Vietnam government sees new faces but policy shift unlikely

Written By DNA Web Team | Updated: Apr 09, 2016, 03:17 PM IST

Newly elected Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc, 61, sworn in during a ceremony at parliament house in Hanoi.

Nguyen Xuan Phuc was recently sworn in as the prime minister.

Vietnam completed a protracted leadership transition on Saturday, with 21 new faces in a cabinet tasked with reforming an economy seeing galloping growth but dogged by privatisation and public debt problems.

Parliament approved a 27-member lineup that retains some important figures from a government credited with driving a pro-business agenda, including Finance Minister Dinh Tien Dung and deputy premiers Vu Duc Dam and Pham Binh Minh, who is also foreign minister. The cabinet, which was announced on state television, has one woman, Nguyen Thi Kim Tien, who keeps her post as the health minister.

Nguyen Xuan Phuc, 61, was sworn in as the prime minister on Thursday, replacing two-term premier Nguyen Tan Dung. Dung's take-charge approach and the pursuit of stronger US ties shook up Vietnam's often uneventful politics and won him plaudits though his administration was dogged by a banking crisis and a graft-ridden state sector.

The new government takes office after a year of strong growth of 6.7% for its $200 billion economy and record figures for foreign investment and mergers and acquisitions. But it has much work to do in shoring up the recovery of a fragile banking sector, boosting a sluggish selloff of stakes in state firms and managing public debt estimated at more than 60% of gross domestic product (GDP).

It also has big changes to make to comply with a US-led Trans-Pacific Partnership trade pact, including setting up independent trade unions for millions of workers in its expanding manufacturing sector. The cabinet has three new deputy prime ministers, including former Supreme Court judge Truong Hoa Binh, and Vuong Dinh Hue, who was chief of the Communist Party's economic committee.

Le Minh Hung was appointed as central bank governor, replacing Nguyen Van Binh, who in January joined the party's 19-member politburo, Vietnam's core decision-making body. Even with the influential Dung out of the picture, the new government is expected to stick to the same strategy. "Though Dung has been the public face of many of Vietnam's major economic reform initiatives and the development of stronger ties with Washington, these policies enjoy strong support among Vietnam's leaders," US-based advisory firm Albright Stonebridge Group said in a research note.