In an interview granted to the Vietnam News Agency, Hai, who is an adjunct senior lecturer of policy and politics at the Faculty of Creative Industries, Education and Social Justice under Queensland University of Technology’s School of Justice, said this is Wong's second official visit to Vietnam and her fourth meeting with Foreign Minister Bui Thanh Son since she became foreign minister in May last year.

The visit comes as the two countries are celebrating the 50th anniversary of the bilateral diplomatic relations and five years of strategic partnership this year, he added.

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Vietnamese Minister of Foreign Affairs Bui Thanh Son (right) and her Australian counterpart Penny Wong at a meeting last year

Last year, two-way trade turnover between Vietnam and Australia reached a new record of 15.7 billion USD, up 26.91% year-on-year. Vietnam has become Australia's 10th biggest trade partner for the first time, and Australia is currently Vietnam's seventh largest trade partner.

According to the expert, more Vietnamese and Australian visitors are coming in both directions. Statistics from the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism of Vietnam showed that before the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, Vietnam welcomed 300,000 Australian visitors and 125,000 Vietnamese tourists went to Australia.

In the first quarter of this year alone, nearly 82,000 Australian visitors arrived in Vietnam, an increase of 14.4% compared to the figure in 2019, whereas the number of Vietnamese visitors to Australia made up 10% of the outbound visitors, according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics.

To promote trade and investment to a level that matches up with potentials and the strategic partnership, the two countries have signed agreements and founded several mechanisms.

Both Vietnam and Australia are members of the ASEAN-Australia-New Zealand Free Trade Agreement (AANZFTA), the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), and the Comprehensive Progressive Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP). However, what has been done thus far is insufficient to accelerate a breakthrough in trade, business, investment, and tourism growth from both sides.

More favorable conditions and simplified customs procedures are required to promote more liberalized flows of trade and to remove barriers that hinder the traveling of the citizens, Hai said.

During talks in her first visit to Vietnam last year, leading officials of the two ministries agreed to step up cooperation in the fields of tourism, education and labor in the post-pandemic era. Currently, the two countries are finding ways to make a speedy recovery for the tourism industry which was severely affected by the pandemic while minimizing the impact of the conflicts in Ukraine on trade.

According to Hai, it was necessary for Vietnam and Australia to strengthen security cooperation and border control with advanced identification technologies, and hold constructive and candid dialogues as trusted strategic partners to address each other’s concerns.

He stressed that if the two sides adopt a visa exemption policy for each other’s citizens, it will be a real breakthrough, contributing to further strengthening the cooperation relationship in the coming time.

Source: VNA