Hanoi (VNA) - Vietnam should strengthen market-based reforms and invest in education and training in order to take advantage of opportunities arising from the next digitalisation-driven production revolution, experts have said.
They made the point at the workshop, “The Next Production Revolution and its policy implications” jointly held by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), in Hanoi on June 16.
Experts said that the world was on the brink of the next production revolution with profound technological breakthroughs, while Vietnam was embarking on the new stage of development and integration with accelerated industrialisation from 2016 to 2020.
Besides opportunities, the next production revolution posed challenges to Vietnam particularly the challenge of further lagging behind, according to the experts.
It is time for policy-makers in Vietnam to acquire a better understanding of the digital revolution to make the best of the revolution’s opportunities in its early stages and to speed up industrialisation and modernisation, experts at the OECD said.
They were optimistic that Vietnam would turn into a high-income country in the next four decades.
Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Bui Thanh Son said that innovative thinking was critical for Vietnam to move forward while the country was losing its competitiveness in low-cost labour.
Tran Dinh Thien, Director of the Vietnam Institute of Economics, said Vietnam signed free trade agreements with the world’s giant economies such as the European Union, the Republic of Korea and the US.
“Amidst rapid integration coupled with the approaching next production revolution, if Vietnam went on the right path, the country could take a giant leap,” Thien said.
Kensuke Tanaka, head of the OECD Development Centre’s Asia Desk, said at the conference that strengthening market-based reforms, SOE reforms and reforms to education and training to meet demand for skilled labour were essential.
OECD, on its website, says that the spread of global value chains, the increasing importance and mainstreaming of knowledge-based capital, and the rise of the digital economy, are ushering in the “next production revolution”.
However, a number of policy challenges must be tackled to enable the next production revolution, the website says.
The world went through three industrial revolutions, according to the World Economic Forum. The first was in 1784 using water and steam power to mechanise production. The second was in 1870 using electric power to create mass production, and the third took place in 1969 using electronics and information technology to automate production. Now a digital revolution was in the making.
Investing in education and training was now the clear choice for Vietnam to be able to grasp opportunities from the next production revolution, the OECD experts said at the conference.
Alistair Nolan, senior policy analyst at the OECD’s Directorate for Science, Technology and Innovation said that as the digital revolution and globalisation were bringing radical changes to the world of work, education and training systems need constant attention.
It was also important to improve the link between supply and demand in the labour market, which was a key factor for success, the experts stressed.-VNA