Hanoi (VNA) - ဣThe Country Director of the Asian Development Bank (ADB) in Vietnam has stated that the country’s capital disbursement rate has slowed down in the past 3 – 4 years.
Minister of Finance Dinh Tien Dung has described the disbursement of official development assistance (ODA) and preferential foreign loans in Vietnam as having an ‘alarming’ rate. The concern was raised at an online conference on speeding up the disbursement of ODA and preferential foreign loans in 2019 that took place on June 26.Disbursement progress at snail’s pace
Truong Hung Long, Head of the Department of Debt Management and External Finance under the Ministry of Finance, said accumulated foreign capital disbursements for investment in development reached only 2.05 trillion VND in the first half of 2019, just 3.42 percent of the figure assigned by the National Assembly (NA).Disbursement period ends, but capital is yet to be allocated
Long explained that the delay to allocated capital in medium-term public investment plans is partly not matching demand. He calculated that there are currently 26 loans worth more than 3.4 billion USD signed since 2016 to date; however, related demand for their disbursement is yet to be included in the medium-term public investment plan for 2016 – 2020. Long also pointed out that, to date, the Ministry of Planning and Investment has just planned 48 percent of the total sum assigned by the National Assembly. This has left many local ministries and branches with no capital to disburse amid an urgent need for project implementation. For example, despite being expired, several projects are still allocated capital. They include those on constructing the Hanoi University of Science and Technology, strengthening Thanh Hoa’s provincial health system and a 2008 vocational training programme. The official proposed the Ministry of Planning and Investment coordinate with relevant ministries and localities to review the medium-term plan for public investment until 2020 to promptly adjust and allocate capital for projects in need. On the other hand, Long noted in many cases, although a project has been provided with adequate capital, its implementation remains slow. This shows project preparation work has various shortcomings, particularly those related to design consultancy, ground clearance, and resettlement. To clarify, he took the examples of a project on upgrading Highway No 217 using ADB loans and another on provincial health capacity funded by Germany’s KfW Development Bank.
VNA