There are 610 electric and electronic components production enterprises in the country, all operating on a scale far below the domestic industry |
Sporadic manufacturing and business
According to the Central Institute of Economic Management (CIEM), since 2015, Vietnam has been the 12th-ranking electronic exporter over the world and the third-ranking in the ASEAN. The export turnover of the electronic sector shows significant results. It is expected to exceed $70 billion in 2017 and enable Vietnam to become one of the largest countries exporting electronic products worldwide.
Out of the ten largest electronic projects in Vietnam since 2003, Samsung ranks first with four mananufacturing complexes and a total registered capital sum of over $17.3 billion, followed by projects of Inter, LG, Canon, Nokia, Panasonic, but no large-scale projects by Vietnamese enterprises.
Despite the country’s rising exports, Vietnamese electronics producers are still weak. Companies like Vietnam Electronics and Informatics Corporation (Viettronics) and Hanel Corporation mainly import SKD (semi knocked down) and IKD (incompletely knocked down) units to assemble and meet urgent market demand. Developing without long-term strategy, the Vietnamese electronics market is in serious imbalance now.
There are 610 electric and electronic components producers nationwide, accounting for 53.28 per cent of the total electronic sector’s businesses—a disconcertingly low proportion. Almost all Vietnamese businesses deploy sporadic orders, providing materials and simple components, such as packaging, plastic spare parts, metal, and logistics services such as transportation and sanitation. They have not been able to manufacture important components with higher added value yet. Almost all electronic products are assembled from imported components.
Nguyen Duc Cuong, sales manager of Sunpla Corporation, said that the partners of Vietnam’s electronic supporting enterprises come from Korea and Japan. Co-operating with Korean partners, Vietnamese enterprises often sign contracts with Samsung or LG’s subcontractors. Therefore, Vietnamese firms do not know specific plans and are stuck carrying out contracts of sporadic orders.
With Japanese partners like Canon and Brother, Vietnamese businesses sign contracts for a series of products for a relatively long time. However, these contracts, along with indirect contracts with subcontractors, are relatively few in number. Additionally, the linkages between domestic enterprises are very weak.
Strengthening linkages
Bang Hyun Woo, deputy director general of Samsung Vietnam, said that Vietnamese companies produce more sophisticated components rather than just packaging and palletising. The localisation rate of Samsung mobile phones was 57 per cent at the end of 2016. As many as 29 Vietnamese firms are direct suppliers for Samsung now.
Samsung has been doing their utmost to seek out and support Vietnamese firms to take part in its supply chain. However, Vietnamese businesses have to raise their knowledge by inviting experts who have long experience working with Korean and Japanese firms.
“The linkage between domestic and foreign invested enterprises has been improving, but is still weak,” said Do Thi Thuy Huong from the Vietnam Electronic Industries Association (VEIA). "Almost all Vietnamese electronic enterprises are small- and medium-sized, and it is hard to make large investments to meet the high demands of foreign invested firms."
Major expos to promote Vietnamese supporting industries
Vietnam Hardware & Hand Tools 2017 will take place on December 6-9 in Ho Chi Minh City and is expected to drive the Vietnamese supporting industries forward. |
Samsung Sourcing Fair 2017: more opportunities for local firms
The 4th workshop and exhibition on supporting industries - Samsung Sourcing Fair 2017 was held today in the northern province of Bac Ninh by Samsung Electronics Vietnam in association with the Ministry of Industry and Trade to connect domestic component suppliers to participate in Samsung’s global supply chain. |
Localisation: game-changer for Vietnamese manufacturing industry
Reed Tradex Co., Ltd. is organising Nepcon Vietnam 2017, a special exhibition on SMT and testing technologies, equipment, and supporting industries for electronics manufacturing, in September 2017 in Hanoi, with the aim of helping companies connect and ultimately push the development of the field. Kasinee Phantteeranurak, project manager of Reed Tradex Co., Ltd., talked to VIR’s Hong Anh about how localisation is the best way for Vietnam to take advantage of foreign direct investment in this field and make electronics manufacturing a driver of sustainable economic growth. |
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