International economic experts remain upbeat about Vietnam’s economic prospects in the coming years, even without the much-heralded Trans-Pacific Partnership.

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Donald Trump last week announced that he will issue an executive action on his first day in office to withdraw from the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), describing it as a ‘potential disaster’ for the US.

If this intention is followed through with, the 12-country trade pact-comprising Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, the US and Vietnam-looks to be dead after eight years of negotiations, which culminated in a February 2016 signing.

Vietnam was set to become the biggest beneficiary of the TPP. The World Bank’s preliminary estimates for the 2015-2035 period suggested that the TPP could add about 8% to Vietnam’s GDP, 17% to its real exports, and 12% in its capital stock.

But dim prospects for the TPP do not spell doom for Vietnam’s continued growth. Marlene Rump, a senior economist at international economic forecasters FocusEconomics, told VIR that if there is no TPP, “Vietnam will continue its annual growth at a positive rate of above 6% per year in the coming four years.”

The firm predicts that Vietnam’s real GDP will expand by 6.4% next year, before slowing to 6.3% on average from 2018 to 2020.

According to New York-based business research group Conference Board, Vietnam’s economy is not likely to experience remarkable changes if TPP is not ratified by the US Conference Board forecasts that Vietnam’s economy will grow 6.2% in 2016 and 6.5% in 2017 without the TPP.

Given uncertainty over the TPP, the World Bank recently projected that Vietnam’s economy could rise 6% this year, 6.3% next year, and 6.3% in 2018.

According to the World Bank, the average growth rate of 6% is relatively high, especially compared with growth in the region and around the world.

The World Economic Forum last month released its forecast that Vietnam will likely grow by 6.1% this year. This is far higher than surrounding nations, such as Japan (1.3%), the Republic of Korea (0.5%), Singapore (1.7%), Indonesia (4.9%), Thailand (3.2%), and Malaysia (4.3%).

The average growth rate in Asia is expected to be 6% this year.

At the Vietnam Summit 2016 in Ho Chi Minh City last month, Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Pham Binh Minh said that, if the TPP is not adopted, “Vietnam will not be significantly affected, as the country’s existing trade and investment ties with the US are very good and will continue flourishing.”

Without the TPP, the US is already one of Vietnam’s biggest export markets. In this year’s first 10 months, the US remained Vietnam’s biggest goods importer, with an export turnover totalling US$31.8 billion, up 15% year-on-year. The US was also Vietnam’s sixth-largest goods supplier, with a total turnover of US$6.7 billion, up 0.6% year-on-year.

Minh noted that even if there is no TPP, Vietnam has a host of other free trade agreements (FTAs) to rely on, with partners such as the ROK, Japan, the ASEAN bloc, the European Union, and the Eurasian Economic Union.

According to FocusEconomics and Conference Board, without the TPP, FTAs such as the ones with the Eurasian Economic Union and the EU-and the proposed Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership-will underpin growth for Vietnam.

“A further positive implication of the FTAs is that they oblige the Vietnamese government to undertake economic reforms to make it eligible for them, which will improve the investor environment and business climate in Vietnam,” Rump of FocusEconomics said.

“Overall, alternative trade deals could compensate to some extent for the TPP, and FocusEconomics projects that economic activity will still be supported by surging exports if the TPP is not ratified. For 2017, FocusEconomics expects exports to grow at 10.1%,” she continued.

“Unless Trump’s administration cuts existing ties, exports are expected to continue growing, though at a slower pace than they would with the TPP. The extent of protectionist policies that could be implemented in the US is difficult to assess at this point, though they would make it more costly and difficult for Vietnam to export to the US.”

The TPP will only take effect when it is adopted by at least six signatories, which must hold at least 85% of the combined GDP that all 12 signatories generated in 2013. In 2013, the US occupied 60% of the combined GDP of the 12 member countries. In keeping with this mechanism, if the US Congress does not ratify the TPP, the agreement will not enter into force.

VIR