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Vietnam's devaluation alarms rival exporters

While few Asian neighbours are likely to follow Hanoi's lead on currency, competitors such as Thailand brace for fallout.

 

Vietnam's decision to devalue its currency raises tensions across Asia as the region's export-driven economies jostle for an edge amid a slow recovery in orders from the U.S. and Europe.
 
Vietnam shaved 5% off the value of its currency, the dong, on Wednesday, its third devaluation since June 2008. It also increased interest rates by one percentage point, to 8%. The moves were driven primarily by domestic concerns, including a need to combat speculative pressure that has weighed on Vietnam's economy for more than a year.
 
The devaluation makes Vietnam's manufactured goods cheaper than those of many other Asian countries, improving its relative position in global trade. 
 
 
 
A factory worker in the northern Vietnamese province of Vinh Phuc helps assemble a motor scooter. Vietnam's currency devaluation this week gives it an edge over other Asian exporters. (AFP/Getty Image)
 
Thai Finance Minister Korn Chatikavanij, whose country has spent at least $15 billion this year to slow the appreciation of its currency and keep it competitive with the yuan, said in a phone interview Wednesday that Thailand could see some "marginal impact" in low-margin export industries such as textiles after Vietnam's devaluation, but that he was hopeful the broader Thai economy wouldn't be buffeted too much.
 
Industry leaders, however, are worried. "The Thai baht is rising too quickly in comparison with some of our competitors, and we in the private sector are telling the government that it is rising too quickly -- but it seems they aren't doing anything," said Thamrong Tritiprasert, chairman of the footwear section of the Federation of Thai Industries, a trade association.
 
Economists say Vietnam's move is unlikely to trigger copycat devaluations elsewhere. Vietnam's economy is relatively small, and most Asian countries are more concerned with currency policies in China -- a much bigger rival than Vietnam.
 
But Vietnam's actions matter a great deal in some industries, including textiles and agriculture, and could accelerate a longer-term shift of manufacturing to the country, which already has the advantage of a large and low-cost labor force. Vietnam's exports grew faster in percentage terms than other Asian economies' in recent years, and the country attracted more foreign direct investment in 2007 than its much-larger rival Thailand. It is among the world's top exporters of rice, coffee and shrimp.
 
Vietnam has economic problems, though, many of which contributed to the decision to devalue. In sharp contrast to many other emerging markets, whose currencies have gained value against the dollar this year, Vietnam continues to face severe downward pressure on its currency, in part because it is one of Asia's only economies with both a fiscal budget deficit and a current-account deficit.
 
 
 
 
Wednesday's devaluation, in which the central bank lowered the midpoint of the dong's daily trading range 5.16%, was an attempt to help stabilise the situation. The accompanying one-percentage-point rise in interest rates, in effect Dec. 1, was designed to make sure there will be no further depreciation.
 
"This time our solution is to strongly intervene," State Bank of Vietnam Governor Nguyen Van Giau said.
 
Many economists say they are skeptical that will be enough to halt the downward pressure on the dong. "The authorities are buying themselves some time with this move," says Tim Condon, head of Asian research at ING in Singapore. But Vietnam needs the global recovery to pick up steam to boost exports and reduce the country's trade and balance-of-payments deficits before the situation can be remedied, he and others say.
 
Growth is still relatively strong in Vietnam, though, and the lower currency values could give a further shot to exporters. The World Bank expects Vietnam's GDP to climb 5.5% this year, compared with 6.2% in 2008.

 

Source: Wall Street Journal
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