WB Group, Australia to Support Vietnam in Mitigating Impacts of COVID-19

The World Bank (WB) Group and the Australian Government on June 24 agreed to extend their strategic partnership in Vietnam with a commitment of a further AUD 5 million to support Vietnam’s economic recovery and protect the most vulnerable from the negative impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic. The funds, provided by the Australian government and administered by the WB Group, are additional financing to the ongoing Australia-World Bank Group Strategic Partnership - Phase 2 (ABP2) that focuses on supporting Vietnam’s development agenda through knowledge sharing and advising policy-making. According to Ousmane Dione, the WB Country Director for Vietnam, the additional funding will help address emerging challenges and critical needs of Vietnam in post COVID-19. “By providing support in key areas such as private sector development, trade integration, and innovation, the program aims to help the country’s economy gain back its full potential in the fastest and most sustainable way,” he said. Speaking highly of the role the Australia-World Bank Group Strategic Partnership is playing in Vietnam’s economic recovery, Australian Ambassador to Vietnam Robyn Mudie said that the funding program will continue providing world class economic advice and analysis for Vietnam’s leaders and policy makers to accelerate economic recovery, with an increasingly strong focus on gender equality and social protection. In fact, the Government of Vietnam has effectively contained the pandemic with a limited number of cases and no registered deaths. The pandemic, however, has shaken the country’s traditional resilience to external shocks with economic growth in the first quarter reaching only 3.8% compared to projected growth of 6.5% prior to the crisis. In order to mitigate economic and social impacts of COVID-19, it is critical for the government to target sectors and activities that create jobs and improve long-term productivity and growth, such as infrastructure, innovation, social protection, health, and education. To address the potential loss of human capital from COVID-19, the activities to be funded will protect and support vulnerable groups, including by strengthening social safety nets with more efficient and effective delivery of social security payments; narrowing human capital gaps, particularly for ethnic minorities, with a well-designed ethnic minority national targeted program; and improving gender equality in legal frameworks. The funds will also be directed towards economic recovery activities, including accelerating the execution of the investment program while deepening trade integration, supporting the private sector strengthening resilience against future shocks through structural reforms, and taking advantage of the digital agenda by reducing transactions costs for the government, people, and businesses. This program is part of the AUD 10.5 million commitment from Australia toward Vietnam’s COVID-19 recovery efforts, discussed in a meeting between Australian Ambassador to Vietnam Robyn Mudie and Vietnam’s Minister for Planning and Investment, Nguyen Chi Dung on June 5. The ongoing ABP2 program, signed in April 2017, aims to support Vietnam’s key national reforms, which are intended to gradually benefit millions of Vietnamese people and help the Southeast Asian country reach its ambition of becoming a high-income economy by 2045. (Nhan Dan)