Trade war winner Vietnam sees exports drop for sixth month
Vietnam has seen exports plunging amid a faltering recovery in China's economy and a slowdown in goods demand across the world.

Exports declined 7.6% this month from a year earlier, data released by the General Statistics Office showed Tuesday. While smaller than the 9.5% drop seen by economists in a Bloomberg survey, the print adds to the grim sentiment.
Higher demand for goods is key to bolstering economic growth for the nation, which emerged as a manufacturing and export powerhouse in the midst of the US-China trade war. The months-long contraction in outbound shipments now risks putting the government’s full-year target of 6.5% gross domestic product growth out of reach.

Vietnamese businesses are still struggling “as difficulties and challenges remain great, with the global economic downturn,” the trade and industry ministry said in a statement earlier this month. “There is a lack of orders, especially with the export market being narrowed,” it said.
Vietnam’s benchmark stocks index opened little changed Tuesday after the data.
Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh on July 4 ordered ministries to focus on measures to boost rice exports as the government seeks to take advantage of global market opportunities to bolster economic growth in the second half of the year.
Earlier this month, Chinh said the government aims to push economic growth to about 9% in the second half of the year in order to meet the full-year target of 6.5%.
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