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Vietnam remains mostly an agricultural nation, mired in the farming methods of the 19th century. Women in conical hats still harvest the rice, one stalk at a time.
Larry Hall / For CNHI News Service


Water buffalo are common to the Vietnamese countryside. They are used for ploughing fields, transporting goods from farm to market and for food.
Brian Dennis / For CNHI News Service


Hoang Ngoc Minh, 26, a motorcycle tour guide from Hanoi, describes the contrast between Vietnam's 19th century farming techniques and 21st century Internet availability as "strange" and yet part of the country's charm.
Gary Powell / For CNHI News Service


Internet access is available throughout Vietnam. Even remote towns have Internet cafes, like this one in Phong Nha.
Bill Ketter / CNHI News Service


Hoang Ngoc Minh, 26, a motorcycle tour guide from Hanoi, describes the contrast between Vietnam's 19th century farming techniques and 21st century Internet availability as "strange" and yet part of the country's charm. (Photo by Gary Powell)
Gary Powell / For CNHI News Service


Published September 26, 2008 03:28 pm - Vietnam is a country blessed by fertile lands, bountiful seas and an industrious human spirit. Yet the average personal income is less than $500 per year, and nearly one-third of the people live in poverty. Dreadful as those statistics can seem, they’re a vast improvement from the country’s dark period during and after the Vietnam War and before the adoption of open-market capitalism in the 1990s.



Vietnam: Tied to the past, seeking the future


William B. Ketter
CNHI News Service

Vietnam is a country blessed by fertile lands, bountiful seas and an industrious human spirit. Yet the average personal income is less than $500 per year, and nearly one-third of the people live in poverty.

Dreadful as those statistics can seem, they’re a vast improvement from the country’s dark period during and after the Vietnam War and before the adoption of open-market capitalism in the 1990s.

Now, even ordinary Vietnamese appear optimistic about their economic future, pointing to the country’s achieved goal of making the Internet available everywhere, including remote mountain villages.

“We’re on our way to a better life,” said Nguyen Ngoc, a confident 34-year-old entrepreneur from Hanoi who recently started a motorcycle tour business. “Tomorrow will be bigger and better than yesterday.”

Vietnam took a big step toward that goal when it joined the World Trade Organization, two years ago, opening access to more overseas markets and attracting greater foreign investment.

The United States, which refused to trade with Vietnam for nearly 20 years after the war, signed a bilateral trade agreement with its former enemy in 2001, and is now the leading export market for Vietnamese goods, followed by the European Union, Japan and China.

On the home front, a skilled and low-wage workforce competes with China, Indonesia and India for electronic and textile manufacturing jobs. Canon recently opened a large inkjet printer plant outside Hanoi. Sony, Intel, Samsung and other electronic firms are likewise bullish on the land of the dragon. Textile and shoe manufacturing are also on the move. Nike makes more than 80 million pairs of shoes in Vietnam annually.

Still, Vietnam is mainly an agricultural country, with more than 70 percent of the people living on farms and in villages, and the bulk of the economy tied to the fate of rice, coffee, tea, rubber trees, pepper plants and cashew nuts.

It also remains a contradiction between 19th century farming methods and 21st century technology – as witnessed during the 850-mile motorcycle trip from the 10,300-foot high mountains northeast of Hanoi, the national capital, to Hoi An, a charming seacoast community in the southwest.

In the country, water buffalo plough rice fields, and women in conical hats stoop for hours to harvest the crop, one stalk at a time. On their way home, they strap bundles of wood to their back for fire or balance fruits and vegetables on both ends of a bamboo pole for that night’s dinner in one and two-room homes.

But amazingly in remote northern villages like Phu Yen, Mai Chau and Tan Ky -- where our motorcycle group of six Americans stayed overnight -- Internet cafés serve tourists and locals, including teenagers playing Bubble Shooter, Raiden X and other popular online games. Mobile phones are commonplace in country and city.

“It is strange, right?” remarks Hoang Ngoc Minh, 26, a tour guide from Hanoi. “We are a country of differences. The Internet is everywhere. So too the traditional ways of living off the land.”

Dao Quong Binh, an economist and journalist with the Vietnam Economic Times, put it this way during an interview at the upscale Intercontinental Hotel in Hanoi:

“Land is the property of the people in Vietnam and no taxes or rent are required for use in agriculture,” he explains. “As we increasingly transform to a market economy, modernization will naturally take place in the rural regions along with the cities. New, more efficient techniques will be introduced.”

Binh is counting on Vietnam keeping up its fast pace. He has invested in several niche lifestyle publications, and has plans to start an auto magazine even though the Great Wheel of the country is definitely the motorbike.



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