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Intelligence for Better Decision Making
| Domain | Causal Chain | Possible Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Households | (House-price-to-income ratio ↑ → Housing cost-to-income burden ↑ → Household loan-delinquency rate ↑ → Precautionary savings gap ↑) | Widening precautionary savings gaps cut discretionary spending and dampen consumption growth. |
| Households | (Household debt-service ratio ↑ → Household loan-delinquency rate ↑ → Consumer confidence diffusion index ↓ → Private consumption growth volatility ↑) | Increased consumption volatility complicates macroeconomic management and undermines stable growth. |
| Financial System | (Credit-to-GDP gap ↑ → Financial-conditions index ↓ → Housing-market crash probability ↑ → Shadow-bank default cascades ↑) | Heightened crash risk could trigger widespread defaults in shadow banks and amplify financial instability. |
| Governance & Law | (Policy-implementation speed ↓ → Public-investment execution ratio ↓ → Infrastructure-quality index ↓ → Urban productivity premium ↓) | Slower policy execution and poorer infrastructure depress urban productivity and competitiveness. |
| Infrastructure & Urbanization | (Construction-permit issuance time ↑ → Housing-affordability index ↓ → Informal-settlement growth rate ↑ → Informal-settlement population share ↑) | Delays in permits fuel informal settlements, straining municipal services and exacerbating urban inequality. |
| Firms | (Market concentration trend ↑ → SME loan-rejection rate ↑ → Business-formation rate ↓ → Employment growth in the business sector ↓) | Tighter SME lending and lower start-ups slow job creation and hinder inclusive business-sector growth. |
| Macroeconomics & Growth | (Credit impulse (% GDP) ↑ → Asset-price wealth effect ↑ → Private consumption growth volatility ↑ → Output gap (% GDP) ↓) | Consumption swings widen the output gap, complicating policy efforts to stabilize growth. |
| Households | (Housing cost-to-income burden ↑ → Income-volatility (monthly) ↑ → Social-trust composite swing ↓ → Residential protest vandalism rate ↑) | Rising housing stress erodes social trust and can spur protest-related vandalism. |
| Politics | (Policy-uncertainty index deviation ↑ → FDI net inflow (% GDP) ↓ → Business fixed-investment growth deviation ↓ → Potential GDP growth revision ↓) | Heightened policy uncertainty reduces FDI and business investment, prompting downward revisions to potential GDP growth. |
| Financial System | (Asset-price valuation metrics ↓ → Housing-market crash probability ↓ → Financial-conditions index ↑ → Credit-availability index (SME loan approval) ↑) | Valuation corrections ease crash risk, improving conditions and boosting SME credit availability. |
Erudite Risk takes an all risks approach to intelligence reporting. We categorize key intelligence into one of 40 different risk intelligence categories.
The goal is to provide intelligence that allows decision makers to avoid being blindsided by what they may have missed, while informing them to make better decisions as well.
Erudite Risk also includes operations categories so you can monitor the environment for better decision making. Everything is tied together--what happens in risk affects operations and what happens in the market impacts risk profiles.
We categorize key intelligence into one of 30 different operations intelligence categories.
Different roles and functions within the organization can monitor different key issue areas. HR may monitor employment, wages, regulations, labor and management relations, etc., while P&L leaders may monitor overall developing trends.
Thủ tướng: Thảm họa thiên tai gây hậu quả nặng nề, khôn lường
Prime Minister: Natural disasters cause severe and unpredictable consequences
Dantri | Local Language | News | Jan. 16, 2026 | Natural Disasters
Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh emphasized at the January 14 meeting of Vietnam's National Steering Committee for the COP26 commitments that natural disasters cause severe and unpredictable consequences, underscoring the urgency of moving from awareness to concrete climate action. He highlighted the challenge and opportunity in achieving net-zero emissions as a pathway to sustainable development, independent and integrated economic growth, and innovation.
Vietnam has made significant progress in implementing climate commitments, with active participation from ministries, sectors, localities, enterprises, and the public in digital and green transformation, low-carbon and circular economy development, and energy transition. The government has institutionalized COP26 commitments into legal frameworks, facilitating emission reductions and climate adaptation. Vietnam's attractiveness to international investors and financial institutions in renewable energy and green projects has increased, as evidenced by multiple cooperation agreements currently being implemented.
Despite progress, the Prime Minister acknowledged shortcomings, especially in the mobilization of international resources under initiatives like JETP and AZEC, and the need for improved effectiveness in emission reduction and climate adaptation efforts. He called for a decisive shift from commitments to action, prioritizing people and enterprises as central actors in climate efforts and stressing the interconnectedness of safety and climate resilience among citizens and countries.
To advance these goals, the Prime Minister urged the refinement of Vietnam’s climate-related institutions and policies to align with global standards and local conditions. Key focuses include developing financial mobilization mechanisms, absorbing advanced green technologies, establishing governance models for green development, and building human resources. He also directed specific ministries to pilot emission quota allocations for major industrial sectors soon after approval of the 2025-2026 quotas and emphasized accelerating renewable energy development in line with Politburo Resolution No. 70-NQ/TW. Furthermore, the Ministry of Finance was tasked to lead research and assessment of the financial needs critical for green growth strategies in coordination with relevant authorities.
Áp thấp nhiệt đới gần Biển Đông có thể mạnh lên thành bão
Tropical depression near the East Sea may strengthen into a storm
Dantri | Local Language | News | Jan. 16, 2026 | Extreme Weather Events
On January 14, a tropical depression with wind speeds at force 7, gusting to force 9, was detected east of the Philippines. Forecasts indicate the system is moving west-northwest and may strengthen into a storm within the next 24 hours, potentially becoming the first storm in the Northwest Pacific region in 2026.
After strengthening, the storm is expected to move predominantly northward along the sea area east of the Philippines. Experts believe it has almost no chance of moving into the South China Sea near Vietnam due to the presence of a cold air mass in that region. The storm is likely to dissipate over the northeast waters of the Philippines around January 19-20.
Meteorological forecasts from now until March suggest a low likelihood of any storms or tropical depressions forming in the South China Sea. Between April and June, the frequency of storms and tropical depressions is expected to be near the multi-year average, with approximately 1.8 systems active in the South China Sea and only about 0.2 to 0.3 systems making landfall in the country. The chance of significant storm landfalls during this period remains low.
Establishing a science and technology research center in Vietnam: 05 key considerations from early 2026
BLawyers Vietnam | English | AcademicThink | Jan. 16, 2026 | UndeterminedTech Development/Adoption
Law No. 93/2025/QH15 on Science, Technology and Innovation (STI Law) came into effect on October 1, 2025, establishing a comprehensive legal framework for scientific research, technology development, and innovation in Vietnam. This law aims to attract high-quality investment, particularly research and development (R&D) projects by both domestic and foreign enterprises. Foreign-invested enterprises (FDIs) are increasingly interested in establishing science and technology research centers, especially in high-tech sectors like cybersecurity, AI, big data, semiconductors, and software development. Proper selection of the legal structure and understanding regulatory procedures are crucial to mitigate legal risks and maximize access to incentives and support.
The STI Law introduces a “Science and Technology Organization” model specifically for R&D centers, distinct from conventional commercial enterprises. This model allows proper legal characterization of R&D activities based on autonomy and results-based evaluation principles. Operating as a science and technology organization ensures compliance and provides a more stable legal foundation, while operating R&D activities as regular commercial enterprises may increase legal risks related to investment, tax, and regulatory oversight.
FDI enterprises can establish science and technology organizations in various forms such as research institutes, centers, laboratories, or specialized R&D centers. To operate lawfully, organizations must have charters and objectives aligned with Vietnamese law, qualified scientific personnel, adequate infrastructure, and compliance with national defense and development requirements. Authorities assess substantive research capacity during establishment reviews rather than mere formal compliance.
After lawful establishment and stable operation, foreign-invested organizations can apply for official recognition as R&D centers. Recognition confirms their research capabilities and grants access to state incentives, including tax benefits, land use priority, financing, and research collaboration opportunities. This recognition is generally pursued after demonstrating long-term research and development capacity.
The STI Law provides various incentive and support mechanisms to encourage R&D activities, especially in high-tech and strategic fields. Benefits include tax incentives, priority land and infrastructure access in specialized economic zones, use of shared facilities, support for communication and trade promotion, research infrastructure support, and talent attraction policies. These incentives depend on operational compliance and applicable policy frameworks.
Enterprises should be aware of practical risks, such as distinguishing science and technology organizations from commercial enterprises for correct licensing, aligning project documentation with STI Law objectives, and complying with regulations on foreign personnel, intellectual property, information security, and technology transfer, especially in sensitive sectors like cybersecurity. Early assessment of eligibility for R&D center recognition is advised to facilitate access to incentives.
BLawyers Vietnam offers legal support in advising on appropriate legal models under the STI Law, assisting with establishment conditions and procedures for foreign-invested science and technology organizations, facilitating recognition applications, and advising on related legal matters including investment, labor, technology, and intellectual property compliance.
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