Vietnam delivers:Â 8% GDP growth in 2025, a booming stock market, and official entry into the ranks of upper-middle-income economies.
But behind the shiny facades of new mega stadiums and airports, cracks are emerging. The country is heavily reliant on a handful of giants and struggles with a risky dependence on China.
âťťWe are entering an era of national rise.
To Lam, Vietnam’s top leader
Details
🏗️ Concrete Boom: Vietnam is building at breakneck speed. Infrastructure spending jumped 27% to $32bn. For 2026, another 34% budget increase is planned. The goal: 10% growth—at almost any cost.
🏦 “Chaebol,” Vietnamese-style: Vietnam’s stock market rose 37%. But nearly three-quarters of those gains came from just three stocks tied to the Vingroup empire. Without that single conglomerate, the rally would have been a modest 11%.
đźš§Â The Vin Fail: The fragility of the model showed in a $67bn railway project. Vingroup pulled out after the state refused to provide interest-free loans covering 80% of the cost.
🇨🇳 China’s Shadow: Vietnam’s trade deficit with China widened by 40%. The country increasingly acts as a final-assembly hub for Chinese components to bypass U.S. tariffs.
📉 The Power Puzzle: Electricity consumption grew by only about 5%. Historically, energy demand should rise much faster. That raises doubts about how much of the growth reflects real production.
HCMC as a Lifeline?
Vietnam is trying to break out of its rigid model. Resolution 260 turns Ho Chi Minh City into a test lab for a more modern growth path:
- Bureaucracy Bypass: HCMC can now approve mega-projects independently, without waiting for slow approvals from Hanoi—aimed at clearing the investment backlog.
- Logistics over Assembly: With the new Cái Mép Hạ Free Trade Zone, Vietnam wants to move from being a “gatekeeper for Chinese parts” to an independent global logistics hub.
- The Transit-Finance Loop (TOD): The city builds metro lines, keeps 100% of the land-value gains around stations, and reinvests them directly into infrastructure.
🥡 Takeaway
Vietnam is growing fast, but prosperity and value creation are largely booked by foreign corporations. More than 77% of export value comes from foreign firms, while exports by domestic companies recently fell by 6%.
For now, Vietnam is a highly efficient host for foreign capital rather than an independent economic powerhouse. The 10% growth target for 2026 is a risky bet. Long-term success hinges on whether reforms like those in HCMC can reduce dependence on global multinationals and conglomerate giants.
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