Vietnam’s next leader faces crunch time with economy, demographics

January brought a fresh gust of rumors about the whereabouts of Nguyen Phu Trong, the Communist Party of Vietnam general secretary. He hadn’t been seen in public for a few weeks and failed to meet with the visiting president of Indonesia, leading some commentators to speculate that his health was deteriorating once again. 

We had been here in 2019 when it was rumored – accurately, it turned out – that Trong had suffered a stroke while on a visit down south. This time around, Trong showed up again rather quickly, delivering a speech to the National Assembly on January 15. But rumors of the 79 year-old’s failing health are a reminder of his and the country’s frailty.  

Given that party chiefs tend to rule for two five-year terms, we can assume that the next general-secretary, if voted in at the next Communist Party of Vietnam (CPV) National Congress in 2026 and if Trong does actually retire then, will rule until 2036. 

It is not overly dramatic to say that the next party chief will govern during the most consequential decade of Vietnam’s development. 

Women work at the Hung Viet garment export factory in Hung Yen province, Vietnam, Dec. 30, 2020. (Kham/Reuters)
Women work at the Hung Viet garment export factory in Hung Yen province, Vietnam, Dec. 30, 2020. (Kham/Reuters)

Not least, that person  is likely to enter office facing even more uncertain world politics. 

One uncertainty is China, whose economy is in a terrible state and which is set to experience perhaps the worst demographic crisis of any country in known history. 

The other is a retreating America. The great debate in the United States right now is whether to maintain its post-1945 interest in world affairs or to descend into nationalism and protectionism.

If Washington chooses the latter – and Donald Trump’s possible re-election later this year would be an indication of that – the globalization we’ve known since 1945 that has depended on U.S. security guarantees, not least to keep the seas safe for world trade, could collapse. 

Vietnam has arguably been one of the biggest beneficiaries of globalization – perhaps second only to China in recent decades. More to the point, China and the United States combined account for 46 percent of Vietnam’s exports and 40 percent of its imports. 

Demographic time bomb

Hanoi can do little to rectify China’s troubled economy or dispel America’s isolationist tendencies. But it can clean its own house. 

The most existential concern, as framed by a headline in the state-run press last year, is its “demographic time bomb.” Thailand is set to lose 10 million people of working age by 2050, about a quarter of its current workforce. China, based on conservative estimates, will lose 217 million workers, down from 984 million today. 

Vietnam, thanks to its citizens having so many children in the 1990s, will only see its working-age population dip by around 253,000 people by 2050, from 67.6 million now – a 0.3 percent fall. The workforce will have passed its peak by the mid-2030s.  

Instead, Vietnam appears set to suffer the problem of too many retirees. Vietnam became an “aging” society in 2011, when 7 percent of its population was aged over 65. It will become an “aged” society, when that demographic is more than 14 percent of the population, in 2034. 

Elderly people exercise at a public park in Hanoi, Oct. 9, 2018. (Kham/Reuters)
Elderly people exercise at a public park in Hanoi, Oct. 9, 2018. (Kham/Reuters)

Vietnam will be the fourth “aged” society in Southeast Asia, after Singapore, Thailand and Brunei. The percentage of people over 65, those who don’t work and are net extractors of state money, will double between now and 2050, from 10 percent to 20 percent. 

In fact, people over 60 will go from 14.7 to 26.5 percent of the population over this timeframe. That’s the figure to bear in mind since Vietnam’s retirement age for men will be 62 in 2028 and 60 for women in 2035. 

Moreover, the proportion of retirees will probably be higher than 26 percent of the population since women, who retire earlier, outnumber men by the time they’re 60 years old. So it’s possible that Vietnam is looking at around a fifth of its population in retirement by 2030 and nearly a third by 2050. 

Unlike Thailand and China, whose demographic future is dire, more so than some analysts think, Vietnam won’t see a declining workforce at the same time as an increase in retirees, so it won’t be left trying to scrape less money from fewer workers for greater welfare payments to more retirees. 

However, Vietnam is starting from a lower wealth base. If its GDP per capita doubles between now and 2034, it would still be on par with Thailand’s GDP per capita today. If it triples, it will be on par with today’s Malaysia, which won’t become “aged” until 2042. 

Tough decisions won’t wait

Vietnam risks becoming old before it becomes rich, unless, that is, it can turbocharge its economy over the coming decade and half. According to the World Bank, Vietnam has until 2042 before its “demographic window of opportunity will close.” 

The state will have to find vastly more money for its retirees, sapping funds that could be invested in infrastructure and education. 

Spending on education has already fallen from around 18 percent of government expenditure in the early 2010s to around 15 percent. Infrastructure spending has been criminally misused. Just look at the badly managed Ho Chi Minh City metro project. 

Currently, average social insurance payments are just $240 per month, a little over two-thirds of workers’ average income. A lengthy World Bank report noted that “Countries with old-age dependency ratios equal to Vietnam’s projected level in 2035 typically spend 8-9 percent of GDP on public pensions, well above the 2-3 percent that Vietnam has spent over the past decade”. 

Commuters fill the street during morning rush hour in Ho Chi Minh City, Jan. 12, 2024. (Jae C. Hong/AP)
Commuters fill the street during morning rush hour in Ho Chi Minh City, Jan. 12, 2024. (Jae C. Hong/AP)

By today’s GDP, that means the Vietnamese state will need to find something in the range of $18-21 billion annually just for pensions within a decade. That’s not counting the additional financial strain of an aged society on the government and on households for health services. 

Demographics ought to focus minds in Hanoi on the fact that the good times won’t last forever, and the population dividend Vietnam has been gifted since the 1990s will be over quite soon. 

Things have to change now. In 2021, for instance, labor productivity was valued at just US$10.22 per hour, compared to US$13.53 in China and US$15.06 in Thailand. 

Vietnamese companies have barely any international footprint at the moment. More work is needed to incorporate Vietnam’s economy into supply chains in Cambodia and Laos, both of which will see their workforces increase in size by 2050. 

Private consumption as a percentage of GDP has fallen since 2015, making Vietnam more dependent on exports. That’s risky in this era of deglobalization. Then there are issues over whether upriver damming on the Mekong will decimate Vietnam’s food production – thus increasing imports in the future – and how climate change will impact the economy. 

This demographic “time bomb” won’t quite explode during the tenure of the next party chief assuming he serves two terms until 2036, but preparations for what to do when it detonates will certainly come on his watch. 

Although, on a positive note, the economy should return to around a 6 percent growth rate by 2026, according to the World Bank, the next party chief will still have difficult decisions to make.

Trong’s signature anti-corruption campaign has improved the CPV’s image but it has massively sapped economic development.  His successor, who will be selected because he is trusted to continue the campaign, will be pressured to end it. 

Administrative reforms are overdue, but these will weaken the party’s grip on power. The government will need to massively increase tax collection, not least to pay for the booming retirees, but this will be unpopular and difficult.  And if the U.S. does decide on isolationism and China becomes more chaotic, diplomacy will have to be performed on a knife’s edge. 

Small wonder, then, that the CPV has dallied on choosing Trong’s successor. 

David Hutt is a research fellow at the Central European Institute of Asian Studies (CEIAS) and the Southeast Asia Columnist at the Diplomat. As a journalist, he has covered Southeast Asian politics since 2014. The views expressed here are his own and do not reflect the position of RFA.

Heroes manager trying to be good host for MLB action at home field


With their home park, Gocheok Sky Dome, undergoing a makeover for historic Major League Baseball (MLB) games scheduled for this week, the Kiwoom Heroes have had to spend their entire spring training on the road.

It wasn’t until Sunday morning that the Korea Baseball Organization (KBO) club finally got their firsthand look at the revamped Seoul stadium. The Heroes will play the Los Angeles Dodgers later in the day, the first of two exhibition games for the Dodgers before they face the San Diego Padres in the two-game Seoul Series.

Those two games, scheduled for Wednesday and Thursday, will be the first MLB regular season contests held in South Korea.

Not seeing their own home field for weeks is one of several inconveniences for the Heroes, but their manager Hong Won-ki said he and his team are trying to roll with the punches.

“This is a festival for everyone, and we’re trying to be the good host here,” Hong told reporters at Gocheok. “We understand that we have to make some sacrifices.”

Hong said he was
pleased with the new artificial grass and lights that have been installed for the Seoul Series. Now it’s up to his players to get acclimated to the new surroundings in time for the KBO regular season, which begins Saturday.

Hong also wants his young players to pick up a few lessons from facing the big leaguers.

“We have a lot of inexperienced players and I really hope that they will watch major league players and learn from them,” Hong said. “The Dodgers have one of the most powerful lineups in the majors. And regardless of the final score, it’s a huge honor for us to play these players. I hope my players will make the most of this opportunity.”

Source: Yonhap News Agency

Dodgers manager Roberts recounts fond memories with S. Korean players


Hours before his team played its first exhibition game in Seoul on Sunday, Los Angeles Dodgers manager Dave Roberts took a few moments to reminisce about South Korean stars he has had as a teammate and a player.

Roberts played for the San Diego Padres from 2005 to 2006 alongside South Korean pitcher Park Chan-ho. Then as manager, Roberts had another South Korean hurler, Ryu Hyun-jin, from 2016 to 2019.

Roberts said he hadn’t yet reconnected with Ryu since he arrived in South Korea on Friday. He smiled and said, “Come hit me up, Hyun-jin!”

“I love him, man. I wish I would have been a teammate of his because he’s a funny guy. He’s a great competitor,” Roberts said at a press conference at Gocheok Sky Dome in Seoul, before the Dodgers played the Kiwoom Heroes of the Korea Baseball Organization (KBO). The Dodgers will later play the Padres in a two-game Seoul Series, for the first two MLB games to be played in South Korea.

Ryu has rejoined his old KBO club, Hanwha Eagles, after 11 years in MLB. He was schedu
led to pitch in a preseason game later Sunday.

“I think it’s very cool that he can come back and play in the KBO. I think that’s fantastic,” Roberts said. “I’ve got nothing but great things to say about Hyun-jin.”

Roberts and Park go back even further. They met in San Diego at the tail end of their careers in the mid-2000s.

Park became the first South Korean player in MLB when he made his debut with the Dodgers in 1994, and Roberts said he was happy to see his old mate be involved in the Seoul Series.

Park will throw out the ceremonial first pitch before the first game between the Dodgers and the Padres on Wednesday.

“It’s sort of like a culmination for him, I would assume,” Roberts said. “He was a pioneer as a Korean-born player to come to the States and to be a star player and then to now have his former teammates and team that he played with come to his homeland … I think it’s come full circle and so it’s only fitting that he throws out the first pitch. I think for him to get to show off his country
is really exciting.”

As for the game on the field, Roberts said Shohei Ohtani, the Dodgers’ prized offseason acquisition, will get two at-bats as designated hitter. The two-way sensation will only hit this year as he recovers from his offseason elbow operation.

Even though it’s an exhibition game, Roberts said his players will be fired up.

“I think they’re going to be intense,” Roberts said of the upcoming exhibitions, with the South Korean national up next Monday. “I think certainly with the pitching and running out different relievers today and then the position players sort of piggybacking and kind of mixing and matching is one part of it. But we’re three days away from playing real major league games to open our season. So there’s already a different vibe in our clubhouse where guys are starting to hone their focus, which they have to.”

Source: Yonhap News Agency

Shohei Ohtani strikes out in both at-bats in exhibition vs. KBO club


It wasn’t meant to be for Shohei Ohtani on Sunday.

The Los Angeles Dodgers superstar struck out in both of his two plate appearances in an exhibition game in Seoul against the South Korean club Kiwoom Heroes.

Ohtani is the biggest draw here as the Dodgers are gearing up for the historic Major League Baseball (MLB) Seoul Series against the San Diego Padres on Wednesday and Thursday — the first MLB regular season games to be played in South Korea.

Ohtani signed a 10-year, US$700 million contract with the Dodgers in December, after winning two American League MVP awards for the Los Angeles Angels. The two-way unicorn will only be designated hitter this season, as he recovers from offseason elbow surgery, but such a restriction has done nothing to dampen the excitement surrounding the start of Ohtani’s new chapter as a Dodger.

Ohtani batted second behind Mookie Betts, and Dodgers manager Dave Roberts had said pregame that Ohtani would get two plate appearances in the exhibition.

Ohtani stepped in with one
out in the top of the first against the Heroes’ top starter, former big leaguer Ariel Jurado.

At 2-2 count, Ohtani went down swinging on a 91.8 miles per hour (mph) sinker up in the zone.

Ohtani’s next trip to the plate came with two outs and runners at the corners in the top of the second inning. And Jurado, who previously pitched for the Texas Rangers and the New York Mets, got the better of Ohtani again.

This time, Ohtani whiffed on a 91.2 mph high fastball, and his helmet fell off his head on the wild swing.

For Jurado, though, those two strikeouts were the only bright spot.

Right after the first strikeout of Ohtani, Jurado surrendered a towering solo home run to Freddie Freeman. The right-hander gave up two more runs in the second inning and another in the third.

Hunter Feduccia replaced Ohtani with one out in the top of the fourth.

The Dodgers will next play the South Korean national team at 7 p.m. Monday before playing the Padres.

Source: Yonhap News Agency

Dodgers rout KBO’s Heroes in exhibition game in Seoul


The Los Angeles Dodgers defeated the South Korean club Kiwoom Heroes 14-3 on Sunday in the first of their two exhibition games, as they get ready for the regular season opening-series against the San Diego Padres here later in the week.

Freddie Freeman homered and came up a triple shy of a cycle, while Jason Heyward paced the offense with four RBIs, as the Dodgers cruised to an easy win past the Korea Baseball Organization (KBO) club in front of 14,671 fans at Gocheok Sky Dome in Seoul.

Later Sunday, the Padres will play the South Korean national team in their first exhibition game here.

On Monday, the Padres will face the defending Korean Series champions LG Twins at noon, and the Dodgers will play South Korea at 7 p.m.

The Dodgers and the Padres will then play each other for a two-game Seoul Series on Wednesday and Thursday, back at Gocheok. These will be the first MLB regular season games played in South Korea.

Shohei Ohtani, the Japanese superstar for the Dodgers, struck out in both of his two at-ba
ts against Heroes starter Ariel Jurado.

Right after striking out Ohtani in the first inning, Jurado surrendered a solo shot to Freeman for the Dodgers’ opening run of the game.

Heyward’s RBI double and a run-scoring groundout by Gavin Lux made it 3-0 for the Dodgers in the second inning.

A broken-bat single by James Outman put the Dodgers up 4-0.

The Heroes did not get a hit off starter Michael Grove through two innings. But they scored their first run off the Dodgers’ third pitcher, Ryan Brasier, in the bottom fourth.

Ronnie Dawson, one-time major leaguer, led off the inning with a single and stole second base. Two batters later, Choi Joo-hwan drove him home with a single to left, as Dawson ran through the stop sign put up by his third base coach Park Jeong-eum.

But the Heroes couldn’t get any closer, with the Dodgers batting around putting up a four-spot in the top fifth.

A sacrifice fly by Heyward made it 5-1 Dodgers, and three straight RBI singles blew the game wide open at 8-1.

The Dodgers tacked
on four more runs in the seventh, highlighted by Heyward’s two-run double.

For the Heroes, No. 8 hitter Song Sung-mun hit a big double off Evan Phillips in the seventh to salvage two more runs.

The Dodgers rounded out the scoring with a run in the top ninth.

Seven Dodgers pitchers struck out 15 batters.

Source: Yonhap News Agency

Park Chan-ho’s nephew roughed up in exhibition vs. Dodgers


Kim Yun-ha, a teenage pitcher for the Kiwoom Heroes and nephew of former Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Park Chan-ho, got his “welcome to professional baseball” moment against his uncle’s former team on Sunday.

The 19-year-old right-hander was charged with five earned runs on four hits and three walks in 1 1/3 innings, as the Dodgers eased to a 14-3 victory in an exhibition game at Gocheok Sky Dome in Seoul.

This was the first of two exhibitions that the Dodgers are scheduled to play in South Korea, before facing the San Diego Padres in a two-game Seoul Series on Wednesday and Thursday. Those will be the first two Major League Baseball (MLB) regular season games in South Korea.

Kim was drafted ninth overall by the Heroes at last year’s Korea Baseball Organization (KBO) draft. Against the Dodgers, he came on to start the top of the sixth inning, with the Heroes already down 8-1.

After getting Austin Barnes to pop out to catcher, Kim hit Miguel Vargas.

Kim got Jason Heyward to pop out to catcher but then gav
e up a double to Gavin Lux.

A walk to Chris Taylor loaded the bases, but Kim wiggled his way out of that jam as Hunter Feduccia flied out to right field.

The bottom fell out for Kim in the seventh inning, though.

The right-hander gave up a single and a walk, and then Miguel Rojas singled in a run for a 9-1 Dodgers lead.

Barnes hit a sacrifice fly for a 10-1 lead. Kim issued his second walk of the inning, and Heyward made him pay with a two-run double, knocking Kim out of the game in the process.

Kim Yeon-ju came on in relief but allowed Heyward to score on a single by Taylor, with the run being charged to Kim Yun-ha.

Park became the first South Korean player in MLB history when he made his debut with the Dodgers in 1994. He went on to play for six other clubs and had a second tour of duty with the Dodgers in 2008. His best years were during the first run in Los Angeles, when he went 84-58 with a 3.77 ERA. He earned his lone All-Star selection as a Dodger in 2001.

Park owns the major league mark for the
most wins by an Asian-born pitcher with 124.

Park, who also played for the Padres, will throw out the ceremonial first pitch before the opening game of the Seoul Series on Wednesday.

Source: Yonhap News Agency