The partnership started in Vietnam in 2012 and will now continue until 2026, valued at 95 million AUD.
Australian Ambassador to Vietnam Andrew Goledzinowski said: “The extension of our partnership with the World Bank comes during our 50th year anniversary of Australia and Vietnam’s bilateral relations and demonstrates our ongoing commitment to Vietnamese men and women.”
"For Vietnam to realise its ambition to become a high-income country in 2045, the legislative reform process and strong governance continue to be essential. We are proud to be supporting this ambition in partnership with the World Bank,” he said.
World Bank Country Director for Vietnam Carolyn Tusk said: “We are grateful that Australia has made available this additional resource to enable our Australia – World Bank Partnership to support Vietnam in this critical stage of its development as the country looks for ways to achieve its aspiration for high-income status in 2045.
“The areas of support are of strategic importance for the country, including institutional reforms, social equity and inclusion, the transition to a low carbon economy and innovation-driven growth.”
Over the past five years, the Australian and World Bank partnership has had an impact on more than 58 policies and regulations and helped drive meaningful legislative change.
Recent examples include the Prime Minister’s decision on the Mekong Delta Regional Master Plan for 2021-2030, the Ministry of Labour, Invalids and Social Affairs’ circular on career guidance and job counselling that is estimated to benefit over 2 million students, and its guidance on the rollout of digital social assistance payments to all 63 provinces and cities with approximately 3.5 million beneficiaries
The partnership also provided data that helped informed improvements in child-care services for the Labor Code of 2019.
These successes have led to a renewed commitment to 2026. The partnership will continue to work closely with Vietnam to reflect the needs of the country and its people./.
Source: vietnamplus