The consensus was reached during a working session between Vietnamese Ambassador to Israel Nguyen Ky Son and Israeli Minister of Economy and Industry Nir Barkat in Jerusalem on June 29.
Barkat hailed Vietnam as one of the world's key manufacturing hubs, supported by a population of more than 100 million, a diligent and disciplined workforce, and an increasingly attractive investment climate. These attributes offer Israeli firms more opportunities to widen partnerships, investment and commercial deals in Vietnam.
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A view of the working session |
Vietnam-Israel relations are flourishing across a wide range of areas, from economy and trade to people-to-people exchanges, he said, adding that with VIFTA now in force, the two countries should make better use of their complementary economic strengths to raise two-way trade to new heights.
He proposed that the two sides convene the next meeting of the Inter-Governmental Committee at an early date to review cooperation, clear obstacles and set new directions for future collaboration.
Turning to investment prospects, Barkat said Israel is one of the world’s leading innovation hubs, with strengths in artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, medical technology and high-tech agriculture. Around 80% of Israeli firms operate in cutting-edge sectors and are well practiced at commercializing novel products in global markets.
Israel stands ready to host Vietnamese business delegations scouting for market opportunities, and is weighing its own trade missions to Vietnam to pinpoint new investment and cooperation prospects, he added.
Son reiterated that Vietnam consistently values its friendship and broad-based cooperation with Israel, especially in economy, trade, sci-tech and innovation.
According to him, VIFTA, which entered into force in November 2024, has given bilateral trade a powerful boost, pushing flows near the USD 4 billion mark and cementing Vietnam’s status as one of Israel’s key trade partners in Asia and globally, he said.
As there remains ample untapped potential, particularly in sectors where Israel’s technological edges meet Vietnam’s strong development needs, he called on both sides to make fuller use of VIFTA's preferential terms to scale up investment, technology transfer and business connectivity.
He also suggested Israel continue widening market access for Vietnamese products while bolstering sci-tech cooperation by combining Israeli tech expertise with Vietnam's resources and market potential.
Host and guest promised to keep agencies and business communities in regular contact to effectively deliver on the agreed areas, thus driving economic, trade and investment ties.
Data released at the meeting showed that two-way trade hit USD 3.63 billion in 2025, an 11.8% annual gain. Of which, Vietnam's exports totaled USD 865 million, up 8.9%.
During January-May, bilateral trade neared USD 1.6 billion. Vietnam's exports to Israel jumped 30.6% year-on-year to USD 462 million. If the current growth momentum holds, full-year trade is on track to reach around USD 3.9 billion, with Vietnam's exports set to surpass USD 1 billion for the first time.
On the investment side, Israel now has 45 active projects worth some USD 156 million in Vietnam, while Vietnamese companies have poured roughly USD 78 million into Israel.
Source: VNA