Ho Chi Minh City advances toward global metropolis after 50-year pioneering development
Ho Chi Minh City’s transformation has been shaped by its willingness to pioneer bold reforms and test new development models.
Fifty years after being named after President Ho Chi Minh (July 2, 1976–2026), the southern city consolidates its position as Vietnam’s largest economic hub, pursuing its ambition of becoming a smart and globally competitive metropolis (Photo: VNA)

Hanoi (VNA) – Fifty years after being named in honour of President Ho Chi Minh (July 2, 1976–2026), the southern city has consolidated its position as Vietnam’s largest economic hub, leading national growth through its pioneering spirit of innovation and reform, while pursuing its ambition of becoming a smart, globally competitive metropolis.

Highlights in pioneering innovation

Ho Chi Minh City’s transformation has been shaped by its willingness to pioneer bold reforms and test new development models.

One of the clearest examples was the development of the Phu My Hung urban area in the early 1990s. At the time, the city's southern part was largely undeveloped marshland with poor transport links. Through strategic vision, innovative mindset, a determination to overcome institutional and policy barriers, and unprecedented cooperation with foreign partners, the city launched Vietnam’s first modern urban development project, marking a breakthrough in urban planning while pioneering a new approach to market-oriented development and mobilisation of social resources.

Architect Ngo Viet Nam Son recalled that the project site could only be accessed by boat before construction began. Few imagined it could become one of Vietnam’s model urban areas.

He said the city’s readiness to embrace international development practices and overcome institutional barriers turned what once seemed impossible into reality, while pioneering Vietnam’s first public-private partnership in urban development, setting a precedent for developing many new urban areas nationwide.

Phu My Hung was not an isolated success. Over the past five decades, Ho Chi Minh City has consistently served as a testing ground for breakthrough policies that were later institutionalised and expanded nationwide.

Former Standing Deputy Secretary of the municipal Party Committee Pham Chanh Truc said the city has repeatedly pioneered reforms by experimenting with unprecedented mechanisms and policies, creating development models that have benefited both the city and the country.

Among its landmark initiatives were the Tan Thuan Export Processing Zone - the first export processing zone of Vietnam that paved the way for foreign direct investment; the Quang Trung Software Park - a pioneer in software development and digital transformation; and the Ho Chi Minh Stock Exchange (HOSE), which laid the foundation for the country’s modern capital market.

Economist Tran Du Lich noted that many of Vietnam’s major market-oriented economic policies were first shaped through Ho Chi Minh City’s practical experience. Since the early 2000s, the Politburo and the National Assembly have adopted a series of resolutions granting the city greater autonomy and special mechanisms, enabling it to continue piloting innovative policies and mobilising new development resources.

Growth-driving, innovative hub

From a war-scarred city, Ho Chi Minh City has grown into Vietnam’s largest economic centre and a strategic growth pole. Following the expansion of its development space on July 1, 2025, the city now has an economy estimated at around 3 quadrillion VND (nearly 114 billion USD), contributing roughly 23.5% of the country’s GDP and nearly one-third of the national budget revenue.

Its development model is also shifting toward science and technology, innovation and the digital economy, which are expected to become the main drivers of productivity, competitiveness and sustainable growth.

Looking ahead, the city aims to sustain double-digit economic growth for many years and raise per-capita GRDP to at least 100,000 USD by 2075. Its long-term vision is to become a global city that embodies Vietnam’s dynamism, international competitiveness and development aspirations while continuing to pioneer institutional reform, governance quality and national growth.

According to Dr. Huynh The Du from the Fulbright School of Public Policy and Management, Ho Chi Minh City should evolve beyond its role as an economic engine to become a centre for creating new value, strengthening regional linkages and addressing institutional bottlenecks that can stimulate development nationwide.

Chairman of the municipal People’s Committee Nguyen Van Duoc affirmed that the municipal authorities remain committed to its longstanding principle of developing “for the whole country and together with the whole country” in all its policies.

As it celebrates half a century of bearing President Ho Chi Minh’s name, the southern metropolis is entering a new chapter, with the proposed Special Urban Law expected to provide an unprecedented institutional framework to unlock its full potential and accelerate its journey toward becoming a modern, globally connected and highly liveable city, he said./.

See Also

Hanoi unveils 276 investment projects under 100-year development vision

According to the municipal People's Committee, Hanoi's investment attraction strategy is shifting from prioritising capital volume to focusing on investment quality. In the coming period, the city will seek strategic investors capable of driving growth through high-value projects in semiconductors, integrated circuit design, artificial intelligence (AI), big data, biotechnology, new materials, research and development (R&D), innovation centres, modern logistics, green finance, financial technology (fintech), education and training, and specialised healthcare.

New cave discovered in Phong Nha - Ke Bang

A newly discovered cave in Phong Nha - Ke Bang National Park in the central province of Quang Tri stretches around 3 kilometres and features a spectacular system of stalactites along with numerous clusters of unusually large and rare cave pearls.

Quy Nhon named among world's top 25 beach destinations for 2026

Renowned travel publication Lonely Planet has named Quy Nhon in Gia Lai province among its 25 Best Destinations for 2026, making it the only Vietnamese destination on the list. The coastal city was recognised as an ideal destination for beach holidays and coastal exploration.

Vietnam’s first-ever judge at ITLOS marks milestone in country’s international standing and legal expertise

Vietnam’s election of its first-ever judge to the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea (ITLOS) reflects not only the international community’s confidence in the country’s responsible and constructive contributions to global affairs, but also the growing stature of Vietnam’s international legal profession and the expertise of its legal scholars. These views were shared by Vietnamese diplomats and international experts in interviews with the Vietnam News Agency.

Top leader’s letter honours Vietnamese family values

Party General Secretary and State President To Lam wrote that every Vietnamese family will maintain these cherished traditional values through concrete daily actions: respecting grandparents and parents; loving and caring for children; spouses being faithful, equal, and sharing; and generations listening to, respecting, and supporting each other. Preserving the family means preserving family traditions, culture, and the enduring strength of the nation.

Top leader urges youth to strengthen ambition, skills, national responsibility

Young people across the country must become more resolute in their ideals, more self-reliant in their studies and work, more pioneering in innovation, stronger in their aspiration to contribute, and more proactive in mastering their own future and that of the nation. That was the directive issued on June 25 in Hanoi by Party General Secretary and State President To Lam, as he attended and delivered a keynote address at the opening of the 13th National Congress of the Ho Chi Minh Communist Youth Union for the 2026-31 term.