Vietnam is still lagging behind many countries in terms of technology readiness, innovation, and labor productivity.
According to the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO), Vietnam ranked 44th in the Global Innovation Index 2021. With this position, it still tops the lower-middle-income countries but has fallen two places from last year.
To address shortcomings and create stronger momentum for innovation and science - technology, human resources have a significant role to play.
The 13th National Party Congress identified developing human resources, especially high-quality ones, as one of the three strategic breakthroughs.
With the viewpoint that people are the center, the target, and also the impulse for development, in achieving ambitious development goals, Vietnam will have to exert efforts to develop and fully tap into the huge potential of Vietnamese people not only at home but also abroad.
The Politburo has been affirming that OVs are an important resource for national construction, development, and safeguarding.
About 5.3 million Vietnamese are living and working in more than 130 countries and territories around the world, 80 percent of them in developed countries, and about 50 percent young expatriates.
Those under the age of 45 account for some 60 percent of the number of Vietnamese in the U.S., Germany, and Australia - the second homelands of over 50 percent of the total OVs, according to preliminary data of the State Committee on OVs. Young expatriates hold huge potential for contributing to innovation and science - technology.
Regarding intellectual power, about 500,000 OVs hold a bachelor’s or higher-level degrees, including many working at research institutes, universities, and technique - technology centers of such developed nations as the U.S., Japan, and Canada.
In terms of finance, unofficial statistics show that the OV community has an annual income of about USD 50 billion. The income of young expatriates can reach up to USD 30 billion per year.
Particularly, though young expatriates were born and grew up overseas, the Vietnamese origin is the one differentiating them from other foreign investors and intellectuals when coming to work in the country. In the recent past, a number of young OVs have returned and contributed considerably to the homeland.
Source: VNA