Vietnam

rating-of-vietnam-is-b1


Low Risk for Enterprise

  • Economic risk

  • Business environment risk

  • Political risk

  • Commercial risk

  • Financing risk

  • Economic risk

  • Business environment risk

  • Political risk

  • Commercial risk

  • Financing risk

Cyclical risks

Vietnam is a strong performer among emerging economies, with around +7% growth on average in the three decades before the Covid-19 pandemic, and +4.8% on average over 2020-2023. A recovery in global trade, especially in consumer electronics, supported Vietnam’s manufacturing sector in 2024 and the economy more broadly, with growth recovering to pre-pandemic average at +7.1%. US trade policies since 2025 and geopolitical uncertainties have become important headwinds as the US is the top destination for Vietnamese exports, accounting for 30% of the total in 2024. However, the frontloading and rerouting of shipments throughout 2025 supported growth (+8%). Looking forward, Vietnam’s position in global trade and supply chains should continue to underpin broader economic growth, with exports (especially of electronics, machinery and footwear) and infrastructure investment remaining drivers. We expect the Vietnamese economy to slightly slow to +6.6% in 2026 and +6.3% in 2027 due to trade uncertainties and lingering weakness in the property sector, but remain amongst top performers in the region. Additionally, with moderate inflation, expected at 3.3% in 2026 and 3.8% in 2027 (after 3.2% in 2025), interest rates should remain at 4.5%. Over the longer term, foreign direct investment, solid demand from Asian and Western markets, strong competitive advantages (low labor costs, high productivity growth and a strategic location), increasing integration in global supply chains and Vietnam’s position as a global manufacturing hub should further support economic growth.

Vietnam's short-term financing risk is low, but monitoring is needed when it comes to elevated credit growth, the banking sector, foreign exchange reserves and external debt. Real domestic credit growth remains elevated and visibly accelerated since the second half of 2024 (+17% y/y in November 2025) as confidence returned, likely in the context of accommodative policy moves that helped in alleviating a credit crunch in the property sector, where many firms were facing repayment and refinancing difficulties. However, continuously rising credit will raise private sector debt-sustainability risks if the economy slows down. In this context, the central bank has cut its target for credit growth in 2026 in an effort to avoid overheating.

Foreign exchange (FX) reserves peaked in early 2022 and declined quickly through the year, before roughly stabilizing since 2023. The ratio of money supply (M2) to FX reserves increased from 529% at the end of 2021 to more than 940% in September 2025 –  a ratio below 400% is considered adequate –  while the number of months of imports covered by FX reserves decreased from 3.9 to 2.5 during that period, when at least four months is usually deemed appropriate. The heavily managed exchange rate regime has so far prevented large swings of the VND but a significant deterioration of external demand conditions or further fall of FX reserves could undermine this relative stability. Despite being relatively elevated for an emerging country, the external debt level remains decent compared to exports (less than 35% of GDP or around 40% of exports).

Vietnam’s business environment score is below average and close to the median in our assessment of 185 economies. The Heritage Foundation’s Index of Economic Freedom 2025 survey assigns Vietnam rank 61 out of 184 economies (a steady improvement from rank 105 in the 2020 survey), reflecting good scores with regard to fiscal health, government spending, trade freedom, tax burden, business freedom and monetary freedom, while weaknesses remain particularly in the areas of judicial effectiveness, government integrity and investment freedom. Some of these points are underscored by the World Bank Institute’s annual Worldwide Governance Indicators surveys, which indicate considerable weaknesses with regards to the regulatory and legal frameworks, as well as measures to combat corruption. Our proprietary Environmental Sustainability Index 2025 puts Vietnam at rank 112 out of 210 economies, reflecting some resilience in water stress, but weakness in terms of renewable electricity output, the recycling rate and climate-change vulnerability.

Political stability is to be expected in the coming years. Vietnam is a one-party state, tightly controlled by the Communist Party of Vietnam (CPV). After being appointed general secretary of the CPV in August 2024, Tô Lâm was renewed for a five-year mandate in early 2026. In October 2024, Lương Cường was appointed state president, thus reestablishing power-sharing among the top four leaders (CPV general secretary, state president, prime minister and chairman of the National Assembly). However, Lương Cường’s presidency comes to an end in 2026, increasing competition within the party for the position. Tô Lâm becoming state president on top of his current position of CPV general secretary would help to project political stability, albeit risking the creation of an environment more conducive to policy mistakes. In any case, the policy agenda is likely to continue focusing on efforts to attract investment and foster private-sector growth. 

Regarding international relations, Vietnam is likely to continue its traditional “bamboo diplomacy”, with a multidirectional and flexible approach. Vietnam’s addition to BRICS as a Partner Country in 2025 could provide further opportunities to develop partnerships, while the US also remains an important partner for Vietnam. The trade deal reached with the US in July 2025 manages to cap the US tariff increase on Vietnamese exports (to 20%, compared to 4% at the end of 2024), but further talks can be expected in 2026 around precise implementation and enforcement of the agreement.

Françoise Huang, Senior Economist for APAC
Updated in February 2026

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Form of state Communist party-led state
Head of government Tô Lâm (General Secretary of the Communist Party)
Next elections 2026, legislative
  • Low wages but relatively skilled workforce
  • Competitive manufacturing hub
  • Development potential of various natural resources, especially minerals (iron ore, copper, gold) and energy (oil, natural gas, coal)
  • Relatively open economy with growth model based on trade 
  • Ongoing shift towards higher value-added sectors
     
  • Lack of transparency
  • A fragile and opaque banking system
  • Infrastructure to be improved 
  • A complicated business environment
  • Low external reserves 
  • Recurrent tensions with China
(% of total, 2024)
(% of total, annual 2024)

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