Chairing the September 10 meeting of Working Group No. 8, which monitors, addresses bottlenecks, and promotes public investment disbursement for six ministries and central agencies, the Deputy PM pointed out that their disbursement progress in August remained significantly lower than the average of other ministries, central agencies, and the nation as a whole.
    |
 |
Deputy Prime Minister Mai Van Chinh chairs a meeting of Working Group No.8, which monitors, addresses bottlenecks, and promotes public investment disbursement for six ministries and central agencies. |
He stressed the need to identify and address the root causes, noting that responsibility primarily rests with project owners. Shortcomings included weak investment preparation, incomplete environmental impact assessments, and delays in fire safety and prevention approvals.
Beyond objective challenges, Chinh underlined subjective factors such as insufficient leadership, lack of determination, and inadequate oversight in certain ministries and agencies. As remedies, he called for closer monitoring on a daily and weekly basis, with clear assignments of responsibilities, timelines, and outcomes, alongside measurable indicators of progress.
For sector-specific difficulties, he recommended early preparation, engaging expert consultants, and strengthening forecasting capacity to assess project feasibility.
The Deputy PM also emphasized stricter discipline in public capital disbursement, faster progress in site clearance and construction, and the need to resolve issues relating to land and natural resources. He urged relevant units to press contractors to complete documentation and accelerate finalization of capital settlements.
Looking ahead, he reaffirmed that speeding up public investment disbursement remains a top priority. He instructed heads of ministries and agencies to direct project owners to mobilize resources, swiftly resolve project-specific obstacles, and personally oversee solutions within their authority.
At the meeting, Deputy Minister of Finance Nguyen Duc Tam reported that the total state budget investment plan for 2025 assigned by the Prime Minister to the six ministries and central agencies under Working Group No. 8 amounts to 4.079 trillion VND (154.5 million USD), accounting for 2.2% of the national plan allocated to all central-level bodies.
As of August 31, three of the six ministries and agencies had fully allocated their assigned funds. Their estimated disbursement stood at 951.6 billion VND, or 23.33% of the Prime Minister’s plan, well below the national average of 46.26%.
Source: VNA