The Tremendous But ‘Secret’ Success Of Socialist
Vietnam
By Andre Vltchek
July 16, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - Some twenty years
ago, when I moved to Hanoi, the city was bleak, grey,
covered by smog. The war had ended, but terrible scars
remained.
I brought my 4WD from Chile, and insisted on driving
it myself. It was one of the first SUVs in the city.
Each time I drove it, it was hit by scooters, which flew
like projectiles all over the wide avenues of the
capital.
Hanoi was beautiful, melancholic, but clearly marked
by war. There were stories, terrible stories of the
past. In “my days”, Vietnam was one of the poorest
countries in Asia.
Many great heritage sites, including the My Son
Sanctuary in Central Vietnam, were basically vast
minefields, even many years after the terrible U.S.
carpet-bombing. The only way to visit them was by
government-owned military vehicles.
The building where I lived literally grew out of the
infamous “Hanoi Hilton”, the former French prison where
the Vietnamese patriots and revolutionaries used to be
tortured, raped and executed, and where some captured
U.S. pilots were held during what is called in Vietnam
the American War. From my window, I was able to
see one of two guillotines in the courtyard of what by
then had become a museum of colonialism.
In 2000, Hanoi did not have one single mall, and when
we first arrived, the terminal of Noi Bai Airport
was just a tiny edifice, the size of a provincial train
station.
In those days, for the Vietnamese people, a trip to
Bangkok felt like a voyage to a different galaxy. For
journalists like myself, those who were based in Hanoi,
a regular commute to Bangkok or Singapore was an
absolute necessity, as almost no professional equipment
or spare parts were available in Vietnam.
Two decades later, Vietnam has become one of the most
comfortable countries in Asia. A place where millions of
Westerners would love to live.
Its quality of life is growing continually. Its
socialist model and central planning are clearly
successful. Vietnam feels like China, some twenty years
ago. There are tremendous promenades in the cities of
Hue and Danang, there is the construction of modern
public transportation networks, as well as sports
facilities. All this is in stark contrast to the extreme
capitalist gloom of countries like Indonesia, even
Thailand. Vietnamese people count on constantly
improving sanitation, medical care, education and
cultural life. With a relatively small budget, the
country is often on par with much richer nations in Asia
and the world.
Its people are among the most optimistic in the
world.
In just the three years that I spent living in
Vietnam, the country changed dramatically. The
tremendous strength and determination of the Vietnamese
people helped to bridge the void which was left after
the destruction of the Soviet Union and the other
socialist countries of Eastern Europe. Just like China,
Vietnam opted, successfully, for a mixed economy, under
the leadership of the Communist Party.
A massive attempt by the United States and Europe to
derail the socialist system, using Western-sponsored
NGO’s and individuals inside the country, was identified
and decisively defeated. Pro-Communist and pro-Chinese
factions inside the government and the Party have
overpowered those who were trying to derail Vietnam,
pushing it towards the West.
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What followed was significant success, on many
fronts.
According to the Southeast Asian Globe
report, published on 1 October 2018:
“Vietnam performed the best of 151 countries in a
study that assessed quality of life versus environmental
sustainability.”
This is not the first time that Vietnam has performed
exceptionally well, when compared to other countries in
the region, and in the world.
The article explained further:
“The wide-ranging study, called A Good Life for
All Within Planetary Boundaries, published by a group of
researchers from the University of Leeds, argues that we
need to dramatically rethink the way we view development
and its relationship to the environment.
“We were essentially working on several different
indicators and relationships between social outcomes and
environmental indicators,” Fanning told Southeast Asia
Globe. “We came up with the idea of, well, if we’re
looking at social indicators, can we define a level that
would be equivalent to a good life?”
The survey included 151 countries, and Vietnam showed
the best indicators.
“The researchers settled on 11 social indicators
that included life satisfaction, nutrition, education,
democratic quality and employment.
“It did surprise us that Vietnam did so well
overall,” Fanning said. “You might expect it to be Costa
Rica or Cuba, as Vietnam doesn’t typically come up as a
sustainability hero.” Fanning was referring to two
countries the researchers expected to do well since they
generally provide good social support and haven’t seen
the same environmental damage many countries have.”
This is not the only report that celebrates the great
success of Vietnam’s socialist model.
In the region of Southeast Asia, Vietnam has already
gained the reputation of an economic and social
superstar. Compared to the fundamentalist pro-market
Indonesia or even the Philippines, Vietnam’s elegant
socialist cities designed and maintained for the people,
as well as the neat increasingly ecological countryside,
clearly suggest which of the two systems is superior and
fit for Asian people and their culture.
In times of grave emergencies; of natural and medical
disasters, Vietnam is also well ahead of other Southeast
Asian countries. Like Cuba and China, it invests heavily
in the prevention of calamities.
According to New Age, socialist states
including Vietnam, did a superb job fighting against the
recent outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic:
“Developing countries such as Cuba and Vietnam
with socialist or communist state structures and
philosophy are successfully handling the COVID-19
pandemic. What are the roles that their long term health
and economic strategies playing behind this success? MD
Talebur Islam Rupom asks this question and stipulates
that this is high time that states should invest heavily
in the health sectors to ensure health care for all.”
“Countries with centrally subsidized or fully
funded health care systems are battling the COVID-19
crisis better than any other countries. There are also
several other proactive reasons which makes it possible
for them to decrease the fatalities and positive cases.
Cuba and Vietnam are two developing countries
that have moved rapidly to deal with the emerging
threat. Despite the embargo and restrictions by the
United States and limited resources, Cuba’s handling of
the pandemic could be a role model for others.
With a smaller economy than Bangladesh, southeast
Asia’s Vietnam is also earning its credibility to
restart their economy after reportedly eradicating
COVID-19 from the country even though it shares its
crucial border with China.”
At the end of May 2020, when this essay was being
written, the Socialist Republic of Vietnam with 95.5
million inhabitants, has registered only 327 infections
and zero deaths, according to data provided by Johns
Hopkins University.
Even the mainstream, right-wing British magazine,
The Economist, could not overlook the great success
in battling against Covid-19 by Communist states, such
as the Indian Kerala and Vietnam:
“…With 95m people, Vietnam is a much bigger
place. In dealing with covid-19, however, it has
followed a strikingly similar script, with an even more
striking outcome. Like Kerala it was exposed to the
virus early, and saw a surge of infections in March.
Active cases also peaked early, however, and have since
tumbled to a mere 39. Uniquely among countries of even
remotely similar size, and in contrast to such better
known Covid success stories as Taiwan and New Zealand,
it has not yet suffered a single confirmed fatality. The
Philippines, a nearby country of roughly the same
population and wealth, has suffered more than 10,000
infections and 650 deaths.
Like Kerala, Vietnam has recently battled deadly
epidemics, during the global outbreaks of Sars in 2003
and of swine flu in 2009. Vietnam and Kerala both
benefit from a long legacy of investment in public
health and particularly in primary care, with strong,
centralised management, an institutional reach from city
wards to remote villages and an abundance of skilled
personnel. Not coincidentally, communism has been a
strong influence, as the unchallenged state ideology of
Vietnam and as a brand touted by the leftist parties
that have dominated Kerala since the 1950s.”
Some analyses, including those based in the West, go
as far as to claim that Vietnam has already bypassed
many countries in the region, including those which are,
at least on the paper, much wealthier.
DW (Deutsche Welle), for instance reported
on 22. May, 2020:
“Adam McCarty, the chief economist of research
and consultancy firm Mekong Economics, expects that
Vietnam will widely benefit from how it has handled
COVID-19. “Maybe this is a turning point where Vietnam
leaves the group of countries as Cambodia and the
Philippines and joins more sophisticated countries as
Thailand and South Korea, even though Vietnam doesn’t
have a similar GDP yet,” McCarty told DW from Hanoi…
“With the rest of the world still suffering from
COVID-19, exports are really going to get hurt,” McCarty
said. The economist stressed that things cannot just go
back to how they were. And even though domestic
consumption is likely to increase in the months to come,
a 5% growth figure for 2020 may be too ambitious. “It’s
probably more like 3%, but that’s still good in these
circumstances. It still means Vietnam is a winner.”
I periodically return to Vietnam, one striking thing
I keep noticing is that the country has no slums.
Extreme misery is so common in brutal capitalist
Indonesia, the Philippines, but also in Cambodia and
Thailand. There is no misery in the Vietnamese cities,
towns and countryside. That itself is an enormous
success.
Communist planning means that most of the natural and
medical disasters are well prevented. When I used to
live in Hanoi, the vast and densely populated areas
between the Red River and the city used to get flooded,
annually. But gradually, the neighborhood got relocated,
and green areas reintroduced, stopping the water from
reaching the city.
Step by logical step, Vietnam has been implementing
changes designed to improve the lives of the citizens.
The mass media in the West and in the region writes
very little about this ‘Vietnamese miracle’, for obvious
reasons.
With tremendous sacrifice, Vietnamese citizens
defeated the French colonizers, and then the U.S.
occupiers. Millions of people vanished, but a new,
confident and powerful nation was born. It literally
rose from ashes. It constructed its own, “Vietnamese
Model”. Now, it is showing the way to those much weaker
and less determined countries of Southeast Asia; those
that are still sacrificing their own citizens, by being
obedient to the diktat of North America and
Europe.
From one of the poorest Asian countries, Vietnam has
become one of the strongest, determined and optimistic.
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