1986 Doi Moi (Renewal): Pivotal turning point in socialist construction

1986 Doi Moi (Renewal): Pivotal turning point in socialist construction

The sixth National Party Congress in December 1986 mapped out the Doi Moi (Renewal) policy and initiated the process of Party-led reforms in Vietnam. This marked a crucial turning point in socialist construction, unleashing national strength and potential to propel the country forward. During the 1986–1995 period, the Party led the reform, abolished the subsidy mechanism, and transitioned to a socialist-oriented market economy, overcoming socio-economic crises and laying a firm foundation for international integration.
<b>“The four
pillars” – Vital components of institutional quality</b>

“The four pillars” – Vital components of institutional quality

These four resolutions are not standalone policies. Together, they form an integrated and complementary framework, where science and technology serve as the tool, law as the foundation, integration as the channel to expand development space, and the private sector as the engine driving implementation.
OP-ED: National landscape reorganisation and power of solidarity: Party vision aligned with people's will

OP-ED: National landscape reorganisation and power of solidarity: Party vision aligned with people's will

Initial success has been achieved as people now understand that the overhaul will save public expenditure, foster more balanced development, and enable the formation of new economic hubs. The ultimate goal is to develop digital government, smart smart cities, integrated economic zones, and flexible administrative models that offer faster, more transparent public services, saving time and costs for both citizens and businesses.
Merging cities and provinces: A century-long vision

Merging cities and provinces: A century-long vision

On June 12, 2025, during its 9th session, the 15th National Assembly passed a resolution on the restructuring of Vietnam’s provincial-level administrative units. Under this new structure, Vietnam now has 34 provincial-level units—28 provinces and 6 centrally governed cities.
Death penalty for eight criminal offenses lifted

Death penalty for eight criminal offenses lifted

The new law abolishes the death penalty for eight criminal offenses: the crime aimed at overthrowing the people’s government; the crime of sabotaging state infrastructure and technical facilities; the crime of producing and trading counterfeit medicines for treatment and prevention; the crime of destroying peace and causing aggressive war; the crime of espionage; that of illegally transporting narcotics; embezzlement; and bribe taking.