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Prolegómenos

versión impresa ISSN 0121-182Xversión On-line ISSN 1909-7727

Prolegómenos vol.25 no.50 Bogotá jul./dic. 2022  Epub 24-Mar-2023

https://doi.org/10.18359/prole.5937 

Research article

Against corruption and promoting socio-economic development in Vietnam today through amending the law on state acquisition of land for socio-economic development for the national or public benefit*

Contra la corrupción y a favor del desarrollo socioeconómico en el Vietnam actual mediante la modificación de la ley sobre adquisición estatal de tierras para el desarrollo socioeconómico en beneficio nacional o público

Contra a corrupção e pela promoção do desenvolvimento socioeconômico no Vietnã atualmente mediante emenda de lei sobre aquisição de terras do Estado para o desenvolvimento socioeconômico para benefício nacional ou público

Luan Nguyen Thanha 

a Doctor of Laws, Lecturer, Faculty of Economics and Business Phenikaa University, Hanoi 11216. E-Mail: luan.nguyenthanh@phenikaa-uni.edu.vn. orcid: 0000-0002-5095-3251


Abstract:

this article analyzes and evaluates Vietnam’s current legal provisions on State land acquisition for socio-economic development in the national or public interest. Since implementation, many legal loopholes have been revealed, such as large-scale land acquisition, “cheap” compensation for acquired property, and coercive land acquisitions. These have created additional opportunities for corrupt officials and enterprises with a close and mutually profitable relationship, putting the people whose land is to be acquired into difficulties and poverty. Amending the law to close these loopholes is necessary to combat corruption, ensure the interests of people whose land is to be acquired, and promote Vietnam’s socio-economic development.

Keywords: land acquisition; land prices; economics; land act; officials

Resumen:

Este artículo analiza y evalúa las actuales disposiciones legales de Vietnam sobre la adquisición estatal de tierras para el desarrollo socioeconómico en beneficio nacional o público. Desde su aplicación, se han revelado muchas lagunas legales, como la adquisición de tierras a gran escala, la compensación "barata" por la propiedad adquirida y las adquisiciones coercitivas de tierras. Estas han creado oportunidades adicionales para funcionarios corruptos y empresas con una relación estrecha y mutuamente provechosa, poniendo en dificultades y pobreza a las personas cuyas tierras van a ser adquiridas. Es necesario modificar la ley para colmar estas lagunas, a fin de combatir la corrupción, garantizar los intereses de las personas cuyas tierras se van a adquirir y promover el desarrollo socioeconómico de Vietnam.

Palabras clave: adquisición de tierras; precios de la tierra; economía; ley del suelo; funcionarios

Resumo:

Este artigo analisa e avalia as atuais disposições legais do Vietnã sobre a aquisição de terras do Estado para o desenvolvimento socioeconômico de interesse nacional ou público. Desde a implementação, muitas brechas legais foram reveladas, tais como a aquisição de terras em larga escala, a compensação “barata” por propriedades adquiridas e a aquisição coerciva de terras. Isso criou oportunidades adicionais para funcionários e empresas corruptas com um relacionamento próximo e mutuamente lucrativo, o que colocou as pessoas das terras a serem adquiridos em dificuldades e na pobreza. É necessário alterar a lei para encerrar essas brechas e para combater a corrupção, assegurar os interesses das pessoas das terras a serem adquiridas e promover o desenvolvimento socioeconômico do Vietnã.

Palavras-chave: aquisição de terras; preços de terras; economia; lei de terras; funcionários

Introduction

Today, Vietnam is one of the few socialist countries with the leadership of the existing Communist Party and a dynamic, developing economy (Duong, Holmes, and Strutt 2020). People’s lives are getting better both physically and mentally.

[...] Vietnam achieved all 12 key national development goals set for 2019. According to the UN Sustainable Development Report 2019, Vietnam’s sdg index ranked 54th among 162 countries, up three positions from 2018. In comparison to the East and South Asia averages, Vietnam performed well on 12 out of 17 SDGS, but lagged on SDGS 8 (decent work and economic growth), 9 (industry, innovation, and infrastructure), 14 (life below water), 15 (life on land), and 16 (peace, justice, and strong institutions). Vietnam’s Human Development Index (HDI) continued to increase in 2019, reaching 0.693-only 0.007 points below the Human Development Group’s high threshold (United Nations Vietnam 2020).

This result is due to the implementation of the Doi Moi policy (Beresford, 2008), whose main content is the transformation from a centrally planned to a socialist-oriented market economy from December 1986 until now (Nguyen & Chen, 2017).

In Vietnam, an all-citizen ownership regime for land was declared from the Constitutions of 1980, 1992, and 2013 and the land laws of 1987, 1993, 2003, and 2013 (National Assembly, 2013),1 which is different from the free market and democracy model of Western countries (Bolesta, 2019). On behalf of all people, the State uniformly manages the entire land area in the territory and is entitled to exercise the rights of the owner as prescribed by law.2 People do not have the right to own land but are allocated land by the State for exploitation and use in the name of granting land use rights (Nguyen thanH, 2020), in the form of land allocation by the State or land lease by the State. People must fulfill obligations to the State (Nguyen, Van de Krabben & Samsura, 2017). The State can acquire land that has been allocated to people for other purposes.3 Implementation of socio-economic development projects in the national or public interest is a legal basis for the State to implement land acquisition from the people. This is the basis for the state having, in the past, recovered a great deal of land from people, most of which is agricultural land to build economic zones, industrial parks, tourist areas, eco-zones, and new urban areas (Tuyen et al., 2014).

[.] Ho Chi Minh City is the locality with the largest area converted to non-agricultural purposes compared to other provinces in the country. During 2001-2005, the city transferred about 18,000 ha of agricultural land and unused land for industrial development, services, and urban expansion (Võ & Hoa, 2011).

The State holds great power in the distribution and management of land. However, monitoring this power is still ineffective, the system is loosely controlled, and social criticism has not been appreciated (Nguyen et al., 2019). The law that allows State agencies to recover land from implementing projects for socio-economic development purposes-“for the public benefit”-becomes an easy opportunity for corrupt officials and enterprises to form mutually beneficial and profitable relationships-an expression of the crony capitalism that has long existed in Vietnam (Ngo & Tarko, 2018).

[.] In recent years, the massive construction of golf courses has made it easy for many negative “interest groups” to occupy land. Although the economic efficiency of golf courses is not high, many investors still do it with the main purpose of occupying the land. According to a report by the Ministry of Planning and Investment on the implementation of golf course planning (in 2011), out of 90 golf course projects included in the planning, only 21 projects are golf course businesses, and the remaining 69 projects combine golf business with real estate and tourism. Many golf course projects are mere disguises for occupying land and converting its intended land use purposes (Nguyen & Nguyen, 2020).

The result of this cooperation is the creation of people’s land acquisition projects to reap substantial economic benefits for corrupt officials and enterprises with a mutually beneficial relationship. People whose land is acquired are deprived of valuable assets and even lose their primary source of livelihood (Chau, 2019). People whose land was to be acquired are driven into corners, while corrupt officials and enterprises become wealthy, causing a rift in the relationship between the people and the State. The resistance of the people demonstrates this. There have been prolonged gatherings, large crowds, and even direct action against the State, confiscating the land by force, which has caused socio-economic instability in Vietnam (Labbé, 2015).

Regulations on cases of State land acquisition for socioeconomic development in the national or public interest

According to Article 62 of the 2013 Land Law, the National Assembly, the prime minister, and the People’s Councils of the provinces and Municipal Cities are the decentralized authorities who decide on land acquisition for the implementation of projects for socio-economic development in the national or public interest.

Under the authority of the National Assembly, the law does not specify which projects are essential to the country under the jurisdiction of the National Assembly to decide on land acquisition. Instead, in Article 7 of the Law on Public Investments (2019), projects of national importance are those with one of the following characteristics:

  • Using public investment capital worth 10,000 billion dong or above.4

  • Having a substantial environmental impact or posing potential risks of having a severe environmental impact, such as the construction of a nuclear power plant, destroying natural forests 50 ha or larger, or destroying production forests 1,000 ha or larger.

  • Using land subject to the requirement for conversion of land use purposes from arable land for growing wet rice during at least two cropping seasons that cover an area of 500 ha or more.

  • Moving and resettling at least 20,000 inhabitants in mountainous areas or at least 50,000 inhabitants in other regions.

  • Requiring particular legal frameworks or policies subject to the National Assembly’s resolutions.

Under the authority of the prime minister, projects subject to land acquisition decisions include the following:

  • Project to build concentrated industrial production zones, export processing zones, economic zones, high-tech zones, and new urban areas.

  • Projects to build working offices of central State agencies, offices of diplomatic missions, and construction projects such as parks, monuments, etc.

  • National-level technical infrastructure construction projects such as roads, irrigation systems, electrical systems, national-level reserves, etc.

Under the authority of the provincial People’s Council, projects to approve the investment to recover land include the following:

  • Building working offices of local State agencies, public parks, public squares, etc.

  • Projects to build transportation or irrigation systems for agriculture, water supply, and drainage.

  • Projects to build new urban areas, build houses for low-income people, create new rural residential areas, build funeral homes, construct pagodas, churches, houses of worship, etc.

  • Projects to build concentrated industrial production clusters, export processing clusters, and mineral mining projects.

In general, the provisions of Article 62 of the 2013 Land Law are one step closer compared to the old land laws when they clearly and specifically stipulate the cases in which State agencies recover land to carry out socio-economic development projects in service of national and public interests in law to limit rampant and indiscriminate land acquisition dumps that occurred between 2000 and 2013.5 However, the cases specified in Article 62 of the 2013 Land Law are still large-scale, making it easy for corrupt officials and enterprises with close beneficial relationships to create projects and recover the people’s land.

[...] 'There are still localities that consider land acquisition for “ecotourism urban areas” for national and public benefits. In fact, the construction of an ecological urban area is a profitable investment and a business project that does not represent a work that serves only the residential community. Alternatively, there are projects where the planned area for social housing and resettlement accounts for less than 10 % of the project’s area. The remaining more than 90 % of the planned area for business housing includes: public residential housing, streets, gardens, etc., but it is still considered by some localities to be simple land acquisition by the State for the purpose of socioeconomic development (Hien & Linh, 2020).

In particular, land acquisition for the implementation of projects to build new urban areas, residential areas, tourist areas, ecological zones, commercial zones, economic zones, business zones, social housing construction projects,6 new rural residential areas, concentrated industrial zones, export processing zones, industrial clusters (Nguyen et al., 2019), and new rural residential areas, are preferred. They are widely applied because they bring huge profits to enterprises.

[.] According to Luu Binh Nhuong, deputy head of the Civil Volunteers Committee under the National Assembly, in 2016-2018, Long An province received 11 resolutions of the People’s Council to recover land to implement 1,694 projects. Thus, the average resolution covered 154. Tien Giang province has 16 resolutions with 846 projects, with an average of 53 projects/resolution. Lam Dong province has eight resolutions with 771 projects, about 96 projects/ resolution (Nhan, 2020).

Accordingly, plots of land with beautiful locations, high value, or thousands of square meters of agricultural land can be recovered only through the State Land Acquisition’s decision, which is then assigned to enterprises that have close beneficial relationships with officials for project implementation (Labbé, 2018). After completing the investment and construction of these projects, enterprises sell them to the market and make huge profits. The investment of these enterprises is often only at the level of infrastructure construction, including roads, electricity, water supply, and drainage. However, new urban areas, residential areas, tourist areas, and ecological zones have not been formed. Commercial areas have sold land plots to the market, increasing the enormous profits for corrupt officials and enterprises (Hansen, 2013).

[.] In the land use plan for 2021, Dong Nai province has nearly 350 residential and urban projects in districts, as well as in Bien Hoa City and Long Khanh City. More than 70 % of residential and urban projects have had investors for 5-10 years, but the projects have not been completed. From 2018 until now, the “fever” of land in the Southeast region has made the purchase and sale of land plots and housing projects in Dong Nai more exciting. Many investors in residential areas and urban areas in the province, after barely starting construction on the project, transfer the product in the form of a secondary investor to sign a contract. co-investment, deposit, capital contribution, and reservation (Uyen, 2021).

Apart from the cases specified in Article 62, under Article 73 of the 2013 Land Law, State agencies are not allowed to recover land from people to assign to enterprises for project implementation. Enterprises that want land for project implementation are to negotiate with the people through receiving land use rights transfers, leasing land use rights, and receiving capital contributions in the form of land use rights. This is a voluntary land transfer mechanism between the people and enterprises. The State does not intervene in the force of power to take the land of the people. This shifting mechanism is in stark contrast to land acquisition, which is a compulsory land-shifting mechanism where land is transferred to enterprises using the power of the State to take back land from the people and then assign it to enterprises.

The voluntary land transfer mechanism ensures the rights of people whose land has been acquired and is suitable for the market economy. Businesses must negotiate and pay landowners according to the wishes of landowners to acquire land to implement the project. However, enterprises, especially those with close beneficial relationships with corrupt officials, prefer to avoid this mechanism because it brings less profit, and the time to acquire land takes longer than acquiring land by forced land transfer mechanisms.

[...] Voluntary land transfer is reached by consensus; thus, there is no conflict of interest, but investors can never successfully negotiate with 100 % of people who use land for investment projects. During negotiations, about 70 % of the people ask for land prices that investors cannot accept. This situation makes investors not want to implement the voluntary land transfer mechanism, but want to apply the compulsory land transfer mechanism (Quynh, 2019).

Regulations on land prices that the State compensates people whose land is acquired is lower than the market price of land

Since the Land Act of 19937, when the State recovers land to carry out socio-economic development projects for the national and public interest, people whose land is to be acquired will be compensated by the state for the land and the assets attached to the recovered land. In case of loss of accommodation, the state will arrange resettlement, and for lost livelihood sources, the State will train them and transfer them to new jobs. After inheriting the old land laws, the 2013 Land Law explicitly stipulates the issue of compensation for land, assets attached to the land and resettlement, and support for new jobs; in addition, the compensation level for those whose land is acquired has increased. However, people whose land is to be acquired are interested in something other than this compensation from the State.

The cause of this problem is that in Vietnam, there are currently two types of land prices: land prices formed during the implementation of civil and commercial transactions on land use rights, permitted by law between individuals and organizations, and land prices issued by the state according to the land pricing mechanism specified in Section 2, Chapter 8 of the 2013 Land Law.8 The land price for calculating compensation for people whose land is considered damaged withdrawal, which is the price issued by the State.9

According to the law, the land price promulgated by the State is determined based on the principle of being consistent with the common land price in the market, not the actual market land price.10 Every five years, the government promulgates the land price bracket applicable to each type of land11 and region.12 If during this time, the land price bracket differs from the standard land price in the market by 20 %, the government will adjust the land price bracket accordingly.

Based on the land price bracket promulgated by the government,13 the People’s Committee of the province shall decide to issue the land price list within the administrative boundaries under its management after it has been considered and approved by the People’s Council of the same level.14 To issue specific land prices in line with common land prices in the market, State agencies apply valuation methods15 and can consult organizations with land price consulting functions. However, the land price issued by the government is still much lower than the market price (Luan, 2020).

[.] The highest price at the local land price lists is only 30 % of the common maximum price in the market; in many streets in big cities, especially in some cases, it is not equal to 20 % (Hung, 2019).

Therefore, the specific land price that the State applies to compensate people whose land is acquired at prices much lower than the market price of the land. With the compensation received, the person whose land is acquired cannot buy back the same area for resettlement or buy land to continue agricultural production to stabilize life.16 This often leads to poverty for those whose land is acquired (Seo, Shin, & Kwon, 2021).

[...] While they are not suffering as much as temporary households, the Thu Thiem people who moved to the resettlement area also said that they were struggling day by day because of the money they had to pay when buying an apartment. Doan Thi Chua (living in Binh Khanh ward) said that her dream of having a tailor shop since she was a girl ended when her 60 m2 house (in An Khanh ward) was cleared: When I was cleared, I only received a support of 71 million VND.17 The resettlement apartment was bought for nearly 1 billion VND,18 and we had to pay more than 65 million VND19 annually. The reality was too much for the family.20

Meanwhile, after the land is recovered, the State allocates that land to enterprises implementing projects to build residential areas, new urban areas, tourist areas, commercial zones, etc., and the land is sold to the market at a price many times higher than the compensated one for the people, making huge profits.

[...] The story of borrowing the project, recovering the land from the people at the price set by the State, and then selling it quickly at the highest market price, especially in Nha Trang and Khanh Hoa. In the Quoc Anh Villa project, in Phuoc Dong commune, although most of the area is production forest land, the investor is still licensed to build villas and tourist apartments for sale or rent. Meanwhile, for many years, many people with land in the project were not allowed to touch the status quo and are now being charged a low compensation price, only 20 000 VND21/m2 (Nhiet, 2018).

The economic loss of people whose land is to be acquired is noticeable which is why people whose land is to be acquired are protesting the State’s land acquisition. This objection is reflected in the refusal to comply with the decision on land acquisition, not to receive compensation for land recovery, and to complain about prolonged mass gatherings causing social instability.

[.] Land-related lawsuits occur in many projects in most localities. By summarizing and reviewing, there were 44 out of 63 localities where there were complaints and denunciations of many people at the central citizen reception office, with 221 cases. Hanoi has the most cases, 59; Bac Giang has 15 cases; Bac Ninh has 11 cases; and Ho Chi Minh City has 10 cases (Nhan, 2020).

Enforcement of land acquisition decisions

In cases where the person whose land is to be acquired does not hand over the land under the land acquisition decision of the competent State agency, they may be subject to the application of coercive measures to recover the land according to the provisions of Article 71 of the Land Law in 2013. According to the law, the enforcement of land acquisition is a measure only applied when the propaganda and dialogue between the State and the people whose land is to be acquired fails to achieve results within a certain period and adheres to the principles of openness and transparency. In essence, the enforcement of land acquisition is the State’s use of public power, expropriating people’s land without their consent.

People’s disagreement with the State’s land acquisition policy leads to the State applying coercive measures, which also comes from the State’s compensation when land is recovered for project implementation at a price lower than the market price. People whose land is to be acquired feel the economic loss, so clearly, they do not cooperate in handing over the land to the State.

[.] On the morning of April 24, the People’s Committee of Van Giang district, Hung Yen province, enforced the transfer of 5.8 ha of land from 166 households in Xuan Quan commune. This area is part of a total of 72 ha that will be assigned in the second phase to an investor to build the Van Giang tourist commercial urban area (Ecopark). According to the People’s Committee of Hung Yen province, 90 % of households on the land allocated in the second phase to the investor Ecopark “received compensation and handed over the land”. With the remaining 166 households, after many unsuccessful negotiations, the Provincial People’s Committee agreed to the coercive plan of the District People’s Committee. The reason these villagers did not agree to land allocation was said to be “not satisfied with the compensation plan” (Nguyen, 2012).

People whose land is to be acquired are weaker than the coercive force of the State, so they are forced to hand over their land to the coercive force or be taken off the land. This leads to a conflict between the people whose land is to be acquired and the State being pushed to a serious level. There have been cases where people whose land is recovered have protested by force against the State’s forces, executing the decision on coercive land recovery, causing damage to property, health, and the lives of both those whose land is to be acquired and the power that enforces the decision on coercive land recovery (Nguyen, 2019).

[.] In 2014, the People’s Committee of Ha Tinh province approved the investment policy of the project of raising foreign sows and growing fruit trees in Huong Xuan commune, Huong Khe district, with an area of 17.9 ha. The People’s Committee of Huong Khe district then issued a decision to recover the land, but was opposed by the people because they thought it would pollute the environment and the water sources. On September 8, 2015, the People’s Committee of Huong Khe District organized the coercive recovery of land for eight households in the Hoa Xuan hamlet. Nguyen Van Cuong, born in 1992, residing in Phu Yen hamlet, was arrested for “resisting official duty officers,” then sentenced to prison (Quang, 2018).

The conflict between the State and the people whose land is acquired only occurs when the State recovers the land and allocates it to the enterprise implementing the project. For the State’s land acquisition to make traffic systems, schools, or serve the purposes of national defense and security, building offices of State agencies, schools, and hospitals, the consensus of the people must be reached. The people must be willing to hand over the land to the State to build these works. In many localities, people have actively donated land to the State to construct public works for the common goal of socio-economic development according to the plan set forth by the State.

[...] To date, Muong Khuong district has five out of 16 communes meeting new rural standards (Ban Lau, Ban Xen, Lung Vai, Thanh Binh, and Pha Long); people actively contribute cash, donate land, work days, and participate in new rural construction activities launched by all levels and sectors. In five years, people voluntarily contributed with a total cash amount of over 10.5 billion VND, donated over 79 000 m2 of land, and contributed over 26 000 working days (Giang, 2021).

Therefore, disagreeing with the State’s compensation level for land due to economic disadvantage is the main reason for people whose land is acquired against the State’s land acquisition force.

Recommendations to amend the law on land acquisition for socio-economic development in the national and public interest

From the above analysis, the conflict between the State and the people whose land has been recovered for construction projects of a residential area project, new urban areas, tourist areas, economic zones, ecological zones, business, and trade are mainly over economic matters. The person whose land is to be acquired wants to receive compensation equal to the market price of land. So, they cannot accept that land is acquired with cheap compensation, and they get angry that land is not used for public purposes but is assigned to enterprises for projects and then sold at high prices in the market. Meanwhile, the current law on State expropriation of land for socio-economic development in national and public interests has created lucrative opportunities for corrupt officials and businesses with a close, mutually beneficial relationship. They cooperate to use the coercive power of the State to deprive people of their land and become wealthy as a result, leading the landless into difficulties and poverty.

To overcome this situation, the law on State land acquisition for socio-economic development in the national and public interests needs to be amended and supplemented with the following content:

First, narrow down the cases in which the State recovers land for socio-economic development in national and public interests.

It is necessary to abolish the regulations on land acquisition to implement new urban areas, residential areas, tourist areas, ecological zones, commercial zones, economic zones, business zones, social housing construction projects, new rural residential areas, industrial parks concentration, export processing zones, and industrial clusters. These are business projects in which the most beneficial party is the business. The State performing the social management function must ensure social justice (Ryan, 2007), not for the benefit of enterprises, especially enterprises that have close beneficial relationships with corrupt officials, recovering land to benefit large businesses, let the people whose land is to be acquired into difficulties and poverty. The abolition of this land acquisition regulation also promotes the anti-corruption campaign by the Communist Party of Vietnam to clean up the State apparatus and regain the people's trust in the Communist Party; the State has already been eroded by corruption. 22 The fight against corruption can only be successful when the conditions and opportunities for corruption are eliminated, not only in exposing and adjudicating cases that have occurred (Nguyen et al., 2019). The law allows State agencies to recover land to implement new urban areas, residential areas, tourist areas, ecological zones, commercial zones, economic zones, business zones, and housing construction projects. In society, new rural residential areas, concentrated industrial parks, export processing zones, and industrial clusters are creating conditions and opportunities for corruption, so they should be abolished.

The only solution for construction projects of new urban areas, residential areas, tourist areas, ecological zones, commercial zones, economic zones, business zones, social housing construction projects, new rural residential areas, industrial park concentrations, export processing zones, and industrial clusters that are enterprises wishing to use the land for project implementation must implement the voluntary land transfer mechanism. The State only guides and accredits transactions for voluntary land transfer between land owners and enterprises wishing to use land.

In other cases, according to the provisions of the current law, it can be kept the same.

Second, amend the provisions of the law on land prices to compensate people whose land is to be acquired.

The current law needs to amend the land price to compensate people whose land is acquired, which must be the market price to ensure the interests of the people who have their land acquired and eliminate the situation of taking advantage of the gap between the price of land issued by the State.

Third, amend the provisions of the law on coercive land acquisition to recover land for socio-economic development in national and public interest.

The current law must abolish the application of forced land acquisition for socio-economic development in the national and public interest because it causes conflicts between the State and the people whose land is recovered, sparking violence and socio-economic instability in the country. This measure should only be applied to cases where it is necessary to use the land for national defense and security and land use is dangerous to human health and life. The State’s land acquisition to implement projects for socio-economic development in the national and public interests must be carried out using dialog and consensus based on adequate compensation for the acquired land at market prices to the landowners whose land is acquired, which shall be taken from the national budget. Implementing projects to develop socio-economic development for the national and public interests is about bringing benefits to the people and the country, that is, for the majority, using coercion to take the land of a few people, pushing a few people into difficulties, poverty is unjust and unsuitable for a State organized and operated on the principles of the people, by the people, and for the people (Graber, 2008).23

Conclusion

Characterized by the regime of ownership of land by the entire population, the State plays the role of representing the owner of the land, exercising the rights of the owner; the people do not have the right to own land, so the State has the right to recover the land that has been allocated to people to use for other purposes. The State’s land acquisition for implementation of projects for socio-economic development in the national and public interest, if it is carried out in the public interest, based on consensus with the State. Landowners and ensuring the interests of those whose land is acquired will be a significant driving force for Vietnam’s socio-economic development.

However, the current law on State expropriation of land for socio-economic development in the national and public interests has many loopholes, creating opportunities for corrupt officials and businesses with close beneficial friendships to take advantage of land acquisition for construction projects in urban areas, residential areas, tourist areas, economic zones, etc., to earn huge profits and become more prosperous. In contrast, a person whose land is to be acquired is forced to receive the compensation price issued by the State with a price that is too low to buy an area of land equal to the acquired land, houses, or land for production and business. If they do not comply, they will be subject to coercive measures to recover their land, further increasing societal conflicts and injustice.

The current law on State expropriation of land for socio-economic development in national and public interests needs to be revised and narrowed down to cases in which the State recovers land and provides compensation for land owners. Suppose the land is recovered at the market price, and the forced land acquisition is removed. In that case, only the State’s land acquisition can be used to implement projects for socio-economic development in the national and public interests, if implemented correctly with its meaning, contributing to socio-economic promotion in Vietnam.

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*Research article

1The 2013 Land Law is currently in force in Vietnam.

2Provisions in Article 4 of the Land Law 2013.

3Article 62 of the 2013 Land Law stipulates cases in which the State may recover land for national security or military purposes to protect the country.

4About 430 million USD.

5The 2003 Land Law does not specify the cases in which State agencies may recover land for socio-economic development, but only general provisions in Article 38.1 “The State uses land for defense and security purposes, national interests, public interests, and economic development.”

6In Vietnam, the government has a policy to build apartments for sale to low-income people (called social housing), but it is very difficult for low-income people to buy because of the high cost of living. Prices are still very high relative to their income (Seo, Chung, & Kwon, 2018).

7The Land Act 1987 was built on the concept of a centrally planned economy, not recognizing land as an asset, so people whose land was confiscated to build a school would not be compensated by the State.

8The performance of civil and commercial transactions related to land must satisfy the conditions specified in Article 188 of the 2013 Land Law.

9Provisions in Article 114.2 of the Land Law 2013.

10To determine the price of land “common in the market.”

11Article 10 of the 2013 Land Law has classified all land in Vietnam’s territory into three groups according to the purpose of use: (1) land used for cultivation and agricultural production; (2) land used for non-agricultural activities, such as residential, industrial, commercial, service production facilities, and the construction of headquarters of State agencies; and (3) unused land.

12Classified by rural, urban, plain, or mountainous areas.

13The current land price bracket is prescribed in Decree No. 96/2019/ND-CP dated December 19, 2019, of the government regulating the land price bracket (Government of Vietnam 2019).

14In Vietnam, local government is organized from top to bottom: (1) provincial level: provinces and centrally run cities; (2) district level: district, district, provincial city; (3) commune level: commune, ward, town.

15The methods of land price appraisal are prescribed in Article 4 of Decree No. 44/2014/ND-CP dated May 15, 2014, of the government on land prices, including: (1) direct comparison method; (2) subtraction method; (3) income method; (4) residual method; and (5) land price adjustment coefficient method.

16Vietnam is currently a developing country, but agriculture is the main economic sector of the country, also the main occupation of most of the people (Phuong et al. 2017).

17About 3000 USD

18About 43 000 USD.

19About 2800 USD.

20 Sy Dong and Truong Hoang (2018). “Noi Lòng Ngu&i Dân Thu Thiêm - Báo Ngu&i Lao Dong.” Nguoi Lao Dong Newspaper, July 17, 2018. https://nld.com.vn/thoi-su/noi-long-nguoi-dan-thu-thiem-20180716220840309.htm.

21About 1 USD.

22The anti-corruption campaign, also known as the kiln-burning campaign, has been carried out strongly and drastically in Vietnam since 2016. This campaign was directly initiated and led by the General Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Vietnam, Nguyen Phu Trong, with the main point that there is no forbidden zone in work to regain people's trust in the Communist Party of Vietnam and the government. This campaign has exposed and brought to trial a series of significant corruption cases worth billions of dollars; many high-ranking officials of the Communist Party and the State—something unprecedented in Vietnam since 1975—were brought to trial and severely sentenced (Pham, 2021).

23Article 2.1 of the current Constitution of Vietnam declares that the State of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam is organized and operates on the principle of the People, by the People, for the People.

How to cite: Nguyen Thanh, L. (2023) Against corruption and promoting socio-economic development in Vietnam today through amending the law on state acquisition of land for socio-economic development for the national or public benefit. Prolegómenos, 25(50), 81-93. https://doi.org/10.18359/prole.5937

Received: August 29, 2021; Accepted: May 16, 2022; Published: March 24, 2023

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