According to a report delivered at the event, the collective economy and cooperatives have recorded new strides in quality and quantity development, managed to address lingering weaknesses, and increasingly affirmed their development potential and prospects.

However, there remain many problems in the collective economy, which has yet to fully optimize its potential, the report noted.

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Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh speaks at the ational teleconference on February 15.

There were 27,445 cooperatives and cooperative alliances nationwide in 2021, up 41 percent from 2013, employing about 1.1 - 1.2 million workers per year. In 2020, each cooperative earned about VND 4.3 billion (USD 188,900 at the current exchange rate) in income and VND 314 million in profit on average, up 61 percent and 88 percent from 2013, respectively.

Over the past years, per capita income of cooperatives’ workers has been on the rise, from VND 44.6 million in 2017 to VND 52.8 million in 2019, narrowing the gap with the income of enterprises’ workers.

Addressing the event, Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh affirmed that the collective economy, with cooperatives being the core, is an important economic element always facilitated by the Party and State and gradually getting established in the national economy.

He highlighted some key targets, orientations, and measures for promoting the collective economy in the time ahead, noting that it is necessary to enhance Party cadres and members, and people’s awareness of the collective economy, mobilize more resources for and remove obstacles to its development, fine-tune related legal regulations and policies, and improve the collective economy’s capacity and operational efficiency.

The Government leader also suggested some directions for amending the law so as to create a favorable institutional environment for the collective economy to live up to its role in the formation of a socialist-oriented market economy.

Source: VNA