The event aimed to look into aspects related to the 2018 market, thereby proposing measures to control inflation, as well as step up economic restructuring and growth for 2019 and the years following.
Deputy Director of the Academy of Finance (AOF) Pham Van Lien said that monetary, credit, fiscal, foreign exchange, market and price management measures proposed at the event should not only be adopted this year but also put the economy on sustainable growth path in the long-term.
Director of the AOF’s Institute of Economics-Finance (IEF) Nguyen Ba Minh said that despite several advantages in 2018, the Vietnamese economy faced difficulties such as high import tariffs in the US and a low disbursement of public investment.
According to the General Statistics Office, Vietnam’s gross domestic product grew by 7.08 percent in 2018, a record for the 2011-2018 period. The agro-forestry-fisheries sector expanded by 3.76 percent, contributing 8.7 percent of the economic growth; while industry-construction rose by 8.85 percent, contributing 48.6 percent; and services went up 7.03 percent, or 42.7 percent towards the growth.
Notably, the agro-forestry-fisheries sector posted the highest growth during the 2012-2018 period. Manufacturing and processing remained a key driving force of the economy with a growth of 12.98 percent.
The consumer price index rose by 3.45 percent in 2018, lower than the target of nearly 4 percent set by the National Assembly.
Nguyen Duc Do from the IEF said that thanks to falling petrol prices, inflation stood at 2.98 percent in December 2018, lower than the 3.89 percent in 2017 and 3.98 percent in October 2018.
He added that inflation in early 2019 is likely to be below 3 percent after the Ministry of Finance and the Ministry of Industry and Trade decided to adjust down petrol prices by 500 VND per litre.
Do also pointed out other factors in curbing inflation this year, such as stable pork prices, low pressure on foreign exchange rates, and waning tension between the US and China.
Source: VNA