Executive
Board Calendar |
Board Discussions
on Vietnam:
Next (tentative): May 25, 2012
Previous: April 29, 2011 March 16, 2009 October 26, 2007 October 25, 2006
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Article IV Staff Reports
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Projected % Change
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2012
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2013
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Real GDP
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5.6
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6.3
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Consumer Prices
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12.6
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6.8
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Source: World Economic Outlook (April 2012)
Please refer to more recent PIN/Staff reports on this country for possible revisions.
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Vietnam: Financial Position in the Fund

Transactions with the Fund

Finance Ministry Ministry of Finance

IMF Resident Representative Office in Vietnam

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Vietnam and the IMF
Updated April 21, 2012
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The last Article IV Executive Board Consultation was on April 29, 2011. Listed below are items related to Vietnam, in reverse chronological order (you can also view items by category).
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 | April 21, 2012 -- Transcript of the Asia and Pacific Economic Outlook
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 | December 06, 2011 -- Vietnam--Consultative Group Meeting
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 | September 24, 2011 -- Transcript of a Press Briefing by the IMF Asia Pacific Department
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 | September 23, 2011 -- Statement by the Hon. Nguyen Van Binh, Governor of the IMF for Vietnam
PDF File Size: 366Kb
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 | September 20, 2011 -- Transcript of the World Economic Outlook (WEO) Press Briefing
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 | June 23, 2011 -- Public Information Notice: IMF Executive Board Concludes 2011 Article IV Consultation with Vietnam
Each Public Information Notice contains a background section, a table of selected economic indicators, and an Executive Board assessment.
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 | June 09, 2011 -- Vietnam--Informal Mid-Year Consultative Group Meeting
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 | May 05, 2011 -- IMF Survey: Panel Calls for Greater Asian Role in International System
The world needs an international monetary system that is more efficient, more flexible, and more attuned to the realities of a multipolar global economy, a high-level panel discussion audience hears in Hanoi, Vietnam during the annual meeting of the Asian Development Bank.
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 | April 07, 2011 -- Presentation to the Central Bank Governors of ASEAN,Asean+3 Meetings by Naoyuki Shinohara, IMF Deputy Managing Director
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 | December 06, 2010 -- Vietnam: Consultative Group Meeting for Vietnam
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 | October 27, 2010 -- Transcript of a Press Conference on the International Monetary Fund’s Regional Economic Outlook for Asia and the Pacific
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 | September 08, 2010 -- Public Information Notice: IMF Executive Board Concludes 2010 Article IV Consultation with Vietnam
Each Public Information Notice contains a background section, a table of selected economic indicators, and an Executive Board assessment.
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 | September 08, 2010 -- Vietnam: 2010 Article IV Consultation - Staff Report and Public Information Notice
Series: Country Report No. 10/281
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 | July 01, 2010 -- IMF Survey: Asia: Launching Pad for Tomorrow's Emerging Markets
Following in the footsteps of Asia’s dynamic emerging markets, low-income countries in the region are poised to become tomorrow’s emerging markets. This will help to propel Asia’s global economic leadership as it becomes the world’s largest economic region in about 20 years.
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 | June 08, 2010 -- Vietnam -- Informal Mid-year Consultative Group Meeting
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 | June 01, 2010 -- Vietnam: Bayesian Estimation of Output Gap
Author/Editor: Maliszewski, Wojciech Series: Working Paper No. 10/149
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 | March 22, 2010 -- Press Release: Statement at the Conclusion of the IMF-Vietnam Conference on “Post-Crisis Growth and Poverty Reduction in Developing Asia”
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 | March 22, 2010 -- Realizing the Potential of Asia's Developing Economies, By John Lipsky, First Deputy Managing Director, International Monetary Fund
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 | March 19, 2010 -- IMF Survey: Post-Crisis, Developing Asia Looks to Harness Growth
Boosting infrastructure spending, strengthening growth, and improving competitiveness are expected to be key themes at a meeting in Vietnam of officials, academics, and nongovernmental organizations from across developing Asia.
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 | January 26, 2010 -- Financial Market Update:
Systemic risks have continued to subside as economic fundamentals have improved and substantial public support remains in place. Despite improvements, financial stability remains fragile in many advanced countries and some hard-hit emerging market countries. A top priority is to improve the health of these banking systems so as to ensure the credit channel is normalized. The transfer of financial risks to sovereign balance sheets and the higher public debt levels also add to financial stability risks and complicate the exit process. Capital inflows into some emerging market countries are beginning to raise concerns about asset price and exchange rate pressures. Policymakers in these countries may need to exit earlier from their supportive policies to contain financial stability risks. For all countries, the goal is to exit from the extraordinary public interventions to a global financial system that is safer, but retains the dynamism needed to support sustainable growth. Text also available in: عربي; 中文; Español; Français; 日本語; Русский; and Tiếng Việt.
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