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South Africa hopes to bridge Vietnam trade gap
10:15, 2015/05/27
South Africa wants to expand investment and trade ties but narrow its trade deficit with Vietnam, a visiting business delegation from that country told a meeting in HCM City on May 25.
Brian Soldaat of South Africa's Department of Trade and Industry is leading the delegation of 16 business executives to explore business opportunities and exchange information.
The purpose of the visit was to narrow the trade deficit with Vietnam, he said.
South African firms interested in the Vietnam market are in sectors like food, wine, fruits and vegetables, chocolate, cosmetics, geological exploration services and others, with most wanting to find agents, distributors and retailers for their products here.
Soldaat also told Vietnamese companies about opportunities in his country.

 
Illustrative image
Illustrative image
South Africa is seeking investment in sectors like agro-processing, business process, transport equipment, shipbuilding, pulp and paper, furniture, green economy industries, and automotives and components.
Its stable economic growth, abundance of natural resources and modern infrastructure plus investment incentives offered by the government meant South Africa offered good opportunities for Vietnamese investors, he said.
In addition, South Africa would be a gateway for Vietnamese products to the African continent, he said.
Nguyen The Hung, deputy director of the Vietnam Chamber of Commerce and Industry in HCM City, said trade between Vietnam and South Africa had increased significantly but remained far below potential.
Bilateral trade had been worth US$962 million last year, a year-on-year increase of 5%, with Vietnam's exports accounting for US$815 million, Hung said.
Vietnam's main exports to South Africa are mobile phones and accessories, footwear, garment and textile, coffee, rice, gemstones and metals, timber and timber products, computers, seafood, milk, cashew nut, and instant noodles.
It imports iron and steel, base metals, timber and timber products, chemicals, plastic materials, cotton, and fertilisers.
With such exchange activities, trade between the two countries was likely to expand greatly in the coming time, he said.
The meeting was organised by the VCCI in collaboration with South Africa's embassy in Vietnam and its Department of Industry and Trade.
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