IIAS | IIAS Newsletter Online | No. 21 | Regions | Southeast Asia

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16 - 18 SEPTEMBER 1999
PASSAU, GERMANY

EUROVIET IV

In the middle of September last year, a sunny Bavarian late summer saw a number of experts convene in Passau for three days in order to discuss current developments in Vietnam. Under the title 'The Economic Crisis and Vietnam's Integration into Southeast Asia' over twenty papers were discussed. These comprised not only a survey of the economic indicators of the impact of the Asian crisis in Vietnam but also focused on social consequences and government policies to alleviate the situation.

By MARTIN GROßHEIM AND VINCENT HOUBEN

The consequences of the crisis for the process of the increasing integration of Vietnam into the region, partly through its membership of ASEAN, and the security situation in the South China Sea were also the subjects of debate. The participants in the conference were a balanced mixture of representatives of Vietnam itself and of countries where Vietnam Studies take a prominent place among Southeast Asian Studies in general. Among the nine Vietnamese representatives were academic staff from Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh Universities, but also officials from the Foreign Ministry and the Ministry of Labour, Invalids, and Social Affairs. The Deputy-Ambassador of Vietnam in Germany, Mr Tran Ngoc Quyen, attended the conference as a special guest. Besides these vietnamese guests there were European researchers from Germany, the Netherlands, the Nordic countries, Russia, and France, as well as several Americans.

The keynote speech was delivered by Prof. Carlyle Thayer, who clearly illustrated how the impact of the crisis necessitates a clear-cut domestic policy response from Vietnam, which seems to be poised between a stepped-up doi moi-2 and a wait-and-see policy. After an analysis of recent macro-economic trends in the country by two Vietnamese economists (Phan Thanh Ha and Le Hong Truong), the implication of the Asian financial crisis on Vietnam's relations with the region were analysed by Khu Thi Tuyet Mai and Ramses Amer. Tran Thi Anh Dao showed how the recent growth of trade linkages and intra-regional production units has exacerbated the nation's vulnerability to a crisis. In the historical section, two French researchers focused on regional integration of an earlier kind (Sophie Reig on Cochinchina's integration into Indochina and Southeast Asia) and on current account balances of the 1940s to the 1970s (Hugues Tertrais). There were two contributions on the ways in which Vietnam should model its future financial architecture (Gottwald/Klump, Galina Birina).

One group of papers interpreted the consequences of the economic problems for both the domestic economy, especially employment (Vu Van Toan, Irene Nørlund, Nguyen Thi Hoa) and big industrial estate projects (Laurence Nguyen). Long-term patterns of urbanization (Ton Nu Quynh Tran) and entrepreneurial culture (Mutz/Meyer-Tran/Wolff) were highlighted as well. The final group of contributions aimed to put Vietnamese foreign policy and growing integration into the region into the perspective of the implications of the crisis. Le Linh Lan gave a survey of Vietnam's relations with ASEAN, Ngo Dang Tri discussed the basic tenets of the Vietnamese Communist Party's view of foreign relations. The issue of the contested islands in the South China Sea was explained by Stein Tønnesson, and Nguyen Van Lich described the foreign orientation of Ho Chi Minh City. Finally, possible future development paradigms were discussed by Tim Goydke (referring to Japan) and Pascal Bergeret, putting forward the hypothesis that maintaining the socialist market economy model might lead to a development strategy promoting agriculture rather than industry. Daniel Hoang, from the international committee for the defence of workers' rights in Vietnam, made a critical statement on the social situation after twelve years of reform.

The level of the discussions, held mainly in English but also in French and sometimes Vietnamese, was high and showed how a current theme with a clear focus allows a fruitful cross-disciplinary exchange of thoughts in which the Vietnamese guests participated with guests. During the conference a new book on rural Vietnam was presented: Bernhard Dahm & Vincent Houben (eds.), Vietnamese Villages in Transition. Background and Consequences of Reform Policies in Rural Vietnam. Passau: Lehrstuhl für Südostasienkunde 1999, 224 pages. A publication of a selection of the conference papers by the organizers of EUROVIET IV is envisaged. *


Prof. Vincent Houben holds the Lehrstuhl fuer Suedostasienkunde at Passau University,
At the time of the conference Dr Martin Großheim was working as Associate Professor (Wissenschaftlicher Assistent) at the same Dept. Since 1 October 1999, he has been affiliated as a Postdoctoral Fellow with the Center for East and Southeast Asian Studies at Lund University/Sweden.
E-mail for both professors: seastudies@uni-passau.de

   IIAS | IIAS Newsletter Online | No. 21 | Regions | Southeast Asia