Deputy Minister of Finance Tran Quoc Phuong has recently met with World Bank (WB) experts to discuss the results of the 2024 Public Debt Management Performance Assessment (DeMPA) for Vietnam.
Since 2024, the WB team has worked with Vietnam’s Ministry of Finance and relevant authorities to evaluate the country’s debt management practices, benchmarking them against international standards and identifying areas for improvement.
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(Photo for illustration: The World Bank has rated Vietnam’s overall debt management positively in its 2024 report) |
The WB highlighted several strengths of Vietnam, including clear definition of debt management roles, objectives, and borrowing purposes, strong coordination among stakeholders and skilled staff managing debt, high-quality debt management strategy, with regular public debt disclosure, and effective auditing by the State Audit Office of Vietnam, with reports submitted to the National Assembly and made public.
It recognized Vietnam’s strong alignment with fiscal and monetary policies, along with structured borrowing and on-lending procedures.
The WB also noted improvements in cash flow forecasting, treasury management, and debt recording, both domestic and external.
However, Lars Jassen, Senior Debt Management Specialist at the WB, proposed several areas for improvement, including more transparent reporting to the National Assembly, lack of specific risk indicators in the annual borrowing plan, and absence of audits for operations, fiscal risk reporting, and debt sustainability analysis (DSA).
Jassen and other experts recommended diversifying funding sources and enhancing the performance of Vietnam’s debt management agency.
Deputy Minister Tran Quoc Phuong acknowledged the importance of public debt management for Vietnam’s economic and social development, particularly as the country enters a new growth phase. He emphasized the need for increased capital mobilization, both domestically and internationally, to achieve economic growth targets while ensuring sustainable long-term benefits.
As preferential financing decreases, raising capital will become more challenging. In this context, the bank’s recommendations are vital for Vietnam, he said.
He also encouraged continued collaboration between the WB and the Ministry of Finance’s Debt and External Economic Relations Department to further improve debt management.
The DeMPA assessment includes 15 indicators grouped into key debt management functions, such as governance, strategy development, borrowing activities, cash flow forecasting, and risk management. The performance is rated on a scale from A (best practices) to D (requirements not met), with C indicating minimum standards.
Vietnam’s first DeMPA was conducted in 2011, so the criteria now become outdated. Updating the assessment is crucial for tracking the 2017 Public Debt Management Law’s implementation and assessing progress in debt management practices.
Source: VNA