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Hanoi promotes handicraft exports

It can be seen that the international recognition of two of Hanoi's Bat Trang Pottery and Van Phuc Silk Weaving villages has opened up opportunities for exchange and cooperation with the world's leading craft centers.

Hanoi sets the target to increase the proportion of handicraft exports to 3%-5% of the city's total exports, according to Nguyen Manh Quyen, Vice Chairman of the municipal People's Committee.

Specifically, the city targets the exports at 4.4%-5% per year for the 2023-2025 period, and 5.1%-5.5% annual for the 2026-2030 period.

“In addition to promoting traditional values, Hanoi's craft villages need to create new product designs suitable for the culture of developed countries to increase the export of handicraft products to enhance the product value,” Quyen said.

 Foreign visitors buy handicrafts at the "Week of Promotion of Agricultural Products and Traditional Craft Villages 2024" to mark the 70th anniversary of Hanoi's Liberation Day (Oct. 10). Photo: Kinhtedothi.vn

To preserve and sustainably develop craft villages, in recent years, Hanoi has implemented many specific solutions such as developing nine creative design centers and promoting One Commune One Product (OCOP) and craft villages associated with tourism.

In particular, Hanoi is focusing on developing industrial clusters to draw production facilities and business households. They will be relocated out of residential areas to curb environmental pollution and risks of fires in craft villages. Currently, 70 industrial clusters have been put in operation and 43 others are under construction.

Hanoi is now home to 1,350 craft villages, accounting for more than 45% of the country's total craft villages. “Hanoi identifies craft villages as one of its development strengths to expand Vietnamese culture,” said Quyen.

Over the past years, Vietnam's participation in free trade agreements (FTAs) has helped reduce export taxes and expand market opportunities for economic sectors and the handicraft industry in particular.

However, many challenges require craft village enterprises to promote linkages, change production scale, and improve product competitiveness.

According to Dr. Dang Mai Anh from the University of Industrial Fine Arts, although Hanoi's handicraft products are beautiful and unique, their designs remain monotonous, which makes it difficult to compete with many handicraft products from other countries.

“To have handicraft products that keep up with and are suitable for market demand, businesses must have the right strategy for the creation and production process. Specifically, businesses and production facilities need to understand market demand and the customers,” Mai Anh said.

She noted that each type of product has its own characteristics and appeals to different customers. “Exploiting the right markets for the right type of goods at the right time will achieve the goal of selling products domestically and exporting them to the world.”

The fact that Bat Trang Pottery and Van Phuc Silk Weaving villages were announced as members of the World Crafts Network on February 14 is a testament to Hanoi's increasingly solid position on the global creative map.

“It can be seen that the international recognition of the two of Hanoi's traditional craft villages has opened up opportunities for exchange and cooperation with the world's leading craft centers. It also affirms that Hanoi's cultural industry development strategy is on the right track, promoting traditional crafts of Vietnam and Hanoi to the global market,” Mai Anh stressed.

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