Vâng theo reuters, vừa xong thì quá tốt cụ ạ:
Yêu cầu tariff theo hàm lượng TRung quốc, tăng hàm lượng Việt Nam.
Đầu mỹ thì tariff như vậy
Đầu VN thì miễn thuế TNDN 3 năm đầu, khu thương mại tự do, trung tâm tài chính, bỏ GPXD, bỏ cả IRC chứng nhận đầu tư, gạ kéo chuỗi cung ứng sang là rõ.
Cả tin của TBT sang cuối tháng 6 nữa nên chắc TTCK bật tăng thôi.
Doanh nghiệp MNC (toàn cầu) có vẻ cũng cay bài chính phủ cả HK và VN chơi bài úp sọt, vừa cây gậy tariff vừa củ cà rốt miễn thuế TNDN và tối giản thủ tục để ép nên có đoạn Not too fast...
Vietnam has been asked "to reduce its dependency on Chinese high-tech," said one person familiar with the discussions. "That is part of the restructuring of supply chains and would in turn reduce U.S. dependency on Chinese components," the person added.
The ultimate objective is to speed up U.S. decoupling from Chinese high-tech while increasing Vietnam's industrial capacity, a second person said, citing virtual reality devices as an example of Vietnam-assembled products that are too dependent on Chinese technology.
All sources declined to be identified as the discussions were confidential. Reuters was not able to learn if the U.S. has proposed numerical targets such as caps on Chinese content for "Made in Vietnam" goods or different tariff rates based on the amount of Chinese content.
Apple, Samsung, Meta and Google did not reply to Reuters requests for comment.
Vietnam's ruling Communist Party chief To Lam intends to meet U.S. President Donald Trump in the United States, possibly in late June, officials with knowledge of the matter said. No date has been announced for the trip.
NOT TOO FAST
Local firms attending meetings organised by the trade ministry in recent weeks expressed a general willingness to adapt, but many warned that instant changes "would destroy business", according to one of the sources.
Vietnam has been slowly developing an industrial ecosystem with local suppliers but it has a long way to go before it can match China's advanced supply chains and cheaper pricing, industry executives say.
"Vietnam is about 15–20 years behind China in somewhat fully replicating its supply chain scale and sophistication, but it's catching up fast, especially in key sectors like textiles and electronics," said Carlo Chiandone, a Vietnam-based supply chain expert.
Abrupt changes to existing practices may hurt Vietnam's delicate relationship with China, which is both a major investor in its Southeast Asian neighbour and a source of security concerns.