Vietnam's biometric surge powers digital banking overhaul
As the Party identified breakthroughs in science – technology and innovation as a key driver of national progress, the mastery and adoption of biometric technologies must go hand in hand with safeguarding public trust, data security, and citizens’ interests, all aligned with the people-first philosophy guiding the country's digital agenda.
A Vietcombank employee guides a client in biometric process (Photo: qdnd.vn)

Hanoi (VNA) – Vietnam's digital transformation accelerated sharply in 2025, with State agencies, banks, and financial institutions aggressively rolling out biometric tools, including fingerprint, facial, and voice recognition, to boost governance efficiency, stamp out fraud and money laundering, and bring greater clarity to financial transactions.

Public reception has been largely positive, yet concerns remain over data security and personal privacy. As a result, biometrics have become not only a technological leap but also a litmus test for state governance capacity and civic responsibility in the digital age.

As the Party identified breakthroughs in science – technology and innovation as a key driver of national progress, the mastery and adoption of biometric technologies must go hand in hand with safeguarding public trust, data security, and citizens’ interests, all aligned with the people-first philosophy guiding the country's digital agenda.

In parallel, the banking industry's digital evolution has transcended basic workflow automation and IT modernisation, pivoting toward a robust ecosystem of digital data and identity infrastructure.

Dr. Nguyen Quoc Hung, Vice President and Secretary General of the Vietnam Banks Association, highlighted key imperatives: perfecting data infrastructure, advancing responsible personalisation, bolstering trust via transparency and privacy protection, and deepening collaboration between regulators and tech providers.

Accurate citizen identity verification, he noted, enables reliable processes in credit allocation, anti-money laundering, tax collection, and social welfare management, leaving little room for fraud, profiteering, or vested interests. Viewed through this lens, biometrics assume wider socio-political weight: purifying financial flows, elevating transaction clarity, and showcasing the governance strength of a rule-of-law socialist state.

Within the broader push for Party-driven reform in state-owned enterprises, embedding biometrics in banking marks a decisive move away from rigid, top-down command structures toward governance rooted in trust and actionable data insights. This mirrors a new leadership mindset outlined in the 13th National Party Congress’s Resolution, which calls for a fundamental renewal of leadership methodology, moving from detailed directives to guidance, supervision and performance evaluation based on service quality delivered to the public./.

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