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Geography, agriculture and economy

Viet Nam stretches for 1,650 km along the eastern seaboard of the Indochina Peninsula. Its total land area of 331,700 km2 includes two large deltas — the Red River Delta in the north and the Mekong Delta in the south. Much of the rest of the country is mountainous. The estimated total population in 2007 was 85.1 million, with an annual growth rate of about 1.2 per cent (World Bank).

Agriculture

More than 70 per cent of the country’s labour force works in agriculture and forestry, but cultivated land is scarce (consisting of 21 per cent of land area) and deforestation is a serious threat to the natural resource base. Gross domestic product (GDP) has soared in recent years, to  US$71.2 billion in 2007. Agriculture’s share of GDP in 2006 is declining, It was 21 per cent in 2006. Rice accounts for more than half of total agricultural output. Viet Nam is the world’s second largest exporter of rice after Thailand. Farmers also produce robusta coffee, rubber, sugar cane and cashew. Livestock and aquaculture production has grown by anout 8 per cent in recent years.

Economy

The country has achieved impressive economic success over the past decades, largely in response to economic reforms initiated under the policies of Doi Moi, the transformation of the centrally planned economy into a market-oriented economy, launched in 1986. Gross National Income (GNI) per person was on the rise from US$430 in 2002 to US$790 in 2007 (World Bank).

Source: IFAD



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Viet Nam
capital: Hanoi
GNI per capita: US$530 - 1,250

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Rural poverty in Viet Nam
Progress on the Millennium Development Goals:
Statistics
GNI per capita, Atlas method (current US$) (2008) 890.0
Population, total (2008) 86,210,781.0
Rural population (2008) 62,209,699.6
Number of rural poor (million, approximate) (2008) 22,146,653.0
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