, 2015, the Eurasian Economic Union and Vietnam
signed a free trade agreement. According to the media, the pact strengthens
Russia-Vietnam relations and illustrates the popularity of Eurasian integration
among some non-members. In reality, benefits of the free trade zone vary from
country to country. Russia and Belarus will be the largest beneficiaries; Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan and Armenia stand to gain much less.
Also unclear is how long Vietnam’s economy will continue to grow, since
part of the growth is due to investors substituting Vietnam for China.
Structure of Vietnam’s economy
With a dense population of 90.73 million, Vietnam is turning
rapidly to markets and industry. The agricultural share of output fell from
about 25% in 2000 to 18% in 2014; the
share of industry rose from 36% to 38%, according to the US Central Intelligence
Agency. Though still under
authoritarian rule by the Communist Party, Vietnam has had a mixed economy
since the late 1980s. State-owned
enterprises constitute only 40% of output (measured as gross domestic product,
which was $186.2 billion in 2014).
Vietnam’s economy is
growing more rapidly than it is developing. In 2011-2014, Vietnamese output
grew 5-6% annually. For comparison, Chinese output growth slowed from 9.5% in
2011 to 7.3% in 2014. But while its poverty is declining, Vietnam suffers from undercapitalized banks and bad loans.
By some regional
standards, Vietnam is a laggard. The World Bank classifies Vietnam as a “lower
middle income” country -- unlike China, Belarus and Kazakhstan, which are “upper
middle income.” In the Eurasian Economic Union, Armenia and Kyrgyzstan are
“lower middle income,” and Russia is “high income, non-OECD.” (The Organization
for Economic Co-operation and Development consists of rich Western nations.) On the other hand, Vietnamese inflation and
unemployment are low by world standards and comparable to other countries in
the region. Table 1 shows key macroeconomic indicators of major developing
Asian countries for 2013-2016.
Country
|
Subject
Descriptor, Percent Change
|
2013
|
2014
|
2015P
|
2016F
|
China
|
Gross domestic
product, constant prices
|
7.7
|
7.3
|
6.8
|
6.3
|
China
|
Inflation,
average consumer prices
|
2.6
|
2.0
|
1.5
|
1.8
|
China
|
Volume of Imports
of goods
|
9.7
|
4.6
|
2.5
|
3.5
|
China
|
Volume of exports
of goods
|
9.6
|
5.1
|
3.0
|
3.5
|
China
|
Unemployment rate
|
4.1
|
4.1
|
4.1
|
4.1
|
Malaysia
|
Gross domestic
product, constant prices
|
4.7
|
6.0
|
4.7
|
4.5
|
Malaysia
|
Inflation,
average consumer prices
|
2.1
|
3.1
|
2.4
|
3.8
|
Malaysia
|
Volume of Imports
of goods
|
5.9
|
4.3
|
-0.4
|
5.2
|
Malaysia
|
Volume of exports
of goods
|
1.9
|
5.8
|
-2.2
|
7.5
|
Malaysia
|
Unemployment rate
|
3.1
|
2.9
|
3.0
|
3.0
|
Vietnam
|
Gross domestic
product, constant prices
|
5.4
|
6.0
|
6.5
|
6.4
|
Vietnam
|
Inflation,
average consumer prices
|
6.6
|
4.1
|
2.2
|
3.1
|
Vietnam
|
Volume of Imports
of goods
|
18.4
|
14.8
|
22.2
|
11.6
|
Vietnam
|
Volume of exports
of goods
|
13.3
|
16.2
|
16.2
|
10.6
|
Vietnam
|
Unemployment rate
|
2.8
|
2.5
|
2.5
|
2.5
|
Thailand
|
Gross domestic
product, constant prices
|
2.8
|
0.9
|
2.5
|
3.2
|
Thailand
|
Inflation,
average consumer prices
|
2.2
|
1.9
|
-0.9
|
1.5
|
Thailand
|
Volume of Imports
of goods
|
1.6
|
-6.8
|
4.8
|
4.4
|
Thailand
|
Volume of exports
of goods
|
0.2
|
0.7
|
2.2
|
3.8
|
Thailand
|
Unemployment rate
|
0.7
|
0.8
|
0.8
|
0.8
|
Source: October 2015 IMF World Economic
Outlook Database
Table 1: Key macroeconomic parameters of
major developing Asian countries, 2013-2016
Vietnam’s economy is
rapidly opening. The country’s accession to the World Trade Organization in
2007 has stimulated exports. So will the 5% depreciation last year of the
managed currency, the dong. Vietnam also belongs to the Trans-Pacific
Partnership, a new US-led free trade agreement of 12 Pacific Rim countries.
Vietnam’s trade is
modernizing. In 2012, key exports included crude oil, rice and other farm
products, garments, footwear, electronics and computers, telephones and parts,
transportation, and machinery and parts, said the Vietnam Trade Promotion
Agency. The country is moving away from
primary and low-tech exports. Garments and footwear were only 20% of exports,
as compared with 27% in 2002. During that decade, the share of crude oil
decreased from 20% to 7%, and the share of agricultural products decreased from
24% to 12%. Major trade partners include the United States, China, Japan, South
Korea, Malaysia, Germany, the United Arab Emirates, the United Kingdom, Hong
Kong and Thailand.
Main imports include
motor vehicles, machinery and equipment, oil products, agricultural materials,
metals, chemicals, plastics, textile materials and hi-tech intermediate
goods. China remains Vietnam’s largest
import partner, providing 25% of its imports. China is followed by other East
Asian countries (excluding Japan), accounting for 22% of imports. Members of
ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations, a political and economic
organization of 10 countries), produce 18%.
Despite these
encouraging trends, Vietnam ranks low (90th) on the World Bank’s
2015 Ease of Doing Business Index. This is more likely to be due to national
characteristics rather than regional ones, since efficiency rankings in Asia
vary considerably. China ranks 84th, the Philippines 103rd,
Indonesia 109th, Malaysia 18th, Cambodia 127th,
Thailand 49th, and Singapore 1st. On the other hand, in
the Eurasian Economic Union, rankings are uniformly mediocre – not very good
and not very bad. Kazakhstan ranks 41st, Russia 51st,
Kyrgyzstan 67th, Armenia 35th, and Belarus 44th.
Perhaps regional factors affect the Union.
As for efficiency
within the region, relative strengths for Vietnam include dealing with
construction permits and getting credit. Among its relative weaknesses are
paying taxes, protecting minority investors, and resolving insolvency. In
comparison, China does exceptionally well at enforcing contracts, and very well
in registering property and resolving insolvency. This success may reflect
China’s longer experience with property rights. China’s relative weaknesses
include dealing with construction permits and starting a business, as well as
protecting minority investors and paying taxes. Table 2 lists components of the
Ease of Doing Business index for major developing countries of East and Southeast
Asia and for members of the Eurasian Economic Union.
Nation
|
Rank
|
Start a Business
|
Deal with Construction Permits
|
Get Electricity
|
Register Property
|
Get Credit
|
Protect Minority Investors
|
Pay Taxes
|
Trade Across Borders
|
Enforce Contracts
|
Resolve Insolvency
|
Vietnam
|
90
|
119
|
12
|
108
|
58
|
28
|
122
|
168
|
99
|
74
|
123
|
China
|
84
|
136
|
176
|
92
|
43
|
79
|
134
|
132
|
96
|
7
|
55
|
Thailand
|
49
|
96
|
39
|
11
|
57
|
97
|
36
|
70
|
56
|
57
|
49
|
Malaysia
|
18
|
14
|
15
|
13
|
38
|
28
|
4
|
31
|
49
|
44
|
45
|
Kyrgyz.
|
67
|
35
|
20
|
160
|
6
|
28
|
36
|
138
|
83
|
137
|
126
|
Russia
|
51
|
41
|
119
|
29
|
8
|
42
|
66
|
47
|
170
|
5
|
51
|
Belarus
|
44
|
12
|
34
|
89
|
7
|
109
|
57
|
63
|
25
|
29
|
69
|
Kazakh.
|
41
|
21
|
92
|
71
|
19
|
70
|
25
|
18
|
122
|
9
|
47
|
Armenia
|
35
|
5
|
62
|
99
|
14
|
42
|
49
|
41
|
29
|
28
|
71
|
Source: The World Bank Group
Table 2: Components of the 2015 Ease of Doing
Business Index for the Eurasian Economic Union and for selected developing
Asian economies
Given the weakness
of Vietnam’s legal sector, one is not surprised that corruption remains severe
and is comparable to that of Central Asia. Vietnam ranks 112th in
Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index for 2015; lower
rankings indicate more corruption. In the Eurasian Economic Union, Russia ranks
119th, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan share the 123rd place,
Belarus ranks 107th and Armenia 95th.
History and
general implications of the agreement
According to the
Eurasian Commission, trade among members of the Eurasian Economic Union
increased from $2.6 billion in 2010 to $4.2 billion in 2014. So they considered
trade integration. Creating a free trade zone between the Customs Union members
and Vietnam was first discussed in 2009 when Vietnam’s Minister of Industry and
Trade visited Russia. In 2010, a joint research group of representatives of
Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan and Vietnam was formed to discuss a zone. It
finished in 2012, when Andrey Slepnev, Minister of Trade of the Eurasian
Economic Commission, began talks with Vietnam to prepare the pact.
The agreement is
somewhat weak. For trade in goods, it shall apply to all members of the
Eurasian Economic Union. But for trade in services and investments, each member
can decide whether to abide by it; in 2015, it detailed only relations between
Russia and Vietnam. As before, conditions on non-tariff barriers are the same
for all members. Vietnam accepted some technical and sanitary regulation that
are not in the basic WTO accession agreements but that the Eurasian Economic
Union complies with.
The signatories
expect trade between the Eurasian Economic Union and Vietnam to increase from
$4 billion to $8-10 billion in the next few years. Under the pact, Vietnam will
have to cancel import tariffs for 59% of the products immediately, and for
another 30% gradually.
Firms of the members
of the Eurasian Economic Union are to save $40 million by avoiding customs
duties during the first year of the agreement and $55-60 million per year after
completing the transition. Vietnamese companies are to save up to $10 million
per year. The Union will cancel import tariffs for
59% of the products immediately and for 29% over five to 10 years. The Union
will preserve tariffs for meat, milk, coffee, tea, sugar, pipers, airplanes,
cars, and other goods considered sensitive. Vietnam will preserve duties for
final products from meat, confectioneries, salt, industrial waste, items from
precious metals, and many other goods that the Eurasian Economic Union does not
export.
Relations with
Russia
Economically, Russia and Vietnam cooperate most in oil
extraction, energy, rubber, and sea food processing. About 300 Vietnamese companies operate in
Russia, mainly in trade, food, and construction materials. Over a thousand Vietnamese study in Russia,
according to Vietnam News.
In 2015, mutual trade turnover amounted to $4 billion --
about 1% of total Vietnamese trade and 0.5% of Russian trade. In contrast,
Vietnamese trade with the US is $36 billion and with China $58 billion. In
nuclear energy, Russia must compete with South Korea, Japan and the US for the
Vietnamese market. In oil extraction, India
is Russia’s rival, according to Anton Tsvetov, an expert of the Russian Council
on International Affairs.
Mineral fuels, crude oil and oil products,
bituminous substances and mineral wax
|
8.6
|
Fertilizers
|
7.4
|
Electronic machines and equipment, including sound
recording, televisions and related equipment
|
4.9
|
Nuclear reactors and related equipment and parts
|
3.5
|
Optic equipment, photo and video cameras, measuring
and medical (including surgical) equipment
|
1.7
|
Ferrous metals
|
1.7
|
Items out of ferrous metals
|
1.6
|
Salts, sulfur, lime, cement, plaster, soil and rocks
|
1.2
|
Land transportation, apart from railroad and trams
|
0.8
|
Books, newspapers, manuscripts, typed writings, and
artwork copies
|
0.8
|
Miscellaneous
|
62.3
|
Table 3: The share of various exports from Russia to
Vietnam, % (2014)
Source: ITC Trade Map, as reported by Rusexporter.ru.
Table 3 shows the share of various goods in total exports
from Russia to Vietnam in 2014. In 2014, exports of land transportation
increased 2.9 times, fertilizer 2.3 times, oil and mineral fuels 51.2%, and
items from ferrous metals 34.8%. But
Russian exports of instruments and equipment plummeted 78%, printed products
75.3%, ferrous metals 61%, electric equipment 46.6%, and mechanical equipment
28.6%.
Electronic machines and equipment, including sound
recording, televisions and related equipment
|
32.9
|
Nuclear reactors and related equipment and parts
|
14.1
|
Shoes, gaiters, and analogous items
|
12.2
|
Garments, apart from knitted wear
|
9.2
|
Tea, coffee, and yerba mate
|
7.1
|
Fish and other seafoods
|
4
|
Knitted (by machine or manually) garments
|
3.5
|
Edible fruits and nuts
|
2.9
|
Food products that emerge from processing fruits,
vegetables, nuts, or other parts of plants
|
1.6
|
Other food products
|
1.6
|
Leather items, road items, ladies’ bags and related
goods, and items from animal intestines
|
1.5
|
Table 4: The share of exports from Vietnam to Russia, % (2014)
Source: ITC Trade Map, as reported by Rusexporter.ru.
In 2014, Russian imports of some Vietnamese food products
increased 49.6%, edible fruits and nuts 26.1%, leather items 25%, products from
processing fruits and vegetables 22.8%, tea and coffee 20.6%, fish 10.9%, and
clothing items 9.8%. Imports of
equipment and mechanical items decreased 31.9% and electric equipment 25.8%,
according to the ITC Trade Map.
Relations with Belarus
Vietnam is an important trading partner of Belarus, which
exports potassium fertilizers, tires, tractors, metal products and food
products to the Asian country. In 2011,
the two nations agreed on $275 million of Belarussian exports, and on joint
projects in manufacturing and extraction.
Vietnamese exports to Belarus communication technology,
office equipment, sea food, rice, nuts, shoes, clothing, rubber, processed
tropical fruits, tea, coffee and spices. The two nations might create an
enterprise in Belarus to process and package coffee from Vietnam.
A Vietnamese complex, owned by the company BEAM-Motor,
assembles Belarussian-designed MAZ automobiles. The two nations are considering
assembly of MMZ engines. A
Belarussian-Vietnamese intergovernmental commission, in the areas of trade,
economic, scientific and technological cooperation, has been functioning, said
the Belarussian embassy in Vietnam. Table 5 shows Belarussian exports to
Vietnam and imports from Vietnam, correspondingly. Belarus exports much more to Vietnam than it
imports.
Year
|
Exports
|
Imports
|
Net Exports
|
2010
|
105.5
|
40.4
|
65.1
|
2011
|
164.3
|
23.8
|
140.5
|
2012
|
156.1
|
28.5
|
127.6
|
2013
|
145.2
|
49.6
|
95.6
|
2014
|
108.5
|
60.8
|
47.7
|
Source:
Embassy of the Republic of Belarus in the Socialist Republic of Vietnam
Table
5: Dynamics of bilateral trade between Belarus and Vietnam, millions of U.S.
Dollars (2010-2014)
The trade pact cancels customs duties in Vietnam on
potassium fertilizer, tires, trucks, molasses, milk products and alcohol.
Duties had varied from 6% (fertilizer) to 30% (tires), reports Chesnok
magazine.
Relations with Kazakhstan
In 2014, trade between Kazakhstan and Vietnam totaled $271.9
million, among which exports of Kazakhstan to Vietnam amounted to $1.7 million
and imports from Vietnam to Kazakhstan amounted to $270.2 million, according to
the KAZNEX INVEST national agency on exports and investment. Exports to major trading partners of
Kazakhstan, such as Russia, China and Germany, provide the funds that enable Kazakhstan
to import from Vietnam much more than it exports, according to Kazdata. Kazakhstan
could export to Vietnam 50 goods, including metallurgical products, machinery,
food products, chemical products, and construction materials. Vietnam is a net
importer of these products, and its pact with Kazakhstan has decimated its
tariffs, which had been as high as 40% for poultry, 35% for candy and preserved
meat, and 30% for soft drinks. But Kazakhstani exporters face high
transportation costs.
The free trade agreement benefits the Eurasian Economic
Union in general more than it does Kazakhstan in particular, said Aidarkhan
Kussainov, director of the Almagest consulting company. But since the Chinese
yuan has become more expensive over the last five years and the Chinese economy
has slowed, many multinational enterprises are setting up their factories in
Vietnam. Businesses of Kazakhstan may also take part in this, reports Venera
Gaifutdinova, of Forbes.kz.
Relations with Armenia
In 1992, Armenia and Vietnam established diplomatic
relations and agreed to trade. Twenty years later, they expanded that
cooperation to science and technology. From 2012 to 2014, Armenian exports to
Vietnam increased from $33,900 to $61,900.
Imports decreased from $16.9 million in 2012 to $14.5 million in 2013
and then increased again to $19.9 million in 2014, according to the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs of Armenia. Vietnam’s trade surplus with Armenia leaves it with
a pile of drams, the Armenian currency, that is worthless everywhere except in Armenia.
So Vietnam spends the drams on Armenian assets. However, in November 2015,
Vietnam removed tariffs on Armenian brandy and wine, reports Armenpress, so
Armenia’s trade deficit may lessen. .Overall,
Armenia earns most of its export revenue from Russia, Сhina and Germany, according to Russia’s Ministry
of Economic Development.
Relations with Kyrgyzstan
In the 2000s, Kyrgyzstan and Vietnam traded little. Only in 2014 did the leaders begin
discussing stronger economic ties. The talks continued in 2015 and concerned
textiles, energy, and agriculture, according to Kabar.kg. During a May meeting
of Temir Sariyev, Prime Minister of Kyrgyzstan, and Nguyen Tan Dung, Prime
Minister of Vietnam, the Kyrgyz side encouraged investments of Vietnamese
entrepreneurs in Kyrgyzstan's textile industry, reports Marat Uraliyev, of the Vecherniy
Bishkek newspaper. Sariyev quit this week over corruption charges, reports
Reuters. But his successor, Sooronbai Zheenbekov, an ally of President Almazbek
Atambayev, is unlikely to change the country’s foreign policy much. Kyrgyzstan will still develop relations with
Vietnam.
Relations
with Other Key Players
Despite the Vietnam War of the Sixties and Seventies, the
government of Vietnam since 1988 has strengthened its relations with the US and
with ASEAN countries, at least in comparison with its ties to Russia. By 2015,
US-Vietnam trade exceeded Russia-Vietnam trade 15-fold. Nevertheless, Russia remains
a key military partner of Vietnam.
Russian-made weapons are 90% of Vietnam’s arms purchases.
The Spratly and Paracel Islands have been bones of
contention between Vietnam and four other East Asian countries. China,
Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan, and Vietnam claim the Spratly Islands; and
China, Vietnam and Taiwan claim the Paracels. China and Vietnam clashed in arms
over the Paracels in 1974 and over the Sprawls in 1988; Vietnam lost 70 and 60
troops, respectively. In 2012, China created Sansha city as its headquarters in
the Paracels, angering Vietnam and the Philippines. A year later, the
Philippines said it would challenge Chinese claims before a UN tribunal,
reports BBC.com. Vietnam and the Philippines may seek US support in any more
serious conflict.
Fearing Chinese expansion, the US may increase cooperation
with Vietnam, whose relations with China were damaged by the 1979 war, report Mikhail Moshkin and Andrey Rezchikov, of
the Vzglyad newspaper. During
that war, China punished Vietnam for invading Cambodia and overthrowing the
Khmer Rouge as well as for allying with the Soviet Union. In the one-month war,
China incurred severe losses without accomplishing any strategic objectives,
reports the National Interest. Since then, relations between Russia and
China have strengthened, especially in suspicion of the West.
Russia may have trouble maintaining good relations with both
countries.
The accession of Vietnam to the Trans-Pacific Partnership, a
US-led free trade agreement of 12 Pacific Rim countries, is expected to raise
the country’s GDP by 10%, due to cuts in tariff and non-tariff protection of
large markets such as Canada, the US and Australia, according to the World
Bank’s 2016 report “Prospects of the Global Economy.” Since sanctions-bound
Russia is not in the Trans-Pacific Partnership, the trade accord with Vietnam
may serve as a gateway for re-exports.
Analysis
Having cheap labor, stable governments and predictable
relations with the West, most of East Asia will be affected by political
turbulence much less than will Europe or the Middle East. The migrant crisis in
Europe, as well as the Chinese and other Asian diasporas in North America, are
likely to be severe enough to discourage the West from military operations or
diplomatic pressures to remove Asian dictatorships. Europe, the Middle East,
and the European part of the Commonwealth of Independent States will probably
still play central roles in the political struggle between the West and Russia
during the rest of the 2010s. For Vietnam and China, economic development will
take precedence over war memories and territorial disputes. They will remain
open to the West and the Eurasian Economic Union. The latter should compete for
the Vietnamese market and try to attract Vietnamese suppliers and investors.
Vietnam’s large population and population density benefit its
trading partners, including those in the Union. Vietnam is liberalizing its
economy, playing up export industries and playing down import-competing
industries.
Russia is likely to be the main beneficiary of the trade
pact, since this enables it to import Vietnam-made goods through China and via
the Pacific. The Kremlin’s embargo on European-made goods increases Russia’s
demand for Vietnamese products. While cooperation with Vietnam can yield
political profits for Belarus, due to similarity of political regimes, food
trade will be limited, being overshadowed by the purchase of raw foodstuffs
from Europe and re-exporting or processing them for sale in Russia. For
Kazakhstan, economic relations with China will matter much more than those with
Vietnam, but it may gain from diversifying exports and suppliers.
Armenia and Kyrgyzstan will gain little from the trade
agreement. Their high transportation costs hinder trade with Vietnam, and Kyrgyzstan
competes with Vietnam in textiles. Attracting Vietnamese investors for
start-ups will be hard, since Kyrgyzstan has a reputation of being unstable and
its local market is tiny. Vietnam, too, should build its reputation in the
region, since Chinese-made products dominate the market.
Since the trade agreement implies different benefits for
different countries of the Eurasian Economic Union, and since all of them need
industrialization, diversification and modernization, they may amend the pact
someday. They may propose additions to the “sensitive products” category, and
they may engender conflicts of interest. As small economies, Kyrgyzstan and
Armenia may be initially ignored. Even so, other Union members have an interest
in a compromise with these countries, since both, especially Kyrgyzstan, have
histories of revolts against unpopular measures. Also, the preservation of
non-tariff barriers implies that many members of the accord may still revert to
subsidies, quotas and tax privileges, to the extent that it does not violate
WTO rules, if the country is a member of the WTO. Given Vietnam’s
interventionist policy, this may eventually become the case for more liberal
economies, such as Kazakhstan’s.
Conclusion
Despite authoritarian rule, Vietnam has developed a mixed
economy. Corruption remains serious – but industrialization, economic reform,
and the Chinese slowdown have enabled the nation to vie with China.
Vietnam trades extensively with Russia, moderately with
Belarus, and scantily with other members of the Eurasian Economic Union. By
eliminating tariffs, the pact encourages trade with Kazakhstan, Armenia and
Kyrgyzstan. But China is likely to trade more with these countries than Vietnam
will. In fact, Kyrgyz producers face tough competition from Vietnam. Though its
government hopes to attract Vietnamese investments, its textile producers lack
the reputation of other East Asian firms.
Vietnam’s political relations with China and the US remain
uneasy, due to memories of the Vietnam War and the 1979 Sino-Vietnamese War,
and, in the case of China, to territorial disputes. But both countries trade a
lot with Vietnam. Strong and stable governments, stable relations with the
West, and the lesson of the migrant crisis in Europe will discourage the West
from eliminating or weakening authoritarian regimes in East Asia, including
those of China and Vietnam. As far as the West is concerned, in East Asia,
“it’s the economy, stupid.”
Dmitriy Belyanin
has a Master’s degree of Business Administration in Finance and a Bachelor of
Arts degree in Economics from KIMEP University.
Since 2007, he has been writing on issues in economics and finance
ranging from stock markets to environmental economics. He is the associate
editor of this blog.
References
Armenpress. Armenia will have a chance to ship wine and
brandy into Vietnam on privileged conditions.
http://armenpress.am/rus/news/826883/armeniya-poluchit-vozmozhnost-vvozit-vo-vetnam-vino-i-konyak.html. 2016.
Chesnok. Vietnam is
becoming cheaper and closer. http://4esnok.by/mneniya/vetnam-stanovitsya-blizhe-i-deshevle-ili-kak-soglashenie-o-svobodnoj-torgovle-preodolevayut-geograficheskie-ogranicheniya/. 2015.
Embassy of the Republic of Belarus in the Socialist Republic
of Vietnam. Trade and economic
cooperation between Belarus and Vietnam.
http://vietnam.mfa.gov.by/ru/bilateral_relations/trade_economic/. 2016.
Eurasian Commission.
Questions and answers about the free trade agreement between the
Eurasian Economic Union and the Socialist Republic of Vietnam. http://www.eurasiancommission.org/ru/act/trade/dotp/sogl_torg/Documents/Вопросы и ответы по Соглашению о свободной
торговле между странами ЕАЭС и Вьетнамом.pdf. 2015.
Gaifutdinova, V. What
will Kazakhstan trade with Vietnam? http://forbes.kz/finances/integration/chem_budet_torgovat_kazahstan_s_vetnamom/. 2015.
ITC Trade Map.
Overview of trade relations of Russia and Vietnam in 2014. Exporters of Russia. http://www.rusexporter.ru/research/country/detail/2511/. 2015.
Kabar.kg. Kyrgyzstan
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