Pratique du Shadowing: Why Vietnam’s Economic Boom Is So Fragile | Economy of Vietnam | Econ - Apprendre l'anglais à l'oral avec YouTube

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This is Vietnam… one of the  fastest-growing economies in the world.
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This is Vietnam… one of the  fastest-growing economies in the world.
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Fifty years ago, the last Americans  were evacuated from Saigon— leaving behind a war-ravaged and impoverished country.
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Today, Saigon—now Ho Chi Minh City— is  a metropolis of over 9 million people.
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Skyscrapers. Global brands.
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Endless construction.
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In just a few decades, Vietnam  has eliminated extreme poverty, become one of the top exporters  to the United States, and turned itself into a manufacturing hub for  companies like Apple and Samsung.
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It all began in the 1980s, with the Đổi  Mới reforms— opening the economy to trade and private enterprise with Cheap labour,  Political stability. Since then, Vietnam has attracted over 230 billion dollars in foreign  investment, and become an electronics assembly powerhouse. Chinese, Japanese, South Korean,  and Western firms— all building factories here.
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Over the past decade, its economy  has grown faster than that of any Asian country bar China. In 2025, the  economy grew over 8%. Trade crossed 900 billion dollars. On paper— everything  looks perfect. But something doesn’t add up.
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Because while the economy is growing  fast… its electricity use is slowing down.
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For years, power demand in Vietnam grew even  faster than GDP— often 1.5 times higher.
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But in 2025, GDP grew over 8%…  while electricity output rose just 4.9%.
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Less than half the pace. And in an  industrial economy— that shouldn’t happen.
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Vietnam looks like a manufacturing  powerhouse. But it doesn’t behave like one. In a normal industrial  economy, more factories means more energy. More production means more  power. Growth and electricity move together. But in Vietnam— they’re starting to  move apart. Which suggests something unusual.
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That this growth… might not be as deep as it  looks. So what’s actually happening inside the economy? Where is this growth really coming from?  And more importantly… how strong is it, really?
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To understand what’s happening, you first need  to understand how Vietnam’s growth model works.
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At its core, the system is surprisingly  simple. Foreign companies bring the capital.
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They build factories. They import  components from across Asia— screens,  chips, circuit boards, machinery.
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Those parts arrive in Vietnam, where they’re  assembled by a large and relatively cheap workforce. The finished products are  then exported to the rest of the world— especially to the United States and Europe.
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Vietnam doesn’t design most of these products.
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And it doesn’t manufacture many of  the complex components either.
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Instead, it specializes in the final  stage of the supply chain: assembly.
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And this model has worked extremely well. Global  companies get lower costs. Vietnam gets jobs, investment, and export growth. It’s one  of the reasons multinational firms have poured more than 200 billion dollars into  the country over the past two decades.
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And as tensions between  China and the West increased, Vietnam became even more attractive.  For many companies, it became the perfect backup plan. An alternative  manufacturing base just outside China.
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This strategy is often called “China  Plus One”. And Vietnam became its biggest beneficiary. Factories moved in.  Exports exploded. The economy surged.
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But this model also creates a hidden  weakness. Because when most of your growth comes from assembling  products designed and supplied elsewhere— the value created inside  the country is actually quite small.
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Which means the economy can grow very  quickly… without deeply transforming the domestic economy. And that’s  where the real story begins.
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Vietnam’s boom is not happening  evenly across the economy. Instead, it is split into two very different worlds.  On one side— there are the foreign companies: Samsung, Apple suppliers, large  multinational manufacturers.
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These firms dominate Vietnam’s export  sector. Today, foreign-invested companies generate roughly three quarters of the country’s  total exports. They run the largest factories.
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They control the global supply chains. And they  capture most of the gains from the export boom.
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But on the other side— there are  domestic Vietnamese companies.
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And their story looks very different.  While exports from foreign firms surged, exports from domestic companies  actually declined in 2025.
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In other words, the country’s exports are  booming— but many local businesses are not.
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This creates what economists sometimes call  a “two-track economy”. One track is fast, global, and foreign-owned. The other is  slower, domestic, and struggling to keep up. And that makes Vietnam’s growth  far more fragile than it appears.
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This leads to another misconception about  Vietnam’s rise. Many people see Vietnam as a replacement for China. As companies tried to  reduce their dependence on Chinese manufacturing, they began shifting production to other countries.  And Vietnam quickly became the biggest winner.
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But the reality is more complicated. Because  Vietnam may be producing the final products— yet it still depends heavily on China  for the parts. Most of the components used in Vietnamese factories— chips, displays,  machinery, industrial materials— are imported from abroad. And the vast majority  of those imports come from China.
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In fact, Vietnam’s trade deficit with China  has exploded in recent years. alone, In 2025 the country imported around 186  billion dollars worth of goods from China— creating a deficit  of more than 115 billion dollars.
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Which reveals the real structure of the system.  China produces the high-value components.
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Those parts are shipped across the border  into Vietnam. Vietnam assembles the final product. And the finished goods are  exported to the United States and Europe.
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In other words, Vietnam is not replacing China in  the global supply chain. It is extending it. And that means Vietnam’s growth still depends heavily  on the same country it is supposedly replacing.
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While foreign companies dominate exports, a  handful of giant conglomerates dominate everything else. Groups like Vingroup, Masan, and Hoa Phat.  These companies are not just large businesses.
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They shape entire industries: Real estate,  Steel, Retail, Infrastructure, and Technology.
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Take Vingroup. It started as a real estate  developer. But today its empire stretches across shopping malls, hospitals, universities, electric  vehicles, and massive infrastructure projects.
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In many ways, these conglomerates function  almost like mini economies of their own.
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And their influence is especially visible  in Vietnam’s stock market.
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In 2025,  the country’s main stock index  surged more than 40%.
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But most of those gains came from just a handful of  companies— many of them tied to Vingroup.
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At one point, stocks connected to  the Vingroup ecosystem accounted for the majority of the market’s rise. Which  creates a strange illusion. From the outside, the stock market appears to be booming. But  underneath, much of that growth is concentrated in a very small number of firms. And the risks  don’t stop there. Because these conglomerates are now entering the most expensive phase of  their expansion. Building steel complexes.
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Launching electric vehicle companies. Even  proposing massive infrastructure projects worth tens of billions of dollars. To finance this  growth, many of them rely heavily on borrowing.
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Which means that if one of these companies runs  into trouble— the shock could quickly spread through banks, markets, and the wider  economy like China Evergrande crisis.
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And that’s what makes this concentration  so dangerous. Because when too much of an economy depends on just a  few companies— their success becomes everyone’s success. But their  failure…can become everyone’s problem.
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Over the last decade, Vietnam  has been driven by bank-dependent economic development. That means Vietnam’s  banks have been lending... aggressively.
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By the end of 2025, total credit in  the economy had grown by nearly 19% in a single year. That pushed Vietnam’s  credit-to-GDP ratio to around 146%.
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For a lower-middle-income country, that is an  unusually high number. But the real issue isn’t just the size of the debt. It’s where that  money is going. A large share of the loans flowing through Vietnam’s banking system are tied  to real estate developers and large conglomerates.
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Many of the same companies are driving the  country’s rapid expansion. For years, cheap credit helped fuel a construction boom. Even massive  prestige projects— like Dong Son Bronze Drum Stadium, a proposed 135,000-seat sports complex  named after the prehistoric bronze-casters.
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The project is being developed by Vingroup,  the country’s most powerful conglomerate.
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But rapid credit growth always carries a  risk. Because when borrowing expands faster than the real economy, financial  vulnerabilities start to build.
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Non-performing loans in Vietnam’s banking  system have been rising in recent years.
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Much of that pressure is linked to  property developers struggling with high debt and delayed projects. Which  creates a dangerous feedback loop.
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Banks lend heavily to developers.  Developers rely on rising property values. And property serves as  collateral for many of those loans.
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Which means Vietnam’s growth is not just dependent on exports and foreign investment. It  is also deeply tied to the stability of its financial system. And that  system is starting to show cracks.
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But the most immediate threat to Vietnam’s  growth is much simpler. Electricity.
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Over the past decade, the  country’s industrial boom has pushed electricity demand higher and higher.
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Manufacturing zones in the north— where many of  the electronics factories operate— are especially energy intensive. The World Bank estimated that  the 2023 power crisis caused losses of US$1.4 billion, equal to 0.3 percent of  Vietnam’s GDP. Semiconductor production, which demands intensive electricity usage,  was especially vulnerable. In the past, manufacturers have been asked to adjust  schedules to conserve power in their region. For example, Foxconn cut power use  by 30 percent at northern assembly plants.
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But building new power plants and transmission  lines takes years. And in Vietnam, many of those projects have been delayed.  Some are stuck in regulatory disputes.
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Others are waiting for financing.  More than a hundred renewable energy projects remain stalled, unable  to connect to the national grid.
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At the same time, the state electricity company still controls power prices.
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Those price caps make it difficult for private investors to earn a return which slows the construction of new power plants even further.
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The result is a system that is increasingly stretched.
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For a country whose economic rise depends heavily  on manufacturing, reliable power is not a luxury.
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It is the foundation of the entire model. Without  it, the factories slow. Exports stall. And the growth story that has defined Vietnam for  decades begins to look far more fragile.
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Vietnam’s leadership is well aware of  these risks. And over the past few years, the government has begun trying to address them.
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At the center of this effort is the country’s  new leader, General Secretary Tô Lâm.
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After years as Vietnam’s powerful minister of  public security, Tô Lâm rose to the top of the Communist Party and is now leading an ambitious  push to reshape the country’s economic model.
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His goal is simple— to move Vietnam  beyond low-value manufacturing and turn it into a more advanced economy.  One that designs technology, builds stronger domestic companies, and produces  more of its own industrial components.
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In theory, this could help Vietnam move  up the global value chain. But reforming an economic system this large is never  easy. Vietnam’s rapid growth was built on cheap labor, foreign investment, and  a tightly controlled political system.
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Changing that model requires difficult  trade-offs. Too much regulation can scare away foreign investors. Too little reform can  leave domestic firms permanently behind. And all of this is happening while Vietnam navigates  a delicate geopolitical balancing act— deeply tied to Chinese supply chains, yet heavily dependent  on American and European markets for exports.
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Vietnam now stands at exactly this  crossroads. Its export model has lifted millions out of poverty and  turned the country into one of Asia’s fastest-growing economies. But the same model  also creates deep structural dependencies.
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From the outside, Vietnam’s rise looks  unstoppable. A country once devastated by war has transformed itself into a  major player in global manufacturing.
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Factories stretch across the countryside.  Exports reach every corner of the world.
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And growth continues to surprise economists.  But underneath this success the system remains fragile. Much of the economy is driven by  foreign companies. Domestic firms struggle to keep pace. Debt is rising. Energy  infrastructure is under strain. And the country remains deeply embedded in global  supply chains it does not fully control.
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For now, the model still works. Investment  continues to flow. Factories continue to expand. And Vietnam remains one of the  fastest-growing economies in the world.
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But the next phase of development will  be far more difficult than the last.
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Because the challenge ahead is not  simply to grow— it is to transform.
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And whether Vietnam can make that transition may  determine the future of its economic miracle.

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Why practice speaking with this video?

This video offers a captivating insight into Vietnam’s economic landscape, making it an excellent resource for English learners who desire to practice speaking about real-world topics. By engaging with the material, you are not only exposed to contemporary issues but also encouraged to develop your vocabulary and fluency in a discussion about economics, globalization, and cultural dynamics. Speaking about such relevant themes enhances your ability to articulate complex ideas clearly, which is invaluable for effective communication.

Grammar & Expressions in Context

In the video, several key grammatical structures and expressions stand out:

  • Present Perfect Tense: The use of the present perfect tense, as in "Vietnam has eliminated extreme poverty," emphasizes the significance of past actions with current relevance. This structure is essential for discussing achievements or ongoing processes.
  • Comparative Forms: Phrases like "faster than" highlight comparisons, crucial for discussing economic growth rates. Understanding how to effectively use comparatives will boost your ability to present arguments and make claims.
  • Conditional Sentences: Sentences like "if one of these companies runs into trouble, the shock could quickly spread" utilize conditional structures, which are vital for expressing hypotheticals and outcomes. Mastery of this grammar will help you articulate possibilities in discussions.

Common Pronunciation Traps

The video includes challenging vocabulary that English learners should pay close attention to for improved pronunciation:

  • Metropolis: This word is not only a complex term but also demands attention to the stress on the second syllable. Practice saying it in shadow speech to ensure clarity.
  • Conglomerates: Many learners find the combination of sounds tricky. The stress falls on the third syllable, which makes it essential to pronounce accurately during conversation.
  • Surged: The 'g' sound at the end can be a hurdle. Shadowing this term will help you improve your English pronunciation and ensure that it flows naturally in your speech.

Integrating shadow speech into your English speaking practice with this video will provide you with the tools to not only understand complex subjects but also discuss them confidently. Consider utilizing this shadowspeak method to reinforce your learning and articulate your thoughts on Vietnam’s economic framework.

Qu'est-ce que la technique du Shadowing ?

Le Shadowing est une technique d'apprentissage des langues fondée sur la science, développée à l'origine pour la formation des interprètes professionnels. Le principe est simple mais puissant : vous écoutez de l'anglais natif et le répétez immédiatement à voix haute — comme une ombre suivant le locuteur avec un décalage de 1 à 2 secondes. Les recherches montrent une amélioration significative de la précision de la prononciation, de l'intonation, du rythme, des liaisons, de la compréhension orale et de la fluidité.

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