WASHINGTON, D.C. – 
U.S. Trade Representative Susan C. Schwab met in Washington Monday with 
Vietnam’s Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung and senior members of his economic team 
to welcome the rapid growth in U.S.-Vietnamese economic ties and to discuss next 
steps in the steady expansion of our bilateral trade and investment 
relations.  They also commended the launch of the bilateral investment 
treaty (BIT) negotiations.
“A bilateral 
investment treaty will build on the already strong economic ties between the 
United States and 
Vietnam, one of the fastest 
growing markets for U.S. exports,” Ambassador Schwab 
said.  “When concluded, this agreement will provide U.S. investors in Vietnam with key legal protections and enhanced 
market access with important direct and collateral benefits for U.S. 
exporters and consumers alike.” 
Ambassador Schwab 
and Prime Minister Dung also exchanged views on Vietnam’s economic reform efforts and 
the implementation of its World Trade Organization’s (WTO) accession 
commitments, which are on track.  They discussed the need for further 
efforts to provide enhanced intellectual property rights protection in 
Vietnam and continued 
cooperation on agricultural issues, including access to the Vietnamese market 
for all cuts and all ages of U.S. beef and beef products, consistent with OIE 
standards, as well as access to the U.S. market for Vietnamese 
fruits.
Ambassador Schwab 
welcomed Vietnam’s move to lift its ban on 
rice exports and underscored the importance of open trade regimes in ensuring 
adequate global food supplies.  She applauded the signing last week of an 
agreement to facilitate bilateral trade in telecommunications equipment and 
Vietnam’s intent to become an 
observer to the WTO’s Government Procurement Agreement.
Background: 
Trade between the 
United States and 
Vietnam has grown rapidly since the 
conclusion of the U.S.-Vietnam BTA in 2000, followed by normalization of trade 
relations in 2001.  Two-way goods trade between United States and Vietnam 
totaled $12.5 billion in 2007, up 30 percent over 2006 and up more than 700 
percent since 2001.  U.S. goods exports to Vietnam 
in 2007 totaled $1.9 billion, an increase of 73 percent from 2006.  
Meanwhile, U.S. foreign 
direct investment in Vietnam also has grown, totaling $339 
million in 2006, the most recent available data, up over 95 percent since 
2001.  
Under the Trade and 
Investment Framework Agreement (TIFA), signed last year, the United States and Vietnam 
have been holding exploratory talks on the launch of negotiations of a 
BIT.  The United 
States negotiates BITs on the basis of a model 
text that provides high standards of investment protection and market access 
commitments.  BITs not only protect U.S. 
investors but can also be a valuable tool in guiding and implementing economic 
reforms and a stronger, more open investment regime.  The 
U.S. model text is 
substantively similar to the investment chapters of the free trade agreements 
the United States has 
concluded in recent years and is the basis for treaties recently concluded with 
Uruguay (2005) and Rwanda 
(2008).  The United 
States has 40 BITs in force.  
On June 19, 2008, 
the United States and 
Vietnam concluded an agreement to 
facilitate trade in telecommunications and information technology (IT) 
equipment.  This Mutual Recognition Agreement for Conformity Assessment 
will permit U.S. authorities 
to designate laboratories in the United 
States as eligible to test telecommunications and IT 
equipment for compliance with Vietnam’s telecommunications 
regulatory requirements and to have the results of such testing recognized by 
Vietnamese authorities.  By permitting tests to be conducted in the 
United States, the agreement 
will lead to a reduction in the costs and time involved in exporting 
U.S. telecommunications and 
IT equipment to Vietnam. 
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