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Update news Chinese businessmen
VietNamNet Bridge - Tea producers complain that it has become difficult to collect raw materials because Chinese businesses have flocked to cultivation areas to collect tea leaves directly from farmers.
More and more Chinese have been flocking to coastal provinces and cities in the central region, from Da Nang City to Khanh Hoa province, where they buy land, build hotels, and run restaurants.
VietNamNet Bridge - China consumes 144,000 tons of pork a day, according to FAO, but Vietnamese farmers cant sell their pork to the country because of demands made by Chinese traders.
VietNamNet Bridge - These families have created consumer goods brands familiar to every Vietnamese.
VietNamNet Bridge - Many Vietnamese merchants help Chinese businessmen swindle farmers in Vietnam, which is a reflection of the state’s poor management of the farm produce market.
VietNamNet Bridge - The Central Highlands’ pepper market has heated up with the presence of Chinese businessmen who are scrambling to compete with Vietnamese to buy pepper.
VietNamNet Bridge - Economists say the differences in official statistics are puzzling and they are finding it difficult to discern how heavily Vietnam’s economy relies on China.
VietNamNet Bridge - Vietnamese farmers have been warned that Chinese businesses might play nasty tricks in an attempt to control the Vietnamese pepper market.
VietNamNet Bridge - Worms illegally imported from China could harm domestic agriculture and damage the soil.
Analysts have summarized some of the more popular tricks Chinese businessmen play on Vietnamese farmers. They maintain that, in the aggregate, these tricks harm not just individual farmers, but the Vietnamese economy as well.
VietNamNet Bridge – Scholars have pointed out that Chinese businessmen have been scouring every corner in the rural areas of Vietnam to collect farm produce to serve their dark intentions.
VietNamNet Bridge – Vietnamese economists have discovered some dirty tricks Chinese businessmen play on Vietnamese farmers.
Vietnamese businesses have shouted for help when their products are threatened by illegal low quality products. CITES Vietnam has called for the security agencies intervention.
VietNamNet Bridge – Experts have voiced their concern over the flooding of Chinese sturgeons in the Vietnamese market, which would kill the Vietnamese sturgeon farming industry.
Having tasted bitterness in doing business with Chinese enterprises, Vietnamese say it’s not the time to make a break with Chinese.
Chinese businessmen have been collecting the roots of pepper plants in Chu Se district of Gia Lai province, the biggest pepper growing area in Vietnam.
Everyday, the Chinese man comes to the paddy field in the Hoa Phu commune of Chau Thanh district in Long An province, where he takes care of strange paddies.
VietNamNet Bridge – Chinese businessmen have been going to every corner in the Vietnamese land to collect all the things that Vietnamese think are useful and throw away, thus raising doubts about the machinations behind this.