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PVN could have contributed more to state budget
  • | Tuoi Tre | April 17, 2012 01:43 PM

While the Vietnam National Oil and Gas Group (PVN) always prides itself on the fact that it accounts for 30 percent of the state’s total budget collection, it has in fact contributed only 56 percent of its revenues from oil extracting activities to the budget.

 

The rate is much lower than that of other oil and gas enterprises in other countries.

In Russia, Vietnam’s main partner in oil extracting, the rate is as high as 72 percent, according to an official from the Ministry of Finance.

This means that while they are operating in the same sector, the budget contribution the Russian oil and gas enterprises have to give is 16 percentage points higher than that of their Vietnamese counterparts, he said.

“It is a huge disparity,” commented Doctor Le Dang Doanh, former member of the Prime Minister’s research board.

When PVN reaped around USD9 billion in revenues from oil and gas extracting activities in 2010, the difference was already as large as USD1.4 billion.

“We should review the case to ensure economic effectiveness for the country,” he urged.

The 56 percent contribution could be appropriate at a certain time, but amid these hard economic times it should be revised, said Doanh, adding that the country’s oil and gas reserves also show signs of becoming exhausted.

Even in Indonesia, a developing country like Vietnam, the budget contribution rate for the oil and gas sector is between 55 and 85 percent, Sanjeev Gupta, Oil and Gas Leader Asia Pacific Region at Ernst & Young, told Tuoi Tre in an interview on April 12.

“Only the areas with special preferential policies from the government can have the 55 percent rate,” he said.

Meanwhile, Malaysia-based Petronas also has to contribute 50 – 60 percent of revenues to their national state budget, he added.

The levy depends on not only the location of the reserves, but also how long they have been extracted from, he said.

With the new oil reserves, the rate can be low due to the high risks they pose.

“But with the long-extracted ones, as risks have reduced, the government should levy a higher rate,” he said.

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