A beach in Phu Quoc Island, one of three special economic zones under planning in Vietnam. File photo
‘The limit is to guarantee security and
prevent acquisitions by foreigners.’
Foreign investors will be restricted to 30 percent ownership of
real estate projects in Vietnam's future special economic zones if a new draft
law is approved, despite government promises of added incentives to attract
overseas investment.
The cap is the same as the one currently imposed across the
country.
The Law on Special Economic and Administrative Units, which is
being drafted at the moment, would grant foreign investors 99-year leaseholds
on properties in new investment areas, almost twice the 50-year terms granted
elsewhere in Vietnam.
But a major barrier remains as the law would only allow foreigners
to buy up to 30 percent of an apartment building or resort project in these
areas, said Tran Huy Dong, director of the Economic Zones Management Department
at the Ministry of Planning and Investment.
"The limit is to guarantee security and prevent acquisitions by
foreigners in special economic zones,” Dong said.
He said the heads of these zones will have to consult the Ministry
of National Defense and the Ministry of Public Security before granting any
land to foreign investors.
But he also said that the policy will be open to changes depending
on investors' demands.
Vietnam is preparing to develop special economic zones in the
northern province of Quang Ninh, the central province of Khanh Hoa and the
southern resort island of Phu Quoc.
The government has cast them as major investment magnets along the
lines of Singapore and Hong Kong.
The investment ministry said that investors in these special zones
will receive greater incentives and fewer restrictions than in Vietnam's 18
existing "normal" economic zones, and they will be free from local
regulations. Casinos have been approved in these zones, which will be the first
in the country to be licensed to receive Vietnamese citizens.
Phung Quoc Hien, vice chairman of the legislative National
Assembly, even suggested opening "red-light districts” in these zones at a
meeting earlier this month.
"Life has such realistic demands. We’ve got to go with the flow
and work out an appropriate management mechanism,” he said.
The draft law is expected to be presented to the National Assembly
in May next year.
(Source: vnexpress.net)