Vietnamese Economic Reform: How Important to US-Vietnam Trade Relations

Abstract

The United States and Vietnam have moved closer economically since diplomatic relations were reestablished in 1994. That year, the US trade embargo was lifted as the Vietnamese government promised greater cooperation in resolving issues surrounding US personnel still listed as missing in action from the Vietnam War. In the last seven years, normalization has brought many positive results. The US and Vietnamese governments have strengthened cooperation on the fullest possible accounting for MIAs; there has been a successful resettlement of tens of thousands of refugees through the Orderly Departure Program and related programs; enhanced cooperation in combating narcotics trafficking continues to show promise; promoting human rights and religious freedoms, always an important ingredient to any US economic initiative, is working; and, expanding economic linkages through economic reforms have become a central theme as Vietnam transitions from a total command economy to a state supervised market economy. Economic linkage, more specifically economic reform, is the focus of this paper. The following pages will briefly highlight US policy toward Vietnam, ongoing initiatives, the importance of those initiatives, how we have arrived at where we are today with our relationship and where we expect to go in to the future.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Jan 01, 2001
Accession Number
ADA442666

Entities

People

  • Larry W. Croce

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  • National War College

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  • Asian Economic Studies
  • Political Violence and Terrorism Studies.
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