Vietnamese banks and financial institutes must be ready for a digital transformation.
Policymakers and experts said at a workshop organized in ‘s capital of Hanoi yesterday.
Digital technologies have had a strong impact on the country’s economy and nowhere that impact has been more strongly felt like in the banking and finance sector. Technologies helped improve business models and processes as well as created new products and services to serve the need of customers.
Take mobile payments, for example. According to a PwC survey this year, Vietnam was among the countries with the fastest growth rate in mobile payments. The number of users had seen a sharp increase to 61 per cent from just 37 per cent the year before.
In the first eight months of 2019, total value of mobile payments in Vietnam increased by 150 per cent as the number of mobile transactions doubled from the same period last year, according to a report by the State Bank of Vietnam (SBV).
A report by Google in April showed the size of Vietnam’s digital economy could reach US$12 billion by the end of 2019 and $43 billion by 2025. Vietnam and Indonesia are the fastest-growing digital economies in ASEAN, with over 40 per cent annual growth.
The SBV projected the digital economy would account for up to 20 per cent of the country’s GDP in 2025. Technologies, especially digital technologies, would be an important driver for economic growth and increased productivity to help develop the nation.
“The digital transformation is inevitable and Vietnam’s banking and finance sector is well-prepared to embrace it,” said Nguyen Kim Anh, the SBV’s Deputy Governor, at the workshop.
Anh said the sector was among the country’s leaders in adopting new technologies and innovations, and in reworking its regulatory and legal framework to make use of their advantages.
Dr Sebastian Paust, First Counsellor, Head of Development Cooperation at the German Embassy in Hà Nội, discussed Germany’s development cooperation strategy in supporting digital transformation. He said Germany would continue its support for the Vietnamese banking and finance system for the implementation of digital transformation programs.
“Digitalization in the context of Industry 4.0 and rapid changes in technologies has great potential to help achieve the objectives of green economic growth and sustainable development,” said Dr Michael Krakowski, Director and Chief Technical Advisor of the Macroeconomic Reforms/ Green Growth Program.
The workshop was a part of the Macroeconomic Reforms/Green Growth Program implemented by GIZ Vietnam, and was co-organized by SBV and GIZ Vietnam, which operate on behalf of the German Federal Ministry of Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ).
By VNS