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Vietnam has about three dozen seaports and several high-quality terminals that welcome international shipping lines, but no major port with swift connections to efficient roads and rail. "All the coastal provinces want a deep-sea port," said Nguyen Xuan Thanh, director of public policy programs at the U.S.-funded Fulbright Economics Teaching Program in Ho Chi Minh City. "The central government needs political support from these provinces, so they don't say no to these proposals." "Everybody wants a piece of the action," he said. In 2010, state-owned ship builder Vinashin came close to collapse with debts of $4.5 billion, leading to a sovereign credit rating downgrade and sounding the alarm on a major pressure point in Vietnam's economy. Last month, police arrested two former senior executives at one of the country's largest banks. The banking industry has run up massive bad debts in recent years, many of them made to state-owned companies. Vinalines has also come under scrutiny. In March, police arrested several of its executives and accused them of mismanagement in the purchase of a floating dock that resulted in losses of about $5 million. In May, government inspectors issued a report saying the company had five defaulted loans worth $1.1 billion and had bought 73 foreign vessels, many of which had run up millions of dollars in losses. Earlier this month, Vinalines' former head, Duong Chi Dung, was arrested in a neighboring country after an international manhunt. The problems at the banks and the state-owned enterprises have played a major role in Vietnam's economy slowing from 7 percent growth in 2010 to just over 4 percent in the first half of this year. Foreign investment is also down amid inflation and the inability of the country to build the roads, electrical grid and bridges businesses need to prosper. "It's very important that the government continues to put infrastructure very high on the agenda," said Peter Smidt-Nielsen, general director for Vietnam and Cambodia at global shipping company Maersk Line. "If you have growing trade and you don't do anything about the infrastructure, you'll have more and more delays and congestion, and that all leads to added costs for exporters and importers," he said.
[Associated
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