ESTIMATED ECONOMIC GAINS TO THE SOVIET BLOC IN NORTH VIETNAM

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CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2
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October 25, 1954
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/t4 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 US OFFICIALS ONLY INTELLIGENCE MEMORANDUM ESTIMATED ECONOMIC GAINS TO THE SOVIET BLOC IN NORTH VIETNAM CIA/RR IM-402 25 October 1954 WARNING THIS MATERIAL CONTAINS INFORMATION AFFECTING TEE NATIONAL DEFENSE OF THE UNITED STATES WITHIN THE MEANING OF.THE ESPIONAGE LAWS, TITLE 18, USC, SECS. 793 AND 794, THE TRANSMISSION OR REVELATION OF WHICH IN ANY MANNER TO AN UNAUTHORIZED PERSON IS PROHIBITED BY LAW. CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY Office of Research and Reports US OFFICIALS ONLY Si~.nsdl464 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001- 7~ fir Approved For Release 1999/09/21: CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T FOREWORD This memorandum outlines generally the level of economic activity in the territories of Indochina placed under Viet Minh control by the Geneva Conference. Estimates are made of the extent of agricultural self-sufficiency and of the level of activity of industry,, principally of mining, textiles, cement, and transportation. The trading structure of the North Vietnam area is outlined as it functioned before and during the recent hostilities. The probable benefits to the Soviet Bloc of the inclusion of the Viet Minh area within the Bloc are discussed. A comparison is drawn between the prospects for develop- ment of North and South Vietnam into self-sustaining economic entities. An estimate of probable economic developments through 1957 is made. S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 .-? Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T CONTENTS Page Summary and Conclusions . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 I. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 II. Productive Resources . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . 7 A. Agricultural Output in 1953 and Trends since 1946 B. Industrial Output . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1. Ferrous Metals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 13 a. Iron Ore . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 b. Iron and Steel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 c. Ferroalloys . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 (1) Manganese . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 (2) Chrome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 (3) Tungsten . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 2. Nonferrous Minerals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 a. Zinc . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 b . Bauxite . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 C. Tin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 d. Phosphates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 e. Salt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 3. Coal . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 4. Electric Power . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 5. Cement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 6. Consumer Goods and Handicrafts . . . . . . . 26 a. Textiles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 b. Miscellaneous . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . 26 7. Engineering, Munitions, and Shipbuilding Industries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIARDP79T00935A000300090001-2 a. General . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 b. Munitions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 c. Shipbuilding . . . . . . . ? . . . . . . . . 29 C. Transportation and Communications . . . . . . . 29 1. Transportation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 a. General . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 b. Highways . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 c. Railroads . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . 30 d. Water . . . . . . . . . . . . . ? . 32 (1) Inland Waterways . . . . . . . . . .. . 32 (2) Maritime Shipping . . . . . . . . . ? . 32 2. Communications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ., . 34 III. Human Resources . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . 34 IV. Economic 0:?ganization . . . . . . . . . . . ? . 36 V. Economic Relations of North Vietnam . . . . . . . . . 38 A. Prewar Foreign Trade 38 B. Trade with Communist China and the Soviet Bloc . . . 39 . ' 1. Exports . 39 2. Im.Dorts . . . . . . . . . . . . f . . . . . . 42 3. Ex;ent of Material and Technical 'Assistance Given to the Viet Minh . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 C. Relations with South Vietnam and Other Asiatic Count:^ies . . . . . . . 44 D. EffeCt3 oh. World Trade Patterns of the Inclusion of North Vietnam in the Soviet Bloc . . . . . . . . 45 i VI. Comparison of the Level of Economic Activities and Viability of North and South Vietnam . . . . . . . 46 VII. Estimate of Probable Economic Developments in North Vietnam through 1957 . . . . . . . . . . . 50 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA~RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 uw Approved. For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T Page A. Future Soviet Bloc Aid . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . 50 B. Probable Economic Developments through 1957 . . . . 50 1. Iron and Steel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 2. Nonferrous Minerals . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . 53 3. Coal . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53 4. Textiles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53 5. Cement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 6. Food . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 Appendix Sources . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 Tables 1. Estimated Production of Rice, Corn, Sugar, Sweet Potatoes, and Manioc in North Vietnam, 1937-41 and 1946-53 . 2. Estimated Production of Fuelwood and Industrial Wood in North Vietnam, 1938, 1940, and 1950-52 . . . . . 10 3. Estimated Production of meat in North Vietnam, 1935-39 and 1949-51 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 4. Per Capita Production of Principal Items of Food in North Vietnam, 1953 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 5. Production of Iron Ore in Indochina, 1937-45 . . . . . . 13 6. Production of Tungsten Concentrates in Indochina, 1937-42 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Production of Zinc in Indochina in Terms of Metal Content and Smelter Output, 1937-43 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIAOIRDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T Page 8. Producticn of Bauxite in Indochina, 1936-43 . . . . 18 9. Production of Tin in Indochina, 1937-43 ? ? ? ? ? ? 18 10. Production of Phosphate in Indochina, 1937-43 . . . 19 11. Production and Distribution of Coal inIndochina, 1937-41 and 1946-53 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 12. Capacity and Production of Electric Poker in North Vietnam., 1929, 1935-42, and 1949-53 24 13. Production and Export of Cement at Hai~hong, Tonkin, 1929 and 1933-53 . . . . . .. 14. Production of Textiles in North Vietna , 1937-41 and 1946-53 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15. External Trade of North Vietnam and ofTotal Vietnam;, 1936-38 and 1949-51 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 16 Prewar Commodity Trade Balance of North Vietnam, 1936-41 and Average . . . . . . . . . . . 41 17,. Trade of North Vietnam with France, 1936-38 and Average . . . . . . . . 18. Composition of Trade of North Vietnam,; 1936-38 Average . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 19. Peak Production and Estimated Production of Selected Commodities in North Vietnam in 1.957 and Consequent Percentages of Chinese and Total Soviet Bloc Pro- duction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52 M Indochina: Natural Resources and Processing Centers :L954 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Inside Back Cover - viii { S-E-C-R--E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21: CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 ' / Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 CIA/RR IM-402 (ORR Project 10.567) S-E-C-R-E-T ESTIMATED ECONOMIC GAINS TO THE SOVIET BLOC IN NORTH VIETNAM* Summary and Conclusions The partitioning of Vietnam, decided upon at the Geneva Conference 21 July 1954, has split a natural economic entity into two parts. The area now to be controlled by the Viet Minh has relatively greater potentialities for developing a viable partially industrialized econo- my, because it is richer in coal and mineral resources; already pos- sesses cement, textile, and food-processing industrial installations; and, in addition, has fair possibilities of establishing self-suf- ficiency in food production. South Vietnam, on the other hand, is an almost exclusively agricultural economy, with an exportable rice surplus and rubber plantations producing for export, but with very little in the way of mineral resources and with few industrial facilities of consequence except rice mills, rubber factories, distilleries, and shipyards. Reports of the 1954 "5th month"** rice crop in North Vietnam, which may have been as low as 50 percent of normal, indicate that there may be the worst famine in this area since 1945. The conse- quent reduction of at least 25 percent of the total 2.4 million tons*** of rice produced from the two annual rice crops in 1953 would reduce per capita availability from indigenous production to about 97 kilograms.**** Since domestic requirements are estimated at 200 to 250 kilograms per person per year, North Vietnam must either The estimates and conclusions contained in this memorandum repre- sent the best judgment of the responsible analyst as of 15 September 1954. This memorandum does not include any estimate of possible gains to the Viet Minh from their acquisitions from North Vietnam residents and institutions of holdings of old French-issued Indochinese piaster currency. ** The 5th month crop, harvested in May, is the first crop of the year. Tonnages throughout this report are given in metric tons. ** Crop production figures are in terms of paddy rice,, whereas consumption is in terms of milled rice (which represents a 75--percent extraction rate). S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIARDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T suffer severe restriction of consumption or receive imports up to 500,000 tons of rice from other areas, includ].ng Communist China, which is not ir, a position to supply such an amount readily. North Vietnam normally obtains grain from South Vietnam and has only limited potentialities for increasing indigenous production. and availability of food through long-term improvements in agriculture and methods of distribution. North Vietr.am has the essential resources]for small-scale indus- trial development and for sizable exports of coal, nonferrcus metals, and cement. It contains most of the known mineral resources of Indochina, but except for coal these had not teen developed. to sig- nificant proportions for purposes of industrialization under the French. Generally, the inclusion of the Viet Minh areas into the Soviet Bloc will not mean the addition of any v-"-tally important natural resources of w1.ich the Bloc does not already control adequate sup- plies. Any sut stantial production from North Vietnam',s mineral resources other than coal can'be made available to the Bloc only at the cost of considerable investment in trafnsportation, mining, and processing facilities. Communist China will receive more benefit from the inclusion of the area in the Soviet Bloc since important additional supplies of cement and coal, will become available to it, as well as a convenient railroad route for facilitating exploitation, of Southwest China's tin and copper resources and for importing egIuipment for further development of that area. The two railroad links with South China, when restored, will assist North Vietnam's development and facilitate possible future transport of military supplie's from the Bloc. North Vietnam's proved iron reserves are ;estimated at only 5.7 million tons, End iron mining was developed 'ainly for the purpose of export of iron ore to Japan. Only small ounts were processed into iron and .feel products, in local nativE furnaces, the cement plant, and the Bac Son iron and steel plant.: Unless further geo- logical surveys prove otherwise, North V:Letnn will not have the indigenous resources for an adequate iron and steel industry. 1 Production of ferroalloy metals, notably manganese, tungsten, and chrome, from the important deposits of North Vietnam has virtually ceased since World War II. Under table conditions it S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA~RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 1"`" Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T is possible that as much as 10,000 tons eacn in metal content of marketable manganese and chrome and 700 tons of tungsten ore may be produced per year by 1957 for export to the Soviet Bloc. These are relatively unimportant, however, in comparison with reserves and production in the Bloc. Manganese and chrome may be of future importance to the Bloc for bartering purposes, or when Communist China's requirements exceed exploitation of its own deposits. Of the nonferrous minerals, North Vietnam has reserves of zinc, bauxite, and tin which would be of little significance in the Bloc supply position but perhaps would be of some use in improving North Vietnam's trade position. The zinc smelter at Quang Yen, if restored, would be of possible benefit to Communist China, which has inadequate facilities for the conversion of zinc ore to metal. Possibly 8,000 tons of zinc metal and 1,250 tons of tin metal in concentrates may be produced per year by 1957. The phosphate industry in North Vietnam will be of great value to the Viet Minh in its future progtam to increase food production, particularly in view of the fact that there is a phosphate fer- tilizer factory in Haiphong. North Vietnam is not self-sufficient in salt, and, pending expansion of the existing salt field, the large population probably will require imports. The estimated reserves of coal in North Vietnam are 20 billion tons. The local Indochina market has been comparatively limited, and coal. has been an important export,. especially to Japan. The accretion of the Indochina coal mines and reserves to the Soviet Bloc adds to Soviet resources a significant volume of high-grade anthracite coal (with lesser amounts of bituminous and lignite), which is particularly well located for transportation by water to China and other Asiatic countries and well adapted to supplement and complement the coal presently being mined in China. The acquisition by the Viet Minh regime (in May 1955) of the Haiphong Cement Plant, the largest cement producer in Southeast Asia, with an installed annual capacity of 400,000 tons, will provide a relatively significant source of supply to Communist China, whose requirements for cement for immediate construction purposes are substantial. The centers of the electric power industry in North Vietnam are at Hanoi and Haiphong and total 41,000 kilowatts (kw), or three-fourths of the total North Vietnam capacity of 55,000 kw. Indications, however, are that the electric power facilities have -3- S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA, i RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T not recently been utilized at nearly their optimum capacity and that a significant portion of the supply has been for li~hting and electric fans. Although a considerable hydroelectric potential ecists, a total capacity of less than 1,000 kw is currently installed at 1, zinc mine and 2 tin mines. The installation of other than the snallest units in the im- mediate future is tnlikely, because of the costs band time involved. Most of the baEic needs of the population of North Vietnam, as re- gards consumer goods, are met through the efforts; of local artisans, al- though the two cotton mills of Indochina, produci#g cotton fabrics, yarn, and cotton blanket?;, are located in North Vietna*. Raw cotton supplies have been obtained entirely from imports, recentlyy from the US? North Vietnam contains no industrial iroiuction facilities which can be considered Important or significant to the machine-building production of the soviet Bloc as a whole. Although the area is well endowed with both naterial and human resources fcr greater industrial- ization, the machine-building industries are still in the planning or rudimentary stages. The weapons and ammunition industry of North4Vietnam is very limi- ted, production te3hniques having been largely improvised. It is evi- dent that total production has met only a fraction of past Viet Minh needs. North Vietnam possesses the base of a well-developed transporta- tion system involving railroads, highways, End w .ter, which should be adequate for any immediate exploitation of the resources now under its control. Rehabilitation of the area's railroad system, particularly to Communist China and also to the Soviet Bloc, will be expedient both strategically and economically. The chief requirements for these pur- poses will be railroad construction equipment and rolling stock, and the relatively small amounts needed are within tie capability of Com- munist China and the USSR to supply. By connecting the Chinese rail- road system to th?t of North Vietnam north of Lang Son, the Bloc will establish through rail service from the USSR through Communist China to the Southeast Jsian Communist frontier. The restoration of the Raiphong-Lao Kay line to Yunnan Province in Southwest China will prob- ably receive high priority as a means of further developing and ex- ploiting the tin and copper resources of Yu:anan Province in Communist China. Combat destruction and widespread sabotage have accounted for much of the decline of the rapid communicationsjservices of North S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T Vietnam, and intercity wire-line facilities are almost nonexistent today. In order to restore the existing facilities so that they can meet the immediate requirements of the Viet Minh regime, the regime will have to obtain from the Soviet Bloc trained manpower, communications and electric power equipment, some heavy machinery items, and raw and finished materials. The total population of North Vietnam in 1954 is estimated to be about 14 million, or about 56 percent of the population of all Vietnam. Nearly 70 percent of the population reside in the Red River delta or coastal areas, which make up only about a quarter of the land area of North Vietnam. About 90 percent of the popula- tion is dependent on agriculture for a livelihood, but many of those persons working in the mines or industrial installations are part of an agricultural population, appearing to work in the plants only to supplement their agricultural income. Most of the industrial labor force is semiskilled or unskilled. With only meager facili- ties for the training of skilled workers, the. withdrawal of French technicians will create for North Vietnam the problem of a severe shortage of skilled and managerial personnel. The economic organization of the Viet Minh regime is typical of that of a Communist state, and the policy of the regime in genera]. appears to follow closely the lines of Mao Tse-tung's procedure in China in applying the principles of Marxism-Leninism to domestic conditions. North Vietnam may be expected to emulate Communist China's example of the last several years in the imple-' mentation of planned economic development on the Soviet model. Technical assistance from Communist China or other Bloc countries will be required to accomplish such development. North Vietnam has been a deficit area in respect to foreign trade. During the postwar period, 1949 through 1951, North Vietnam controlled only 6 percent of the exports and 22 percent of the imports of Indochina as a whole. The pattern of external trade no doubt will be oriented toward the Soviet Bloc and will follow the typical one of an underdeveloped area dependent on a few basic commodities in trade. Grains, coal, and cement accounted for more than three-fourths of the value of exports from North Vietnam during 1936 through 1938, while textiles and metal manu-. factures represented more than three-fifths of all imports. The Viet Minh has received material aid from Communist China since at least early 1950, and it has been fairly well established that Chinese Communist personnel have been operating with the Viet Minh. - 5- S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIARDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T Though the Viet Minh Communist policy is not known, the Communists may consider this area important enough to encourage some indus trialization, requiring the importation of capital goods from the Soviet Bloc and increasing, though not, significantly, the drain upon Bloc resources. Of the two areas of Vietnam, North Vietnam possesses by far the greater potential for a viable industrial economy with its well- balanced resource base even though it needs technical aid and investment funds to develop it, and even though the rice deficit probably will render it dependent upon some grain imports to sup- port its polulation. I. Introduction. The conc.itions for normal production and economic development have not existed in North Vietnam since prior to 191+1. The Japanese wartime occupation was followed by Chinese. occupation at the end of lrorld War II, and from 19)+6 to the time of the French defeat the Exea was the field of a civil war between the Viet Minh forces and the French and French-supported Vietnamese government. Under French rule in Indochina the development of heavy indus- try was not encouraged, mainly because it would compete with interests of the homeland. In the northern area industrial activity was limited to the exploitation of the coal resources and deposits of some metallic minerals and to the development of agricultural and mineral processing plants and a few f4ctories producing con- sumer goods for local use. These f acilites are located primarily ,in the Red River delta area, which the French forces controlled during the hostilities, and which has always been the major source of agricultural production in North Vietnam. Since these resources were denied to the Viet Minh forces, they had to rely upon Com- munist China and the Soviet Bloc for economic and military support and on clandestine procurement of grain and medical supplies in French-cont:olled areas. Now that the Vi4t Minh, as a result of the Geneva agreements, is about to obtain control of the economic resources o:' Vietnam north of the 17th Parallel, it is important to assess tae economic assets of the area' in the new context -6- Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA!RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 ~"'' Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79TO0935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T (a) of the association of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (DRV) with the Soviet Bloc, and (b) of the prospective exploitation and development of the resources of North Vietnam under Communist methods of planning and economic control. It is also of interest to examine the relative prospects of the DRV and of South Vietnam in respect to the viability of the two areas as separate entities. II. Productive Resources. A. Agricultural Output in 1953 and Trends since 1946. Agriculture, the mainstay of the Indochinese economy, pro- vides a livelihood for about 90 percent of the total population of the country. Rice is the principal crop as well as the main staple of diet and the chief export. North Vietnam currently does not produce enough rice to support its estimated population of 14 mil- lion, while the southern part of Vietnam produces a surplus for export. Historically the North has always depended upon the South to make up its deficit, particularly in times of drought. In 3-953 the estimated per capita production of milled rice in North Vietnam was 126.2 kilograms (kg)* while on the basis of the 1953-54 esti- mated crop, the per capita production for South Vietnam alone was approximately 255.3 kg- !/** The yearly rice requirements have been estimated to be between 200 and 250 kg per capita. D' Because rice production in the North is not sufficient to support the esti- mated population of 14 million, a poor harvest -- such as not in- frequently occurs in the Red River delta -- would further aggravate the situation and would necessitate the importation of even greater quantities of rice. This rice could be made available in the course of normal trade with South Vietnam or otherwise from Communist China at the expense of the latter's own consumption. As a matter of fact, the entire area of North Vietnam underwent a dry winter in 1953-54, and the majority of the spring crops appear to have been severely damaged. J There are prospects that the "5th month" crop of rice may be as low as 50 percent of normal, which would mean the worst crop since the famine year of.1945. !/ According to information currently available this would mean a reduction of at least 25 per- cent of the total normal crop (there are two rice crops) or an approximate estimated production of 1,810,000 tons of rice for :L954, or a per capita production of approximately 97 kg. * See Table , p. 12, below. ** Footnote references in arabic numerals are to sources listed in the Appendix. S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA RDP79TOO935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-?r The observed eating habits of the northern Vietnamese cast considerable light on their varying standards of living from season to season and :,tear to year. Prior to the man harvests, when the rice supply from the previous crop is exhausted and the new harvest has not yet come in, there appears to be recurring death and famine. In general, the Tonkin peasant eats only 2 meals per day, and only in times when the workload is heavy does he at 3 substantial meals 'Uiy a c . When food runs short and little work has to be performed, he attempts to adapt himself by eating curly once a day, sleeping long hours, and reducing as much as possiblelhis expenditure of energy. He eats, if not to satisfaction, atjleast enough to keep fit when work requires during certain times of the year. When there is scarcity, he consumes anything he can find which is edible, which besides normal kinds of food includes %rorms, water insects, locusts, flies, ant eggs, snails, herbs, and other forest products. Undernourishment is common in the area, and localized famines occur frequently. Thus the average food supply position of North Vietnam is relatively di,.-,advantageous compared vita that of South Vietnam. It is believed, however, that rice production may be increased somewhat in North Vietnam within a year or.1wo, if peace is main- tained and if intensive irrigation, other agricultural improve- ment programs, and conversion of other lands to rice are under- taken by the 'Tiet Minh regime. Increased production and con- trolled distrLbution of chemical fertilizers (utilizing phosphate from the mines near Lang Son and Lao Kay) would, for example, help to boost production. North Vietnam, however, has a lower potential for increased rice production than South Vietnam. Other major food crops produced. in North Vietnam Include corn, sugar, sweet potatoes, and manioc:. Table 1* shows 'the pro- duction of the principal agricultural c:ommod.ities for the years 19:37-41 and 19+6-53. It will be noted that:, rice and sugar pro- duction have increased slightly over the years, while corn pro-64 000 duction has decreased drastically from 225 ,00 tons in 1937 tons in 1953. The cultivation of corn was romoted by the French to satisfy fodder requirements of metropolitan France, and over 80 percent of' the total Indochina prewar crop was exported. J It may well die that the acreage devoted to the production of this * Table 1 follows on p. 9 S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA~RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T Table 1 Estimated Production of Rice, Corn, Sugar, Sweet Potatoes, and Manioc in North Vietnam 1937-41 and 1946-53 Thousand Metric Tons Rice Y Sugar L Year Paddy Corn Raw Potatoes Manioc J 1937 2,240 225 22.4 N.A. N.A. 1938 2,240 225 22.4 N.A. N.A. 1939 2,176 225 22.4 131 45 1940 2,208 117 23.4 N.A. N.A. 1941 2,176 117 .23.4 N.A. N.A. 1946 1,834 102 N.A. N.A. N.A. 1947 2,279 59 N.A. N.A. N.A. 1948 2,240 59 N.A. N.A. N.A. 1949 2,122 59 28.0 150 45 1950 2,238 59 27.7 150 45 1951 2,412 64 27.3 150 45 1952 2,412 64 27.3 150 45 1953 2,356 64, 27.3 150 45 commodity may be converted to some other food crop which would be more acceptable to the indigenous population and would supplement the main diet of rice. Kidney beans and soybeans, as possible alternative crops, are reported to be even now the most important 'source of protein in the Indochinese diet after rice and fish. 10 In any case, it is evident that the low average food balance of North Vietnam based on indigenous production need not be regarded as an irremediable condition. Other agricultural commodities produced in North Vietnam include peanuts and peanut oil, sesame seed and oil, soybeans, tea, cottonseed oil, castor beans and oil, tobacco, and raw cotton. Peanut production, which reached an estimated peak of 9,696 tons 11 in 1940, dropped to 4,927 tons 12 in 1953. Tobacco production dropped from an estimated 4,162 tons in 1939 to 1,805 tons in 1953. Tea production dropped from an estimated prewar average of 7,120 tons 13 to an estimated production of -9- S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA IRDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T 5,340 tons 14 in 1953. Table 2 indicates thsyt fuelwood production in North Vietnam is now approximately one?-thirld of what it was in 1938, while industrial wood production is now one-fourth of what it was then. Estimated Production of Fuelwood and in North Vietnam 1938, 1940, and 1950-52 Thousand Cubic Meters Year Fuelwood _a15 Industrial Wood J 1 : J 1938 614 385 1940 614 385 1950 327 78 1951 277 88 1952 233 98 a. The geographical. breakdown for fuelwood was cal culatec~_ from a total. fuelwood production for Vietnam which was broken down for the area alcove and below the 17th Parallel on the basis of preiwar and postwar population estimates for these areas.; b. The geographical. breakdown for industrial wood is based on a total industrial wood production for Viet- nam wh:_ch was broken down for the area above and below the 17th Parallel on the basis of they total controlled forest acreage in Vietnam during the prewar period.. It was estimated that about 40 perce t of the total industrial wood produced in Annam wa produced north of the 17th Parallel, based on n merous vegetation and forestry maps. Livestock raising has been a minor fa tor in Indochinese agri- culture, and meat is relatively unimportant i the diet. J In the past, fish has supplied the bulk of animal pr tein. Table 3* indicates * Table 3 follows on p. 11. S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA~,RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 I%w Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T that total estimated production of meat in North Vietnam in 1951 was one-fifth of 1935-39 average production. Footnote a of Table 3 also shows the considerable drop in the fish catch. Unless general fishing conditions have changed radically, the reported 60,000-ton salt water fish catch for 1930 in the Gulf of Tonkin and Northern Annam, together with the potential for increased raising of fresh water fish in ponds, may serve as sofne indication of the program which may be resorted to by the Viet Minh regime to increase this important source of food for the Indochinese diet. Table 3 Estimated Production of Meat in North Vietnam a/ l8 1935-39 and 19+9-51 Thousand Metric Tons Item 1935-39 Average 1949 1950 195_ Beef 11 2 2 2 Carabao. 11 1 1 1 Pork 100 13 22 22 a. The data on fish catch in Indochina and North Vietnam are extremely sparse. It has been reported that 60,000 tons of salt water fish was the catch for the Gulf of Tonkin and Northern Annam and it was estimated that the salt and fresh water catch for Vietnam in 19)+0 was 180,000 tons. L 9J 1953 the Embassy estimated that this catch had been reduced to 30,000 tons. Table 4* shows the principal items in the estimated production of food per capita in North Vietnam in 1953. It will be observed that these figures are based on production only and do not allow for ex- ports, imports, stocks, and nonfood uses. As a partial picture of food resources per capita in North Vietnam, Table )+ suggests that on the whole the average availability of food per capita will. hot be suf- ficient to support the population at its previously accustomed level Tab1 )4 follows on p. 12. S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T of sustenance. This problem, however, could be overcome with improved methods of distribution, increased food production, and grain imports. Table 4 Per Capita Production of Principal Items in North Vietnam a 1953 Item Kilograms per Capita Rice (Milled) 126.2 4 6 C orr . Sugar (Raw) 2.0 Sweet Potatoes 10.7 Manioc 3.E Peanuts (Shelled) .24 Sesame .08 Soybeans .16 Meat 1.6 Fish 2.1 a. Does not include wheat flours, pulses, white potatoes, fats and oils, vegetable's, fruits, poultry, eggs, and milk which in 151-52 in Indo- china as a whole were estimated to!be about 170 kilograms per capita. 20 They above data are based solely on production and. do not include estimates of stocks, trade, or nonfood uses. Only processed fish are included; unprocessed, fresh water fish are not included. S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T B. Industrial Output.* 1. Ferrous Metals. a. Iron Ore. As of 1951, the total well-established iron ore reserves in Indochina are estimated to be only 5.7 million tons. 21/ The few deposits which have been economically significant in the past are all located north of the 17th Parallel, primarily in the Thai Nguyen area (210351 N - 105057' E). The ores of this deposit are of high grade, containing from 55 to 66 percent iron, but are rather limited in quantity. Iron mining in Indochina after 1936 was developed largely for the export of iron ore to Japan. In fact, aside from small quantities consumed by local cement plants, native furnaces, and the Bac Son iron and steel plant, Japan has been the chief his- torical consumer. Table 5 illustrates the relatively small produc- tion of iron ore in Indochina. 22 Production of Iron Ore in Indochina a/ 1937-45 Metric Tons Year Amount Year Amount 1937 33,000 1942 63,000 1938 130,000 1943 8o,6oo 1939 134,700 1944 22,000 1940 32,400 1945 7,900 1941 52,400 a. Iron content, 50 to 70 percent. Postwar iron ore production has been of very minor sig- nificance. Although the French had ambitious plans for expanding iron mining, the continuation of hostilities in the area of the iron ore deposits prevented the execution of these plans. The value of * See the map, Indochina: Natural Resources and Processing Centers, 1954, inside back cover. - 13 - S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-,RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T Indochina's iron ore resources to Communist China and/or to the Soviet Bloc is questionable.* Unless further geological surveys prove other- wise, North Vietnam cannot be regarded as a !significant source of iron ore for itself or for any of the Bloc countries. b, Iron and Steel. Indochina's very small :Lron and steel industry, as well as the bEsic raw materials for it, lies' north of the 17th Parallel. Other than negligible native iron furnaces, the only known production of pig iron and steel was from a plant at Bac Son (21053' N - 106021' E), which was operated in 1942, 1943, and 1944 by the French Tonkin Coal Mining Company. Production, at this plant varied from 1,100 tons of pig iron in 1942 to a ,high of 2,900 tons of pig iron and 600 tons of st a eel in 1943. A 1948 survey made by a French commission for the modernization of Indochina indicated the exiptence of a raw material base, with the exception of coking coal, sufficient to support an iron and steel industry capable of producing 100,000 tons of pig iron and 60,000 tons of steel per year. 23 The development of minting and transportation facilities would bp necessary, 24 and unless the prcblem of using anthracite coal .nstead of coke in the blast furnaces is solved, any future steel i dustry of Communist- held Indochina would have to import 125,000 to 400,000 tons of coke annually. The future development of a steel industry of any size by the Communists would require coreside'able investment and provision of equipment by the USSR and its Satellites. c. Ferroalloys. AMong its mineral resources, lndochina possesses several ferroalloy metals, notably manganese, tungsten, and chrome, the important deposits of which are all locoed north of the 17th Parallel. Production of all these minerals as virtually ceased since World War II. Until such time as a steel industry is de- veloped in North Vietnam the importance of these metals will be limited to expert purposes. See also VII, below. S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIAHRDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T (1) Manganese. Reserves of manganese ore in Indochina, have been estimated at 25,000 tons, but exploitation would require extensive field investigation to prove the deposits for further development. 25 The most important occurrences of the deposits are to be found in Vinh (Nghe An)-Ha Tinh (18?40' N - lob?oo' E. Production. of man- ganese began in 1935 and reached its peak in 194+4 when 7,700 tons were produced. 26 Under stable conditions at least 10,000 tons of marketable ore could probably be extracted. Inclusion of Indo- chinese manganese reserves into the Bloc total is relatively un- important because of the large reserves already controlled by the Bloc.* (2) Chrome. Measured and inferred chromite reserves of the Co Dinh deposit near the village of Nong Cong (20000' N - 105?30' E), in Thanh Hoa Province, are estimated at 1.7 million to 2 million tons.of?recoverable metal. 27 In 1939, this mine produced 2,000 tons. During the Japanese occupation, production rose to 12,400 tons of 45-percent concentrates for 1943-44+ inclusive. 28 In general, North Vietnam may have the potential to produce 5.0,000 tons of chromite concentration annually. 29 Chromium ore reserves may be of future importance to Communist China when its requirements exceed exploitation of its own minor deposits.* 30 (3) Tungsten. Known tungsten ore reserves in Indochina are quite small, the only deposits of commercial quality being located in the immediate area surrounding Tinh Tuc (22039' N - 105?51' E). Production of tungsten concentrates is shown in-Table 6.** There are several reports indicating that the Viet Minh with Chinese Communist aid have been operating these mines. 31 In view of Communist China's large reserves of tungsten, inclusion of the limited Indochinese tungsten reserves within the Soviet Bloc appears to be of negligible significance to Communist China or the Bloc.* See also VII, below. Table 6 follows on p..16. S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA.RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T Table 6 Production of Tungsten Concentrates in Indochina a/ 32 1937-42 Metric Tons Year Amount 1937 580 1938 553 1939 486 Year Amount 194d 361 1941 310 194 200 a. 66-percent tungsten] 2. Nonferrous Minerals. The greatest period of production for nonferrous metals in Indochina occurred just before and during the period of Japanese occupation. Most of the deposits of these metals are located in or near Viet M_nh-controlled territory, and consequently there has been no known production since 1946. Zinc, the deposits of which are located in North Vietnam, is the only major nonferrous metal produced in Indochina which has occupied a position of importance in the economy of the country. A smelter built; in Quang Yen near Haiphong, in 1924) with a capacity of 6,000 metric tons of metallic zinc, was reported to have been destroyed or severely danage4 by bombing in 1943. 33 Table 7* gi-ires the production of zinc in ndochina in terms of metal content and smelter output. The acquisition of Indochijna's zinc industry by the Viet Minh would be of possible benefit to Communist China, particu- larly if the smelter at Quang Yen were restored. Because facilities in China are inadequate for the conversion of zinc ore to metal, China imports zinc metal from Poland. Asi de from this, the * Table 7 :'ollows on P. 17. - 16 - S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA~RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T rehabilitation of the Indochina zinc industry would have little sig- nificance in respect to the Soviet Bloc zinc supply position.* Table 7 Production of Zinc in Indochina in Terms of Metal Content a/ 34 and Smelter Output 3/ 1937-43 Year Metal Content Smelter Output 1937 5,000 4,200 1938 5,100 4,5:00 1939 6,978 5,750 1940 6,753 6,090 1941 7,343 6,240 1942 6,119 5,270 1943 4,625 4,1.40 a. 100-percent zinc metal. b. Bauxite. 361 Indochina's reserves of bauxite are estimated at about 300,000 tons; 200,000 tons are located near Dong Dang (21057' N - 106?42' E) and 100,000 tons near Hai Duong (20056' N - l06?19' E). Production has been irregular, as shown in Table 8.** Indochina has long produced small quantities of tin (see Table 9**). The producing centers are Tinh Tuc, in North Vietnam, and Nam Pathene, in Laos. 37 See also VII, below. Tables 8 and 9 follow on p. 18. - 17 - S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E `P Table 8 Production of Bauxite in Indochina 1936-43 Metri c Tons Year Amount Year Amount 1936 30 1940 118 1937 7,000 1941 10,200 1938 16o 1942 12,800 1939 330 1943 360 a. 50- to 60-percent alumi a, 2- to 14-percent silica, and{up to 26-percent iron oxide. Table 9 Production of Tin in Indochina a/ 38 1937-43 Metric Tons Year Amount 1937 1,602 1940 1,495 1938 1,625 1,41 1,316 1939 1,490 1942 1,045 1943 663 a. Tin concentrates (tin content). For the period from 1933 to 1940, the average annual output of tin was 1,384 tons. Based upon scattered reports of in dividual mines, it is estimated that 40 to 59 percent of the total production was achieved in North Vietnam and 50 to 60 percent in Laos. Using 45 percent as an average figure!, the output of Tonkin for the 1933-40 period would be 620 tons of contained tin per year. On the basis cf limited reserves and past production records, a S-E-C-R-E.-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 "low Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T maximum output of 1,000 to 1,500 tons of contained tin in concen- trates is anticipated for North Vietnam. In view of the large Chinese tin reserves and rapidly growing Chinese output, together with the expected reconstruction Of the railroad from Haiphong to Kunming, the significance of the Vietnam tin potential is compara- tively unimportant.* d. Phosphates. Most of Indochina's major phosphate deposits are located above the 17th Parallel. The most important of these is at Lao Kay, near the Chinese border. Estimates of reserves range from 10 million tons of 40-percent phosphate and 40 million tons of varying grades to.100 to 200 million tons of all grades. The Japanese raised production at Lao Kay to 120,000 tons in 1942. Other less important deposits are found in Lang Son and Thanh Hoa Provinces. 39 Table 10 gives the production of phosphate in Indochina. Production of Phosphate in Indochina 40 1937-43 Year Amount 1937 20,252 1941 100,000 1938 37,341 1942 150,000 1939 35,694 1943 4o,ooo 1940 22,266 Phosphates represent an important source of fertilizer, which will be of considerable use to the Viet Minh in increasing food production. As early as May 1952 the Chinese Communists reportedly had 10,000 miners extracting the phosphate ores at the Cam Duong mine near Lao Kay. 41 The expected reconstruction of the railroad. from Haiphong to Lao Kay will greatly stimulate production, particularly in view, of the fact that there is a phosphate fertilizer factory in Haiphong.* See also VII, below. - 19 - S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 I Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIARDP79T00935A000300090001-2 I S-E-C-R-E-T Large and small salt works are sattered all along the Indochina coast, but North Vietnam in the past h.s produced on the average only an estimated one-third of the total salt production of Indochina. For exaunple, of 193,600 tons 42 of Galt produced in 1937 in the whole of Indochina an estimated 661, 000 tors were produced in what is now North Vietnam. In 1941, because of increased Japanese requirements for salt, production rose to 260,000 tons. This serves to illustrate to some degree the existing potential for increased sea salt.* The large :)opulation of North Vietnam wi.l probably require imports of salt, pending expansion of the existing salt fields. 3. Coal. All tha developed coal mines of Indochina are located north of the 17th ?arallel, in the vicinity of t e coastal areas of Haiphong, Hon Gay, and Cam Pha. The bulk of production has been anthracite coal, most of which is of supericr quality. The prin- cipal area of production has been the Quang Yen lasin (21007' N - 107027' E), in which the above-named coastal ports are located. Before World War II, 44 mines were producing coal in this basin. At present, 1 large French company, La Societe FTancaise des C;aarbonnages de Tonkin, and 4 o:r 5 smaller companies of diveroified ownership are the only active operators. The major portion of production is from open-cut mines of the French company. Plans had recently been developed for an extensive renovation of this company's pr6perties over a 5-year period, involving substantial investment and. the introduction of modern mining methods and up-to-date mechanized equipment whereby the use of manpower and the cost of production c:ould1 be reduced. About US $1.7 million worth of coal mining equipment s been delivered to the Charbonnages du Tonkin-company by the UPI under MSA and FOA auspices. 43 It was planned to restore production to approximately 1 million tons annually,4 depending upon the .evelopment of mar- kets for the increased production. The local InPchinese market for coal has been comparatively limited, and coal has been an important export, especially to Japan. 45 Coal. reserves in Indochina, mostly located in North Vietnam, are estimated at 20 billion tons, about equal. in', volume to the estimated original reserves of anthracite coal in Pennsylvania. Approximately * See also VII, below. S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA 1RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 k.,+ Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T 12 billion tons of these reserves are believed to exist in the Quang Yen Basin, of which 390 million tons are in the currently most pro- ductive fields within` the basin. Based on an estimated recovery of 65 percent, coal from this mine alone would last 200 years at the 1952 rate of production. L6 The accretion of the Indochinese coal mines and reserves .to the Soviet Bloc adds to its resources a significant volume of high-grade anthracite coal (with lesser amounts of bituminous and lignite), which is particularly well located for transportation. by water to China and other Asiatic countries and well adapted to sup- plement and complement the coals presently being mined in China. The possibilities of wider trade, both intra-Bloc and with non- Bloc countries, are materially enhanced by the Bloc's acquisition of these mines and deposits.* Table ll** gives the production, imports, exports, and consumption of coal (anthracite, bituminous, and lignite combined) in Indochina, 1937-41 and 19)+6-53 4. Electric Power.' Hanoi and Haiphong are the centers of the electric power industry in North Vietnam. Three coal-fired steam plants -- a 22,500-kilowatt (kw) plant in Hanoi, a 6,300-kw plant in Haiphong, and a 12,200-kw plant in the Haiphong Cement Works -- total 41,000 kw, or three-fourths of the total area capacity of 55,000 kw. The Hon Gay Coal Mine Plant with a 4,000-kw installed capacity and the Ben Thuy wood products plant with a 3,)+50-kw installed capacity are the other two significant plants. 47 These 5 plants thus account for nearly 90 percent of the total, with the remainder divided among 13 diesel, gasoline, and hydro plants. As a matter of comparison, It is interesting to note that the total capacity of all these plants is only about two-thirds that of the single smallest unit installed in the Potomac Electric Power Company's new Alexandria Station. In the past the Hanoi-Haiphong area was served by over 700 kilometers of 30-kilovolt transmission lines. 48 Unsettled conditions over the past. several years, however, resulted in.destruction of a major portion of the system and the installation of small gas and diesel generators to serve the many small centers. 49 See also VII, below. ** Table 11 follows on p. 22. S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935AO00300090001-2 Appro!gd Fof Release 1999/09/21: CIARDP79T00935A000300090001-2 r-I000MQC\,DNUMr-ILr Ln\p\D\D MZ N N CO r I H H r-I H o00Ln bD M0 u-\ H H H H rr I 40 vl 43 H ~o 0 NNN0M. MCTCn C0 H H H dCOCOCO N ~D 0\O CO O 0 Z Hr-1HN H i I CO ~ \D\D\OO 0 N-0000_zt Z L(\ zI LC'\ -t N N om. H0000ZoN -1- C~O Co \D \0 \D Lr\ ri ri N -f Cn r-I CO ri o\ 00 CO Ln O\ CO L - 0 -- r-i CO O N O\ O\ Ln ON M 4\ co LO CO 0CVNN- Ml- U\ H ri H CO H CO _Y 0 CO N N--# \D N t`- N L r\ _:I- ri M r- \D \O CO H CO L -7 M M\D Ln C N N rn (Y) \ U\ ON ON N N N N N rn 01) HHHH m U"\ m~co~HHHH H COO 0CO 0 O\ CV 0 ON O\Mlr\.1 M (Y( m \O Lr CO N N (Lr\ r) M 0 \O O\ C7\ N N N N N 0 m 1Cn 0 0 m!. ?S 0; 0 H aa> P4 (a 0 0CUB b ?r+i r- 0 U1i'd 'dI,?ri H 01 ci 0 r-- CO O\ 0 r-i \O N co C, 0 ri N MMCmt .rF r1 -:I- LC Lt\ Ln Ifs U) CT CT ON O\mCJ\C'sall ON 9\CTOIO\ Approved Fo'b` RbI6 Se 1r99I9/0 /21-'' l RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 `~ Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Indications are that the electric power facilities have not recently been utilized at nearly their optimum capacity and. that a significant portion of the supply has been for lighting and electric fans. Although some rather elaborate plans for the development of the hydroelectric potential of the area have been advanced., a total capacity of less than 1,000 kw is currently installed at 1 zinc and 2 tin mines. It may be presumed that the Viet Minh will assign some priority to the restoration of the transmission system so that a maximum portion of the demand may be met from coal-fired plants, rather than from diesel-driven plants which require imported fuel. Such restoration will require the importing of equipment and prob- ably will also require some technical assistance from the Soviet Bloc. The supply of power to local industry may be considerably increased by scheduling techniques and by limitation of domestic use. Any expansion of electric facilities would be a reflection of major expansion of industries. Although a considerable hydroelec- tric potential exists, the installation of other than the smallest units in the immediate future is unlikely because of the costs and time involved. Table 12* shows capacity and output of electric power in North Vietnam. The partition of Indochina has placed the only cement plant in the area in the control of the Viet Minh. The output of this plant, located at Haiphong (20052' N - 106041' E), constitutes the largest volume of production of any single industry other than coal mining in Indochina. 60 The Haiphong plant is the largest cement producer in Southeast Asia, with an installed annual capac- ity of 400,000 tons. Allowing for unavoidable plant maintenance, an effective annual production of about 300,000 tons could be realized. 61 As shown in Table 13,** there has been a marked difference between actual production and theoretical installed capacity, the best production having been achieved during the period 1937-41. The relatively high output of these years was brought about by modernization of the plant and a resultant improve- ment in quality which opened more foreign markets. The location of the plant on a waterfront serving deep-draft vessels makes its Table 12 follows on p. 24. Table 13 follows on p. 25. S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E?-T Capacity End Production of Electric Power in North Vietnam L2/ 1929, 1935-42, and 190-53 Capacity Production Year (Thousand Kilowatts) 4i11~ ion Kilowatt-Hours) 1929 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939 1940 1941 1942 1949 1950 1951 1952 1953 48.4 49.4 55.0 17.5 18.3 20.4 21.6 24.2 29.9 33.8 36.3 35.3 58.3 73.6 100.0 aJ 120.0 EJ 140.0 EJ a. Estimate, including allowance for unreported plants. I product easilr available for inexpensive tra'nsportatLon. Cement ex- ports reached a peak of 159,000 tons in 1930. Some difficulties may be encountered by the Communists in their operation of the Haiphong Cement Plant. The gypsum required for production has heretofore been imported from Europe and the San Marcos Island,, off the California coast and hereafter will probably have to be ob-.ained from the Chinese mainland. The plant is vul- nerable to breakdowns if intensively operat'd, and its maintenance and repair could become a critical problem 4ince much of the equip- ment was installed in the period 1928-.33 an was manufactured in Western Europ,:, the US, and Japan. If the lant is required to main- tain high production, however, makeshift re;airs and substitution of spare parts from the Bloc could prevent any major drop in output. S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIAmRDP79T00935A000300090001-2 -ftw Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T Table 13 Production and Export of Cement at Haiphong, Tonkin 1929 and 1933-53 Thousand Metric Tons Year Production Export 1929 183 63 40.3 64 1933 133 1934 115 1935 107 7/ 1936 149 1937 235 124.6 70 1938 266 71 1939 3122/ 159.0 73 1940 282 1941 263 75 1942 177 1943 149 77 Year Production Export_ 1 145 944 09~ 1946 ~6 Sa/ 1947 43 1948 98 1949 154 63 38.'7 84 1950 143 5 17.6 1951 213,x// 12.3 1952 235 / 8.9 1953 291 91 . Half year only. The acquisition of this cement plant by the V:Let Minh regime will be relatively significant as a source of supply to Communist China, whose requirements for cement are substantial for immediate construction purposes. Thus, Communist China may become the principal external consumer of the plant's output, possibly leading to maximum exploitation of the plant's capability.* The 1953 output of the plant approximated 10 percent of estimated total Chinese Communist cement production of that year. The expected reconstruction of the Haiphong-Kunming Railroad will make cement conveniently available to the heretofore relatively isolated region of Southwest China. South Vietnam, which in the past used a large portion of the annual cement production of Haiphong, may for the time being be forced to seek its requirements elsewhere. * See also VII, below. S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA~RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T 6. Consumer Goods and Handicrafts. a. Textiles. Two cotton mills, both of whit are located in North Vietnam, account for the major portion of production of machine-made cotton textiles in Indochina. The Societe Cotnniere du Tonkin, at Nam Dinh, the scle industrial producer of cotton fabrics in Indo- china, also produces yaxn and cotton blankets. 92 The Societe des Filte:ries de 1'Indochine, at Haiphong, engages only in the spinning of cotton yarn End thread. 93 Industrial pro uction of cotton fabrics has in the past amounted to 35 to 40 rcent of the total output. 94+ The remainder may be attributed t artisan weavers, approximately 6C percent of whom are located i North Vietnam. Z5./ It should be noted that the textile industry iI completely de- pendent upon imported raw cotton. During the i past several years the US has supplied this demand. Altogether, bout 75 percent of the cotton fabric production facilities and al of the yarn pro- duction capacity are north of the demarcation line. Table 1)+* gives textile production in North Vietnam, b. Miscellaneous. Almost the entire Indochinese production of matches and glassware i:, carried out in North Vietnam. One of the match en- terprises has fe.ctories at Ben Thuy and at Hanoi, and the other operates a factory at Thanh Hoa. These companies are said to have employed a total. of 60,000 workers. 96/ Maximum production of matches was achieved in 19+1 when 352 mil:Lion~boxes of matches were manufactured. 9;f Maximum postwar output reached 45.7 million boxes in 1953. 98/ Glassware is produced by he E d'Extreme Orient in Haiphong which is equipped glass, bottles, and drinking glasses. 99 ThE glass was suspended by the company in 1939 in production of bottles, for which there is a le Postwar production of glassware reached a rec 6,768 tons. 1001 ociete des Vereries to produce window production of window order to expand the rge local demand. rd peak in 1953 with Indochina's present sole industrial producer of leather goods is located in North Vietnam. * Table 14 fol:_ows on p. 27. - 26 - S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA~RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 UI\ ri N N 0 O mc0 c~~ ti uN -P ri i m m IH -I CQ rO'H H rmi R q H N N N- ONE O < N lD 00~ L .I N q H r-I N M v E0 rlH, H 1 N N CU I vn rn i I N M P a) ~~ S ? om r0-IH Hl 10- 0 cps 0 N l O\ N N b 0 0 O Q u 0 0 ) 0 5 4 H U,4 `SqO ~riI q H o O U .0 E-I 11 44- 4- o b H .a ' 0 .?". u 4~ CO 4- 1 o0 HJ Lr 0 xp 7 m m G) o u?r1 o P, 0 -H ~ O 1 rl `U0 ~ S ~ $ $ '+ ?0 `4 0 m l!1 m ~ ri ri 0 o d 0 0 r~-I cOV N o Ii' Approved For RSIeasi 1999/09/21 :COI `RDP79TOO935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 { S-E-C-R-E-T ,ost of the basic needs of the population of North Vietnam, as regards consumer goods, are met through the efforts of local artisans. In most instances, the peasants supplement their income from agrit3ultural endeavors by artisan activity such as basket weaving, grass rope making, and pottery making; There are, however, some villages in which the whole population contributes to the fabrication of o:ae type of item, such as baskets or mats. 13;/ Examples of small consume:- goods enterprises located in'North Vietnam are a candle making plant at Haiphong, 136 porcelain factories at Hanoi and W)n Cay,13 soap factories at Hanoi and H iphong, 138 button factories at Hanoi and Haiphong, L32/ and bicycle parts shops at Hanoi and Haiphong. 1]+0 7. Engineering, Munitions, and Shipbuilding Industries. a. General. North Vietnam contains no industrial production facili- ties which can be considered important or significant to the machine- building industr;r of the Soviet Bloc as a whole. Although the area is well endowed 'rith both material and human resources for greater industrialization, the machine-building in1ustr'ies are still in plan- ning or rudimentary stages. Colonial policies!in the past have generally retarded the development of autonomous industrial facili- ties, and the facilities which do exist are primarily repair and service shops se-; up by machine-importing companies for the benefit of their local c:_ients. It is estimated that the benefit to the Bloc resulting from acquisition of these facilities will be negligible. b. Munitions. ]?roduction of weapons and ammunition in North Vietnam is very limited, and without foreign imports in the form of semi- finished militar;r end items and raw materials,'Viet Minh production of weapons and ammunition has been carried on in a number of small plants employing usually no more than 50 to 100 workers each. Such plants have been established in out-of-the-way '',forested and mountainous areas, have been operated mostly at night, and frequently have been moved to avoid bombing. 141Production techniques have been largely improvised, and :_t is believed that total production has met only a fraction of past Viet Minh needs. With increa ed supplies of higher quality Chinese weapons, many such plants in Viet Minh have concen- trated. on repair work and the production of ammunition. - 28 - S-E-C-R-E-T { Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-aRDP79T00935A000300090001-2 _,.,: Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T c. Shipbuilding. North Vietnam has a very limited capability for ship construction and repair. Construction would probably be limited to small wooden fishing and river vessels without power propulsion. Haiphong is the only point within the area which reportedly possesses any kind of facilities. These yards in the past have built large numbers of wooden vessels and have done repair of small ocean and coastal vessels. 142 C. Transportation and Communications. 1. Transportation. a. General. The DRV, with the areas gained in the truce agree- ment, possesses the base of a well-developed transportation system involving railroads, highways, and water* which should be adequate for any immediate exploitation of the resources now under its con- trol. The transport network as developed by the French made avail- able several transport media parallel to each other. The focal point of all transport is the Hanoi-Haiphong road, rail, and water route axis. Transport, however, from the Tonkin Delta area south to the truce demarcation line is not well developed. The transport system can be made to serve the needs of the area and to develop relations with Communist China and the USSR. The chief requirements for these purposes will be railroad construction equipment and rolling stock, and the relatively small amounts needed are within the capability of Communist China and the USSR to supply. b. Highways. The highway complex of North Vietnam focuses on the two major cities of Hanoi and Haiphong. Originally the road system was established to satisfy military needs and to extend French influence inland from the mouth of the Red River toward China. Hence, from a very dense highway network within the delta region, high-- ways have been constructed toward the northern limits of the country, * In addition, the Viet Minh now control several airfields to which civil air transport could be established. S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T linking the delta with the Chinese border at, Ban Leng, Lao Kay, Thanh Thuy, Tliuy Cao, Nam Quan, and Mon Cay In the past these roads, because of their military and political use,.' never received the ex- tensive improvements which could only have een justified in terms of more intensive economic development. Since 1950 the Viet Minh and the French have placed a major emphasis on improving tactical com- munications by reconstructing existing roads and trails, and by constructing new roads in order to bypass vtlnerable road stretches subject to interdiction. Conspicuous among these is the road built by the Viet Minh connecting Dong Dang,11 on the Chinese border opposite P'in?;-hsiang, the Chinese railhead? to Thai Nguyen, where the improvements have permitted two-way truck traffic. Under peacetime conditions, and with the reconstruc- tion of bridges, it is probable that each ofithe roads leading into North Vietnam from China will soon have a capacity of 600 to 1,000 tons each way per day (EWPD). With the return to peacetime con- ditions and the probable reconstruction of railroad facilities, however, the greater part of the China-Tonkii traffic will move via railroad cr water as was the case prior Ito the outbreak of hostilities. Thus, because of the short; supply of gasoline and the heavy consumption thereof on the long-haul supply route from China, the truck park built up by tactical expediency will probably be used more for ancillary or feeder purposes w4ien through railroad service is restored. I The French originally constr4.cted a simple but ade- quate meter-ga3e railroad system in North Vi+tnam consisting of two lines crossing at right angles at Hanoi. Thg line running north- south was built within the concept of a trans-Indochinese :^ailroad uniting the no:^thein and southern parts of the country. The line running generaLly .east-west, extending up th? Red River valley from Haiphong to La) Kay and then Into China to K nming, was built to enhance French influence in Southwest China 4nd to exploit the mineral resources of Yunnan. Just prior to the truce agre4ment, only a few sepaxate sectors of this railroad system wer in operation -- the vital Hano:_-Haiphong line under French control 143 and some segments of the system within the Viet Minh areas. 144/ .Although the rails have been removed from all nonoperating sectors of the S-E-C-R-E-'T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA 1RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T railroad net, the roadbed remains. In order to facilitate economic development and to serve military purposes, it is considered probable that the reconstruction of the lines connecting with the Chinese rail systems in Kwangsi and Yunnan Provinces will receive the highest priority in the allocation of labor and materials on the part of both the Chinese Communists and the Viet Minh. It is estimated that these connecting lines could be returned to operating condition within the 300 days allowed the French for withdrawal from the delta. The Lao Kay-Haiphong line will probably be re- established to its prewar condition to facilitate the exploitation of the Chinese K'ochiu tin mines and the copper resources in southern Yunnan as well as to hasten the development of the mineral resources of North Vietnam. Construction on this line has already been reported begun. This route will probably continue to represent the most ex- peditious transport link between Yunnan and the industrial areas of China until Kunming is joined by rail to Chungking and the Yangtze River. In 1940 the Haiphong-Yunnan line had a maximum daily capac- ity of 3 trains EWPD, with train capacity computed at 250 tons. 145 If the Haiphong-Lao Kay line is reconstructed over its entire length with 30-kilogram-per-meter (kg/m) rail (the weight used on. the Chinese` section of the line), it will require about 34,000 tons of rails. In addition, use of this line into China will require the further construction of about 80 kilometers of rail from the Chinese border to the present railhead at Pi-tze-chai and strengthening of the Lao Kay - Ho-K'ou bridge at the Chinese border and other bridges. Moreover, the Hanoi-Lang Son-Nam Quan line will prob- ably be rebuilt as soon as possible. This line is not only economically but also strategically important, in that a short rail connection across the Chinese border would connect the Viet Minh railroad system with those of China and the USSR. In 1940 this line had a maximum daily operating capacity of 3 trains EWPD, with train capacity com- puted at 140 tons. 146 It is probable that the gage of this rail- road will be widened to permit use of standard-gage equipment from China. Such a program may delay full utilization of the line, but, in view of the advantage of through transit without transloading and of the relatively low capacity of meter gage lines, it is doubtful if the Chinese would have doubled the capacity of the Nanning?- P'ing -hsiang line 147 without anticipating the need for a like in- crease in the capacity of the Viet Minh line. S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA~RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T If the Hanoi-Nam Quan line is rebuilt at standard gage it will require about 15,000 tons of 42-kg/ii rails and a considerable amount of bridging equipment. Constructionicould proceed into North Vietnam from the railhead in China. Reconstruction of railroads Communist or Soviet aid in the form of roll bridging equipment, which are all available quantities. Chinese rail production, estim to 170,000 tots annually, could supply Viet economic deve.Lopment of Southwest China (inc will require Chinese ng stock, rails, and in China but in limited ted to be about 150,000 Minh requirements, and the luding eastward and north- ward railroad construction from Yunnan) would be expedited by the convenient transportation link between Southwest China and coastal transport ove:^ the Haiphong-Lao Kay line. Communist China can also alleviate the shortage of railroad repair facilities in North Vietnam through the accessibility of the repair shops at Hengyang and Ch'uchang (Kukong). d. Water. (1) Inland Waterways. The inland waterways sy tem in'North Vietnam was organized by the French to develop the movement of traffic between the, larger cities and at the same time to e tend the irrigation of cultivable land. Over 700 kilometers of waterways are open to navigation, iI / although some of this -,otajj may be presently of limited use due to silting of channels. The main waterway system is that of the Red River and its basin In the Tonkin delta. Normally these waterways are heavily trafficked by sampans and junks, and. screw and paddle wheel launches regularly serve Hanoi, Haiphong, Nam. Dinh, and the chief provincial towns. Because of the vast amount of small junk traffic on the inland waterwa s, no accurate estimate .of activity c?n be made. There has been, however, no shortage of available bottoms to handle local cargo requirements. (2) Maritime Shipping. The expansion of maritimm traffic and port facilities in North Vietnam received considerable stimulation from the French, but during the recent hostilitieb much structural main- tenance was allowed to lapse with the resultjthat many of the facili- ties have beer.. impaired. Nevertheless, the basic factors contributing S-E-C-R-E-?T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA~RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T to the continuing movement of ocean-going traffic were preserved as necessary parts of the logistical supply program of the French forces in the area. The principal port of North Vietnam, Haiphong, is supplemented by secondary ports of either specialized or regional character, such as Cam Pha Port, Hon Gay, Port Wallut, Quang Yen, Dong Hai, and Ben Thuy. Although other minor ports are susceptible to expansion, the rehabilitation and exploitation of the above-named ports should satisfy the major economic needs of the Viet Minh during the next 2 years (barring any unexpected military events)? Except for small junks the Viet Minh have no coastal fleet, and probably will be dependent on Communist China for coastal shipping bottoms. Haiphong, as the major deep-water port; of North Vietnam, serves as the gateway for Tonkin. Because of the agreement to allow the French 300 days (that is, until mid-May 1955) to evacuate the port, development by the Viet Minh of the Haiphong industrial complex and port will necessarily be delayed. Although the port has been allowed to silt up during the past 10 years, the existing port facilities would permit a substantial increase in the tonnage now handled. In 1952 the port handled slightly over 1 million metric tons of cargo, and it has been estimated that it could handle ap- proximately 8,000 tons per 20-hour working day, or about 2.8 mil- lion tons per year. 14 The port can berth vessels up to 7,700- ton Liberty-type vessels, but has limited repair facilities. With Haiphong opened for trade of the Viet Minh, commerce will probably be directed chiefly toward Communist China. Since the route between Haiphong and Canton is less than 1,200 kilometers and for the most part sheltered, Chinese Communist coastal-type vessels will be capable of handling a considerable traffic flow between the two areas. Soviet Bloc and chartered vessels will be able to serve the European-Viet Minh trade to Haiphong as it develops. lion Gay was developed solely to export coal from nearby mines. Over 2 million tons of coal were exported annually from this port before World War II, 150 and the port has been in continuous operation. Although most of the vessels calling at Hon Gay port are of the 4,000- to 5,000-ton variety, it is possible to bring in Liberty-type vessels, contingent on high tide and calm waters. 151 Facilities at the port permit turn-around of 5,000-ton colliers in 24 hours. Cargo other than coal is handled with con- siderable difficulty. S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIAO S-E-C-R-E-T RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Cam Pha Port operates in conjjunction with Hon Gay in the export of coal, but it has been relatively inactive in recent years. Maximum leading capacity for coal is estated at 1,000 tons per day. , 2. Communications. { The rapid communications services of Noith Vietnam have deteriorated.marke:dly since the period befo:^e World Wax II. At that time, depending a:most exclusively on foreign equipment and technical knowledge, they probably adequately met the needs of the country. Combat destruction and widespread sabotage have accounted for much of the decline. .:n consequence, intercity 'wire-1line facilities are almost nonexistent; today, with only an esti:Hated. 129 kilometers of wire lines and po,;sibly 7 telephone exchanges in operation. As a result, radio com(Lunication is being utilized a4 a minimal alter- native. 152 At .)resent there are 20 to 24 radio stations in the area, concentrated primarily at Hanoi and Haiphong. So depleted are the permanent civ:Ll communications resources th4.t the contending military forces r,.portedly meet their own needs for rapid communica- tions without any dependence on civil facilitie$. It seems likely that this situati)n will persist for some time. In communications resources, Ncrth Vietnam is a liability to the Soviet Bloc. In order to restore the ex.sting facilities to a condition to meet adequately the immediate requirements of the Viet Minh regime, the regime will have to obtain. fro i. the Bloc trained manpower, communications and electric power equipment, some heavy machinery items, and raw and finished materials,. Expansion of the :radio broadcasting base as a chief medium of maps communication for control and indoctrination of the "Viet Minhese1' and the propagandiza- tion of the peoples of the other Indochina stays and perhaps Thailand will be included as one of the first orders ofusiness. III. Human Resources. In. 1954 the total population of Vietnam north of the 17th Parallel line is estimated to be about 14 million. 153+ ** This is about 71 2~ million) and 46 percent 56 percent of they population of all Vietnam * All sources on population state that the e~timates are subject to ** 0f' this tota:L, approximately 7,000 persons are European, primarily French; 100,000 are Chinese; and a negligible Iumber are other Asiatics. - 34 - S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA~RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T of all Indochina (30.5 million). The 195+ population represents an increase within the Viet Minh area since 19+3 of about 8 percent, compared with an 11-percent increase within all Vietnam, and a, 14-percent increase within all Indochina. Nearly 70 percent of the population of North Vietnam reside in the Red River delta or coastal areas. These areas, however, make up only about a quarter of the land area of North Vietnam. This results in many sections within the area having population densities of over 1,700 persons per square mile, or as high as any nonurban area in the world, as well as having underemployment of the populace. An estimate of the total labor force available within the country is difficult to calculate. In the rural population, however, every- one works from early youth to old age, and this generalization applies only to a slightly lesser extent to the urban population as well. Probably about 8 million persons fall in the 15 to 59 year age group, of which over 3.5 million would be males. 15~+ About 90 percent of the population is dependent on agriculture for a livelihood, and probably no more than 1 percent of the total have no direct connection with agriculture. 155 Many of those persons working in the mines or industrial installations are also a part of the agricultural population, as they appear to work in the plants only to supplement their agricultural income. Skilled labor represents only a small fraction of the labor force, and the greater part of the skilled labor force is employed in the production of local specialty items such as food products, textiles, baskets, or other handicraft products. 156 Of the modern industrial installationd in North Vietnam, coal and other mines, textile plants, and the cement plant employ the greatest amount of labor. Except in the textile industry, most of this labor is unskilled or semiskilled. There are only meager facilities for the training of skilled workers in North Vietnam, and, if French technicians and admini- strators withdraw, the factories of North Vietnam will be faced with a severe shortage of skilled and managerial personnel. S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA~RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 IV. Economic Organization. The economic organization of the Viet Minh regime is typical of that of a Communist state. The party directorate is the seat of power, and Party members hold the principal ministries and direct the mass organizations which propagandize and implement decisions of the central boaly. Some ardent nationalists ve been utilized by the Party in ministerial positions but only n close association with Party member3 as deputy ministers. Six mi istries, all of whose ministers or deputy ministers are Party, m mbers, deal par- ticularly with matters of economic policy and c ntrol: the Ministries of Finance, Commerce and Industry, Agriculture, Labor, Public Works, and Information. In general, the policy of thelregime appears to follow closely th= lines of Mao Tse-tung's proc duce in China in applying the principles of Marxism-Leninism. to conditions in Vietnam. The Land Reform Law, which was promulgated by the National Assembly of the DRV on 4 December 1953, has bee heavily propagandized in order to gain popular support. It provides enerally for confisca- tion and expropriation of the lands of large 1 downers, absentee land- :Lords, and members of the opposition ("reaction ies"), and for re- distribution of the land to landless peasants o small landholders. 157 The law is similar in many respects to the law opted by the Chinese Communists in June 1950, and, as in Communist China, it appears to have the twofold immediate purpose of popularizing the regime on a broad base and of eliminating the opposition of the g ntry as an effective force. During the last 3 years, the influence of C advisors has been pronounced in the inauguratio currency reforms. In early 1951 a small bond i than planned) was floated with value, in terms for 5 years. In 1951 the budget was formulated paddy, and contracts by the government for serv inese Communist of fiscal, tax, and sue (in fact, smaller f. rice paddy, guaranteed in terms of rice ces were to be paid in Ho Chi Minh piasters at the market price of paddy on the day of payment. In 1952, collection of taxes and cont of of expenditures were centralized in the hands of the Ho Chi Mina government. No local government expenditures were allowed unless previously autho- rized by the central government. Local taxes re abolished, and the people were Eo informed by widespread prop anda. A National Granary Service, supervised by officials appointed by the central government, assumed control of the paddy suppli s collected through taxation, thus removing this function from local authority. In 1952 - 36 - S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIAHRDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T a Viet Minh state bank was established with a monopoly on currency issue, which had previously been partly in the hands of semi- independent regional administrations. In 1952, five principal forms of taxation were instituted to replace the previously irregular taxes-in-kind, real estate and business taxes, agricultural tax, taxes on industry and commerce, commodity taxes, export-import duties, and slaughterhouse taxes. The new agricultural tax was based on production instead of on land area, and the yield estimate for -tax purposes was said to be stabilized. Exemptions were allowed for family units instead of individual farmers, but the harvest tax was to be collected on a graduated scale based on size of land hold- ings. 158 Taxes on industry and commerce under the reform are of three types: turnover taxes, taxes on gross profits, and taxes on partic- ular transactions in the case of petty merchants. Taxes on opium and salt amount to one-third of production. Tea, sugar, tobacco, and cigarettes are similarly taxed, but at lower rates. Slaughter- house taxes amount to 10 percent of the value of the processed meat. The implementation of the land reform law and of the tax col- lection system appears to have been erratic, varying, with the degree of control, from mere propaganda to severe enforcement. The central- ization of administration, however, has generally been as absolute as the condition of available communications would appear to allow. The results are reported to have been generally in the direction of a reduced rate of currency and price inflation in the Viet :Minh areas and strengthening of control of resources in the hands of the regime. 159 At the DRV government conference held in Tuyen Quang in July 1953, Vice President Pham Van Dong of the DRV summarized the policies of his government as follows: (1) more thorough and equitable tax col- lections under the centralized tax collection system; (2) the increase of trade with other countries as well as with "enemy-controlled areas"; and (3) the improvement of land and water transportation systems to facilitate trade. He stated that the fact that prices had become more stable would aid in the development of economic production and that the implementation of the land reform program would increase agricultural production. Since agriculture is the basic element of the Vietnamese economy, he said that the working slogan would again be: "Increase agriculture production first, then encourage the development of family handicrafts." Finally he stated that "production S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-R1DP79T00935A000300090001-2 OOA S-E-C-R-E-T and economy are the most important objectives party and the entire population." 2,60 of the government, the No economic programs, or even production oals of the DRV, have been announced since the conclusion of t,, Ge eva agreements. The policies of the regime, however, as so far ex ressed, are clearly reminiscent of those which have been so ruthl ssly applied in Communist Chine,over the last 4 years. In vi w of the close similarity of fiscal and tax reforms to those in Conmtunipt China and the con- tinual presence of Chinese Communist advisors in North Vietnam, the pattern of centralization of authority and co trolled economic develop- ment may be expected to follow that of the Peiping government, with but slight modifications to fit local conditions and resources. V. Economic Relations of North Vietnam. A. Prewar Foreign Trade. The va: Lue of the external trade of T 1930's lagged 2onsiderably behind the trade ing about half its foreign trade with France area (North Vietnam)** ran a consistent comm the pre-World War II period, and depended on support a wider range of imports. North Vie nkin and Annam in the late f Cochinchina. Conduct- * the present Viet Minh dity trade deficit in a few basic exports to nam did not constitute a significant source of supply for France an the Western world, and all of its coixmodity exports to the West. can be replaced from other areas. Indochinese foreign trade has been weighted more heavily in favor of the Eouthern area than of the north period, 1936 through 1938, the present Viet about 20 percent of the exports and 40 perce three Vietnamese provinces of Tonkin, Mnam, relationships change only slightly when the compared with the whole of Indochina. For t. through 1951, the declining importance of N by its control of only 6 percent of exports France infludes French Union countries. The area acquired by the Viet Minh unde agreement constitutes 95 percent of the val Tonkin and Annam. Trade magnitudes attribu in this section are those of Tonkin and. Ann' roughly 5 percent. tot~r~n. For the prewar kinh area controlled. only nt of the imports of the and Cochinchina. These present North Vietnam is he postwar period, 1949 rth Vietnam is indicated and 22 percent of imports. terms of the cease-fire e of external trade of ed to North Vietnam m and are overstated by - 38 - S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CI4\-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T French trade with North Vietnam, protected by preferential customs, was relatively greater than was that area's trade with the rest of the world. Tonkinese and Annamese exports to France, con- fined mostly to corn, coal, and metals, represented 52 percent of all exports from those provinces during the late 1930's. Imports from France, concentrated in textiles, metal and miscellaneous manufactures, and paper products and chemicals, amounted to 53 per- cent of total imports in the same period. An annual commodity trade deficit marked the prewar period of North Vietnam, averaging about US $4 million from 1936 through 1941. Cochinchina had an inverse experience during this time, with the magnitude of its trade surplus dependent on the quantity and price relationships of grains and rubber. The pattern of external trade of Tonkin and Annam before World War II was typical of an underdeveloped area dependent on a few basic commodities. Grains, coal, and cement accounted for more than three-fourths of the value of exports from North Vietnam during 1936 through 1938, while textiles and metal manufactures represented more than three-fifths of all imports. Grain, repre- senting 47 percent of exports, consisted primarily of corn exports (to France), with rice exports (to China) averaging about a third of the value of corn exports. Fuel and cement accounted for 32 percent of exports. Coal from mines near Hon Gay produced the major fuel export (to Japan, China, and France), while the cement plant at Haiphong exported half its production to neighboring Asian nations. More than two-fifths of the value of imports arrived as metal and metal manufactures, while textiles accounted for one-fifth of imports. Tables 15-18* illustrate the trade relations of North Vietnam during the immediate prewar period and in 1949-51. B. Trade with Communist China and the Soviet Bloc. 1. Exports. It is unlikely that the Chinese Communists have, given aid to the Viet Minh without demanding some return. We know that** Tables 15, 16, 17, and 18 follow on 40.? 41, and 42, respectively. ** Continued on p. 42. S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA~RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T External Trade of North Vietnam and of Total Vietnam 1936-38 and 191+9-511 Prewar Average 1936-38 Exports North Vietnam. (Thousand 1JS 18,615 88,670 20.99 61 Postwar Average 162 1949-51 5,200 87,512 5.91+ (Thousand US North Vietnam as Percent of Vietnam Imports North Vietnam (Thousand 'JS $ ) 20,803 53,655 Total Vietnam (Thousand 'JS $) 52,851+ 242, 1528 North Vietnam as Percent of Vietnam 39.36 22.12 a. Tonkin and Annam. b. Tonkin, Annam, and Cochinchina. S-E-C-R-J:-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA~RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T Table 16 Prewar Commodity Trade Balance of North Vietnam 163 1936-41 and Average Year Exports Imports Balance 1936 22,424 23,035 -611 1937 17,475 19,274 -1,799 1938 16,127 20,100 -3,973 1939 15,130 22,939 -7,809 1940 16' .652 19,818 -3,166 1941 11,595 19,226 -7,631 Average 16,567 20,732 -4,165 Table 17 Trade of North Vietnam with France.. 164 1936-38 and Average 1936 1937 1938 Average Exports to France (Thousand US $) 12,690 9,749 7,566 10,002 Percent of Total of North Vietnam Exports 56.6 55.8 47.0 5.3.1 Imports from France (Thousand US $) 12,293 10,577 10,468 11,113 Percent of Total of North Vietnam Imports 53.4 54.9 52.1 53.4 Balance with France (Thousand US $) +397 -828 -2,902 -1,111 a. France includes French Union countries. S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T Table 18 Composition of Trade of Northietnam 165 1936-38 Average Tota:, a With France b Tm Exports Imports Export s_ Food Grains 2.7 . 3 68 `8 c/ 12.8 Fuel and Aggregates Metals and Me-gal Manufactures 41.6 i .1 37.6 8 11.0 Textiles 21.0 30. Paper Product- 6.3 8.8 micals Ch 5.7 5.2 4 e Animal Products 2.6 4.3 2.1 3. 4 0 Miscellaneous Manufactures 10.5 3.0 15.5 . 2.0 ?7 other 100.0 106.0 100.0 100.0 percent Cf value of total imports Ea exports. b. Percent cf value of imports and exports; with France. c. Primarily corn. . Primarily coal. from the beginning of 1951 they have exacted 250,000 railroad ties for the construction of the Nanning-P':ing Usiang railroad. In ad- dition, the lTiet Minh have been required tc supply such products as vegetable oi:_s, tea, wood, and minerals. 2. :cmports. { 3eports from a variety of unev luated sources indicate unist China has sent the followin supplies to the Viet Minh: that Comm a Arms and ammunition: moun~ain guns, antiaircraft guns, machine guns, field guns, howitzers, mortars, rifles, rocket launchers,lammunition, explosives, grenades and grenade throrers, and land mines. S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIARDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T Food: rice, maize, dried sweet potatoes, cereals, soybeans, and flour. Clothing. Transportation and communications equipment: trucks, tires, spare parts, gasoline, oil, kerosene, radio sets, and field transmitters. Other: medical and clinical supplies, X-ray metal- testing equipment, balances, electric meters, electric drills, files, abrasives, saw blades, iron and steel for making cables, electrical distributing machinery, agricultural machinery, oxygen. containers, oxygen-generating machines, gas masks, binoculars, and industrial machinery. Little information is available concerning direct trade between North Vietnam and the USSR or other Soviet Bloc countries. Many of the above items imported from Communist China are of Soviet or Soviet Bloc manufacture. A Viet Minh trade mission has been re- ported in Europe in the first quarter of 1954 placing large orders for military equipment, vehicles (jeeps, trucks, and buses) pharma- ceuticals, and hospital equipment in East Germany, Poland,, and Czechoslovakia. 166 3. Extent of Material and Technical Assistance Given to the Viet Minh. The Viet Minh have received material aid from Communist China since at least December 1949 and perhaps since 1948,, Until early 1951 only essential supplies of arms and rice had been sent to the Viet Minh, but by summer Communist China began supplying material designed to develop the Viet Minh's internal systems of supply. Military equipment and supplies, however, apparently con- tinued to be the Bloc's main contribution to the Viet Minh. The seale of supply is difficult to estimate. In June 1951, Communist China and the USSR were each said to have promised 1,000 tons a month (totaling 2,000 tons per month). The plans for later in the year indicated aid on a lower level of possibly 1,300 tons a month, although implementation of the plan revealed movements of only 500 to 600 tons a month. - 43 - S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA~RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T By =nid-1953, Soviet Bloc aid may have totaled as much as 2,000 tons a month, according to French sourc.s. By 195+ there were indications of increased military aid, possib'y as much as 3,000 to 4,000 tons a month. 167 With the end of the war in sight, however, the :195' trade agreement called for the excha4ge of industrial goods. It has been fairly well establish6d that Chinese Com- munist personnel -- instructors, technicians,' political and military advisors, and perhaps transport labor along m ,jor supply routes -- have been operating with the Viet Minh. Esti tes on the extent of this personnel assistance, however, have varild widely. While the average of the several estimates in the past has been in the neighbor- hood of 10,000 to 15,000, there was a gradual] decrease during 1952 to roughly 5,000. This decrease was apparent.y attributable to the progress made by the Viet Minh in their organization, to the develop- ment of training camps in South China, and to; the difficultids en- countered by the presence of Chinese in VietLinh zones. With respect to this latter point, it is felt that the Viet Minh, while not denying the necessity of Chinese Commmnist assistance, have been attempting to reduce the numbers of advisors and technicians in Viet Minh zones because of the possibility of a resurgence of traditional antipathy among the Indochinese fpr the Chinese. The Viet Minh may, in fact, ;purs4e a deliberate. policy of restricting contacts between Chinese personnel and the Viet- namese populat:_on in order to avoid arousing historic animosities held by most V:Letnamese toward the Chinese. There are no confirmed reports of Chiaese combat casualties, except for minor operations along the nort'.iern border. It appears, therefore, that Ch:Lnese Communist personnel operate primarily in conjunction with central administrative units and at higher command 1 vels, and such a policy would definitely limit the capacity of the Viet Minh organization to absorb foreign specialists and advisors. C. Relaticris with South Vietnam and. 0th r Asiatic Countries. There is probably a limited amount of trade between the Viet Minh and the French-held areas in Vietnam despite government efforts to maintain a land and sea blockade. Individuals who have fled from Viet Minh territory have stated, without confirmation, that trusted Workers' (Communist) Party members are designated in each sector to conduct trade with non-Communist regions. S-E-C -R-E--T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA~RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 '`'-" Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T Although the total volume of such trade is relatively small, it has been of considerable importance to the Viet Minh because of specific shortages. Special efforts have been made to secure medical supplies, fuel, and transportation equipment and parts, and the Viet Minh have admittedly been dependent upon food supplies seized from French-controlled areas. There have been reports of arms smuggling between Thailand and Viet Minh areas, carried on by coastwise shipping to Communist- held areas in Cochinchina and overland through Cambodia. No esti- mates of the volume of this traffic can be made from available information. . D. Effects on World Trade Patterns of the Inclusion of North Vietnam in the Soviet Bloc. The Viet Minh certainly will attempt to eliminate the area's trade deficit by pushing exports. It is interesting, however, to note that in 1952, coal exports -- one of Tonkin's major foreign exchange earners -- would have paid for only 25,000 tons of rice, about 5 per- cent of'the possible rice deficit the Viet Minh may face, at least in the short run. The Soviet Bloc is not in a favorable position to give aid, although this deficit is relatively small. Although the Viet Minh Communist policy is not known, the Communists may consider this area important enough to encourage some industrialization. Industrialization, in requiring the importation of capital goods from the Soviet Bloc, would increase, although not significantly, the stresses and strains already existing within the Soviet Bloc. As the Viet Minh area is already a deficit area, in- dustrialization would add to the drain upon Bloc resources.* The reopening of the old trade routes from South China through Indochina would facilitate the exploitation of South China's minerals and the general. development of this area. In 1937, transit trade from Yunnan through Tonkin to China and Hong Kong totaled more than 50,000 tons valued at US $13.6 million, almost the value of Tonkin's exports. The primary commodities entering foreign trade from North Vietnam before the war are generally supplementary to the Chinese * See also VII, below. 45 - S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-.RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T economy. Japan, the largest buyer of Tonkinese coal in the 1930's, may be interested in renewing this source of'supply in exchange for Japanese textiles and manufactured goods,. Should a trade relation- ship develop between Japan and North Vietnam, China may have an opportunity to use Japanese trading desires as a lever to obtain trading concessions for herself. In the absence of Japanese trade with North Vietnam, it is probable that the USSR and China can furnish North Vietnam with the relatively smll amounts of textiles and manufactured goods required. Frencb imports from North Vietnam before World War II consisted more than 65 percent of corn and of about 10 percent each of metals and coal. French exports to North Vietnam were concentrated in metal manufactures (38 percent), textiles (31 per- cent), and miscellaneous manufactures (15 percent). Should all trade with North Vietnam be cut off in the future, France should have little difficulty obtaining these imports elsewhere in the Free World. Some adjustments may be necessaay in the transition of ;French trade to other areas, due to the preferential position France enjoyed from Indochinese customs arrangements. Of greater immediate significance toi, France than the loss of this trading area is the possibility_thtat USlwar aid for Indochina may be diverted to other uses. During the calendar year 1954, US $785 million were to be funneled through ;France for the war effort in Indochina, thus greatly relieving-the French gold and dollar shortage. At the time of the cease-fire, only US $100 million of this amount had been received by France and US $l100 million additional was in the pipelir.e. If the US should decide that all or part of the remaining US $,585 million and the US $800 million now scheduled for calendar year 1955 should be diverted to Southeast Asian cr other defense, these funds would not flow through France and would make it increasingly difficult for the French to maintain a foreign currency balance. VI. Comparison of the Level of Economic Activities and Viability of North and South Vietnam. The truce demarcation line divides Vietnam into two areas which under normal conditions would form comp:Lementary parts of a national economic entity. Of these, the area now under Viet Minh control possesses by far the greater long-term .Dotertial for a viable indus- trial economy. However, this area does not ;produce enough rice to - 1.6 - S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA--RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 `"'r Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T support its population of 14 million and will probably be dependent upon some grain imports to make up its general food production deficit. North Vietnam contains the only major coal deposits of Vietnam, and practically all of the known metallic mineral resources, including zinc, tin; iron, tungsten, manganese,. chrome, lead, and gold. In addition, the only cement plant in the country the largest in Southeast Asia -- is located at,Haiphong. The country's two major textile plants are also located in the Viet Minh area, ,although these depend upon imports of raw cotton and do not produce enough textiles for North Vietnamese requirements. It is believed that these resources should enable the Viet Minh in time to procure in foreign trade the manufactures which are needed for a modest industrial development. However, the apparent unwillingness of the Viet Minh to offer sufficiently attraftive terms to the French administrators and managers to continue operating the coal mines and industrial installations and to carry on interregional and foreign trade poses an immediate problem for the Viet Minh if they are to realize any benefit from these economic activities, pending the time when Communist technicians and advisors become available. Moreover, the extensive capital construction necessary to rebuild transport and communications facilities linking North Vietnam to the Soviet Bloc, and the improvement of mining and industrial facilities -- even to the levels that had been planned in US Foreign Operations Administration programs -- is believed to be beyond the capabilities of the Viet Minh and.will probably require technical assistance from the Bloc in planning, supervision, and additional equipment. The immediate needs for imported food supplies, raw cotton, gypsum, and technical equipment will require aid from the Bloc if the past level of economic activity in the area is to be restored soon. For the long term, North Vietnam, as discussed in Section II above, possesses a well-balanced resource base for a self-sustaining industrial economy but needs technical aid and investment funds to develop it. The USSR has provided substantial technical assistance to Communist China in its economic development during the past 5 years. It still remains to be determined whether the USSR or Communist China is in a position to pass on the lessons which have been learned in the initial stages of development of the Chinese economy to another Asian country with an even less developed resource base. North Vietnam, however, already seems to be benefiting from the experiences of Communist China, as can be observed in the measures for taxation, - 47 - S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 0-4 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIAI,RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T land reform, and centralized control which hav; been promulgated in Viet Minh areas Ln the past 3 years. The expected reconstruction of the two railroads linking North Vietnam to China will stimulate economic exchanges between the two countries. China is apparently in a position to benefit more at first from the Haiphong-Yunnan rail- road connection. It would provide the means of easy export of minerals from Southwest China and of hastening'ithe construction and indus-trializaticn programs in that region, whi.e North Vietnam would benefit incident ally from the restoration of the railroad line through its are?, of prospective resource development. Thus, in view of the early evidences of Chinese Communist aid to the Viet Minh, it is believed that necessary technical aid will be forthcoming, at least to the extent that is considered mutually beneficial. South Vietnam, on the other hand, has practically no resources available other than agriculture and will be hard pressed to create a self-sustaining economy, even in the long rein. The area does possess an agrioultural base for rice production sufficient to sus- tain its populaAon and permit exports, which prior to World Wax II amounted to over 50 percent of all exports from Indochina. Although in the past China has been the principal purchaser of Indochinese rice, there has been no trade between South Vietnam and China in the last several years. India and other Pacific countries have purchased rice from the Cochinchina area, but rice production and consumption are quite elastic in these regions and the market quite variable. Since rice fron the Cochinchina area is inferior to that of the, other two main sources, Thailand and Burma, the demand for Indochinese rice is always dependent upon the amount available in those countries. Whether rice trading with the Viet Minh areas will be effected is not yet clear. In addition to rice production, the only other major resource available to South Vietnam for foreign trade is natural rubber, pro- duction of which. amounted to about 73,00-0 toils in 1953, or about 5 percent of the world output. France has been the main market. Depending on markets (and on allocation of t1e foreign exchange proceeds of exports), t:iese two resources could provide investment funds for a modest development of consumer goods industries which would improve the self-suffi2iency of the area. A major problem immediately facing the South Vietnam government is the relocation of an indeterminate number of;ersons refugeeing fromn the northern area. Traditionally unwilling to leave their homes S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA 1RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T to take up free land in the upland regions, the northern Vietnamese who accept resettlement in the South will probably be limited for the most part to the families of military and functionary personnel de- pendent on the government for support. These number as many as 330,000 to 350,000 people. Temporary provisions for their accommoda- tion are currently being made. There are several sparsely populated inland plateau areas where these people could be settled, where they could grow such crops as maize, potatoes, beans, manioc, and taro, or where they could develop plantation-type crops such as rubber, coffee, tea, pepper, or fruits. However, even at best, these pur- suits would be long-term in their effect and no prospect is in sight to provide the means of livelihood even for the present numbers of civilian personnel seeking resettlement in the South. There seems slight chance that -- in the absence of a vigorous and efficient organization of migration, agricultural, public works and handicraft projects, to utilize the emigrants -- the need for self- supporting economic activity for these people can be fulfilled. Even with some American aid, the capabilities of the South Vietnamese government are being taxed to provide for their welfare. On the other hand, a large number of stay-behind cadres and guerrilla forces of the Viet Minh can be expected to remain in the South to carry on the Viet Minh regime's program of political subversion and disruption of economic activity. In these circum- stances, the institutional structure of the South Vietnam economy as an agricultural colonial appendage of metropolitan France will be subjected to further severe strains. The continued maintenance and protection of French colonial interests in agricultural production and trade are at the same time both necessary for the support of the present level of economic activity in the area and paralyzing in their effect upon native aspirations to develop a viable national economy. The long-enforced dependence of Indochina on the metropolitan country for manufactured goods has discouraged the development of indigenous industry. At a time when increased economic opportunities are needed to support the population and to replace employment in occupations connected with interregional and colonial trade, normal private sources of investment are lacking to provide the needed maintenance and expansion of the small industrial and trade sectors. In the face of the expected further disruption by Communist forces in the area, additional foreign economic aid to South Vietnam appears to be more than ever required to maintain and develop the economy and. to provide stimulation, guidance,and support for projects in public works, agri- culture, consumer goods and agricultural tools industries, and handicrafts. 168 _49_ S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA~RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T VII. Estimate of Probable Economic Develo !nts ' n North Vietnam through l95 f' A. Future ure Soviet Bloc Aid. Up until the time of the cease-fire, t le bulk of aid given to the Viet Minh by the Soviet Bloc was of a military nature and consisted mostly of military equipment and rations, as well as material to develop the Viet Minh's Internal lines of supply. Mid-1954 protocols for the exchange of goods between the DRV and Communist China `.ndicate that North Vietnam wa scheduled to receive very little in the way of capital good for improving indus- trial production from Communist China. Fu:rthe ore, there is no known grant of a_.d to the Viet Minh such as th grant extended to North Korea by the USSR, Communist China, and the European Satel- lites, which will reportedly amount to US $300 i4illion and restore the 1946-50 leve:_ of economic activity. On th other hand, because of the lack of any information on the Viet Mi regime's plans for economic developzent or on future Soviet Bloc id to North Vietnam, future production can only be estimated there, predicated upon North Vietnam's known resources and facilities the immediate needs of Communist China and the USSR, and the desir of the Peiping regime to make &i impressive showing in Indoch na for the benefit of the other Southeast Asian countries. Under these conditions, it is assumed Vietnam will rec,~ive technical and material ai particularly from Communist China because the gain both economically and politically from th Vietnam into the Asian Communist Bloc; and. (2) important enough in itself, will be limited by 1) that North from the Soviet Bloc, atter has the most to integration of North that such aid, although considerations of economic worth and will not be extended tc North Vietnam projects at an unrealistic cost. B. Probable Economic Developments through 1 57. It is believed that the bulk of Sciviet Bloc aid will be granted to (1) connect North Vietnam with Communist Ch na by rail, and to improve other transport facilities; (2) exploit the area's coal, tin, zinc, chrome,and phosphate resources; (3) provide the cotton textile industry with raw cotton; (4) increase cement roduction; and (5) pro- vide food supplies to overcome present shortages. S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA- RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T Rehabilitation of the area's railroad system will be expedient both strategically and economically to Communist China particularly and also to the Soviet Bloc. By connecting the Chinese Communist railroad system to that of North Vietnam north of Lang Son, the Bloc will accomplish through railroad service from the USSR through Communist China to the Southeast Asian Communist frontier. Recon- struction of the Lao Kay-Haiphong line, on which construction re- portedly has already begun, will again allow Communist China use of the most expeditious route in exploitation of its Ko-chiu tin and other mineral resources found in the Southwest as well as aid Com- munist China's construction program for that region. Reconstruction of rail facilities will be accomplished almost entirely with Chinese Communist or Bloc materials and technical personnel, and strategically will actually benefit the Chinese Communists more than it will the Viet Minh. In addition to reconstruction of rail facilities, the Soviet Bloc will probably aid the Viet Minh in rehabilitating Haiphong harbor. Dredging equipment and reconstruction of some wharf and repair facili- ties will be required, and the equipment and technical assistance for this will also have to come from Communist China and/or the Bloc. Emphasis on the area's resources will probably proceed as follows (see Table 19*): 1. Iron and Steel. Although it is estimated that no iron and steel industry of any significance will be established by 1957, the export of iron ore will undoubtedly be resumed after the restoration of necessary trans- portation and mining facilities and will probably equal or surpass the prewar production peak of 135,000 tons. Ferroalloy ore production consequently will also be limited to export demands, and probably will also surpass past peak production. Chromite production may receive the greatest attention since Communist China has only very minor chrome ore deposits of its own, and although present requirements are meager they will undoubtedly increase. * Table 19 follows on p. 52. S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Appr ved Fqr Release 1999/09/21 :1 CIA~,RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 ri ri o ur u\ co \0 H \ 0Or-iN-i 1N zoo \O ri ri r- u\0--t ON a'0 u1 ONCOririN 0 co ri cO 00000,)\,00 00 U-\ 0oOO00-ENO S0OQN 0 0N ~ m 0 O)N 00 OJNri ~ zcd ri LX Lh 0001-ON0000 0000,or,0o88 ri ri H O (1) cdl Ul~ril~~ ON- - N- ri 00 N ri OH O`. O. O. O, O.0O,O,a,c H ri H ri ri ri [-t NUI\(nN0000 rn 000E 00 Lr\ ~~ ri H 0)m cd Q 0 N 0 O U N 0) N ~.' OU U O N ~+ N +'+' P +? H 0 N P a) $4 W P 'd +? N C SQ N N rd 0 ~w+ ?~-I + .0, +' L ~ ,Ci) O ~-I 0 ri a G*a co O E-i ~d p W O u U + H O E N Er-I l P- UJ 0 O o ? H N H q 0 mEH rl ?ri U U 0 N +' 0) O W Id 0) Uri d EiH 0) -O Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIAHRDP79TOO935A000300090001-2 HI ""~ Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T 2. Nonferrous Minerals. Zinc production will be of importance to Communist China, particularly when and if the zinc smelter at Quang Yen is retorted. It is assumed that the Chinese Communists will probably give this project high priority inasmuch as their own zinc smelting facilities are inadequate, and China is importing zinc metal from Poland. It is therefore believed that zinc production will reach at least 8,000 tons per year. Tin production, the only significant addition to the Soviet Bloc as a whole, could possibly reach 1,500 tons by 1957 and would be very considerably increased, probably doubled, with the acquisition and operation of the Nam Pathene mines in Laos. Production of phosphates which reportedly has already begun under the Chinese Communists in Lao Kay will continue and become more important with the acquisition of the Haiphong phos-. phate fertilizer factory. It is estimated that production of phosphates will attain at least.160,000 tons by 1957? Although coal production in North Vietnam reached an historical peak of 2.6 million tons in 1939, it does not appear likely that this figure will be approached by 1957. The poten- tiality for a production greater than the estimated 1957 production figure of 1.0 million tons probably exists, but because most pro- duction is dependent upon export demands and because present con.- ditions do not portend as favorable a coal export situation as existed in the late 1930's, it does not seem likely that the coal- producing potential in North Vietnam will be fully utilized. New trade agreements made by the Viet Minh regime, however, could significantly change the situation within a short time period. For example, the resumption of coal exports to Japan alone on the 1939 level would mean an increased production of about 350,000 tons per year. 4? Textiles. Prior to the partitioning of Vietnam, the cotton textile industry, especially the plant at Nam Dinh, was almost entirely de- pendent upon the US for its supply of short staple cotton. Some S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA~RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T imports of Ind:_an and Egyptian cotton supplezdented the US supply but were not suitable for most of the production. In 1953 the US, through the Foreign Operations Administration,supplid about 8,000 metric tons of raw cotton, and prior to the hostilities the cotton textile indus- try annually u;3ed 12,000 to 14,000 tons of r w cotton. Practically all cloth and ;Tarn produced by the industry is consumed domestically but still does not meet local demand. The Bloc will be required to supply the industry with raw cotton, as well as finished c=loth and yarn. This import requirement should not greatly tax the Bloc. The Nam Dinh mill aas been idle since French withdrawal, but reportedly is in excellent condition. '169/. 5. Cement. The only other industry of North Vietnam to which the Bloc probably will grant considerable aid is the Haiphong Cement Plant, North Vietnam's most important manufacturing industry. It is estimated that because of its importance s a new source of supply to the Chinese Communists the latter pill exert every effort to raise the slant production to 300,000 ton per year and probably will achieve this well before 1957. 6. Food. For the present, considerab:Le Bloc aid will be required to meet the daily living requirements of 14 million Northern Viet- namese. Since the area will be a showcase for the rest of South- east Asia to view Communist "progress," it is believed that the Bloc will exert considerable efforts to raise the living standard. The estimated per capita production of rice .(milled) of 1"C16.2 kilo- grams is cons:_derably below the yearly :rice !requirements of an Annamite which are estimated to be between 000 and 250 kilograms. It is anticipated that rice; production may lie increased somewhat in North Vietnam within the next two years.; General food production probably will also be increased over the sane time period with programs for ;;rowing other food crops and i4creasing fish catch production. The immediate acute needs of North Vietnam for food because of a coor crop year will necessitat , however, comparatively high imports Df foodstuffs. These will hav to come either from Communist Chiaa, which is experiencing a bai crop year in 1954 because of the present floods, from South Vietnam, or from other Southeast Asian. rice producers. In add.itio ., the area will still require importation of many daily necessities such as footwear and clothing, which in the past have been supplied by France. - 54 - S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA~RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T APPENDIX SOURCES Evaluations, following the classification entry and designated "Eval.," have the following significance: Source of Information Doc. - Documentary 1 - Confirmed by other source A - Completely reliable 2 s - Probably true B - Usually reliable 3 - Possibly true C - Fairly reliable 4 - Doubtful D - Not usually reliable 5 - Probably false E F - Not reliable - Cannot be judged 6 - Cannot be judged "Documentary" refers to original documents of foreign governments and organizations; copies or translations of such documents by a staff officer; or information extracted from such documents by a staff officer, all of which may carry the field evaluation "Documentary." Evaluations not otherwise designated are those appearing on the cited document; those designated "RR" are by the author of this re- port. No "RR" evaluation is given when the author agrees with the evaluation on the cited document. 1. State, OIR, Selected Background Data, Indochina, 1 Apr 1954. .S. 2. J. Gauthier, L'Indochine en Travail, Paris, 1949. U. 3. State, Hanoi Despatch No. 77, 1 Apr 1954. S. Eval. RR 2. 4. State, Saigon Despatch No. 2701, 9 Jun 1954. C. Eval. RR 2. 25X1 X7 5. 6. CIA NIS 3, draft on agriculture. C. JANIS 70, Chap. IX, Oct 1945. C. Agriculture, Food Balances, for Burma, Thailand, Indochina, Philippines and Taiwan, 1952. C. S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIAIRDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T State, OIR, Selected Background Data, Indochina, op. Cit. FOA, Yearbook of Food and Agricultural Statistics, 1952. U. ci3.. 7. Agriculture, Food Balances, op. 8. Ibid. 9. Ibid . 10. JANIB 70, Chap. I, Oct 1945. U- 11. State, Saigon Despatch No. 28, 13 ar 1947. U. Inte:'national Yearbook of Agricult ral Statistics, FOA, Yearbook of Food and Agricultural Statistics, op. Cit. 12. Ibid. 13. Inte:'national Tea Committee, Bulle in of Statistics, Jun 1952 and Supplement, Dec 1951 U. 14. Ibid. 1 1 15. Annuaaire des Etats Associe's, 1953, Paris, 1953. U. 16. Ibid. 17. JAN13 70, Chap. I, Oct 1945- C- 18. Agriculture, Food Balances, op. ci 19. JANI3 70, Chap. IX, Oct 1945. C. State, Saigon Despatch No. 306, 25 Jan 1954. C. 20. Estimate by US Department of Agric lture. 21. Interior, US Bureau of Mines, Mine al Trade Notes, May 1952. U. Eval. RR 2. 22. CIA VIS 43, Section 63, Oct 1953. C. Eval. RR 2. 23. "Prenier Report de la Sous-Coiimiss on de Modernisation de itIndo-Chine," 1948. U. Eval RR 3. UN Economic and Social Council, E/?N 1l/I 8 S/19,, Annex B, Dec 1950. U. Eval. RR 2. on . ................ ... yy yyyyyyyy UN, The Manufacture of Iron and St el in Indo-China, Third Session, Lahore, Pakistan, Feb 1953. 1J. CIA NIS 43, Section 63, Oct 1953. C. Eval. RR 2. CIA NIS 39, Section 63, Dec 1952. C. CIA NIS 43, Section 63, Oct 1953. C. Eval. RR 2. The Metal Bulletin No. 2539, 3 Nov 1950. U. Eval. RR 3. Min rats et Metaux-Societe Anon e Statisti ue, Paris, 1946. U. Eval. Doc. Ibic.., Paris, 1948. U. Eval, Doc Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA~RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T 25X1A2g FOIAb3c 36. Minerals Survey-Bauxite, USBM for NSRB, Aug 1953, Section III, 37. 38. 39. 4o. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. p. 1, Section IV, Table 1, pp. 12, 14, 16. U. Eval. RR 3. Sources of Bauxite in Asia, MTM, USBM, Special Supplement No. 27, to Vol. 2 , No. 6, Jun 1948, p. 14. U. Eval. RR 2. JANIS 70, Chap. IX, Oct 1945. C. Eval. RR 2. Army, Strategic Intelligence Digest, "French Indochina," 1 Oct 19 . C. Eval. RR 2. JANIS 70, Chap. IX, Oct 1945. C. Eval. RR 2. Ibid. JANIS 70, Chap. IX, Oct 1945. C. Eval. RR 2. FOA, Indo-China, 9.95-FR-631, 20 Apr 1953. U. CIA NIS 43, Section 62-B, Jul 1953. C, US OFFICIALS ONLY,. State, Saigon Despatch No. 353, 2 Mar 1953? C. CIA NIS 43, Section 62-B, Jul 1953. C, US OFFICIALS ONLY.- Ibid. Ibid. Ibid. Board of Economic Warfare, No. 4979, 22 May 1948. C. Ibid. CIA NIS 43, Section 62-B, Jul 1953. C, US OFFICIALS ONLY. 53. Ibid. 54. Ibid. 55. Ibid. 56. Ibid. 57. 58. Annuaire des Etats ssocies, Cam o ge, Laos, Vietnam, Paris, 1953. U. 59. Ibid. 60. J. Gauthier, L`Indochine en Travail, Paris, 1949. U. Navy, c-31820, Area Study 12-53. S. 61. Navy, NA, Saigon Report No. 234-52, 12 Dec 1952. U. Eval. A-2. 62. Annuaire Statistique du Vietnam, 1949-50, Saigon, 1951. U. Statistiques conomiques et Financieres, No. 20, Feb 1954, Saigon. U. 63. C. Robequain, The Economic Development of French Indochina, Oxford, 1944. U. 64. Ibid. 65. UN, Statistical Yearbook, 1952. U. 66. Ibid. 67. Ibid. S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-R S-E-C-R-E-T 68. 69. 70. 71. 7?. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77? 78. 79? 8o. 81. 82. 25X1 A20~ 85. 25X1A2g 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91- ? 91 . 93- 94. 95. 96. 97. 8 99. 100. 101. 102. P79T00935A000300090001-2 Ibid. Ibid. Robequair, 2. cit. UN, Statistical Yearbook, 1952. U. Ibid. Navy, Saigon Report No. 234-52, 12 Dec 11952. Eval. A-2. UN, Stat:.stical Yearbook, 1952. U. Ibid. Ibid. Ibid. Navy, Saigon Report No. 234+-52, 12 Dec 1952. U. Eva]... A-2. UN, Statistical Yearbook, 1952. U. Ibid. Ibid. Ibid. Ibid. UN, Statistical Yearbook, 1952. UN, Statistical Yearbook, 1952. U. I Navy, NA, Saigon Report No. 234-52, 1? Dec 1952. U. Eval. A-2. Bulletin Economi ue Hebdomadaire de 1 Chambre de Commerce, Saigon, 23 Jan 1954. U. Navy, NA, Saigon Report No. 234-52, 1 Dec 1952. U. Eval. A-2. Bulleti::.. Economique Hebdomadaire de 1 Chambre de Commerce, - cit. Annuaira des Etats Associe's, Paris, 153. U. CIA NIS 43, Section 64, Mar 1953. S. JANIS 70, Chap. IX, Oct 1945. C. Ibid. Premier Report de la Sous-Commission le Modernisation de 117:ndochine, Commission de Modernisation des Territoires d'Outre Mer, Nov 1948. U. Annuaire des Etats Associes, off. cit.l Statis;iques conomiques et FinancT es1No. 8, Feb 1953, Saigon. U. Bulletin Hebdomadaire de la Chambre d.e Commerce de Haiphong, Haiphong, 26 Sep 1953.1 U. Statistiques Economigues et Financie~es,No. 8, Feb 1953, Saigon. U. Premier Report de la Sous-Commission de Modernisation de 1'Indochine, OP. cit. JANIS 70, Chap. IX, Oct 1945. C. - 58 - S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : ClAA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 v , Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T 105. Ibid. 106. Ibid. 103. Ibid. 104. Annuaire Statistique du Vietnam, op. cit. 107. Annuaire des Etats Associes, op. cit. 108. Statistiques Economiques et Financieres, No. 20, Feb 1954, Saigon. U. 109. JANIS 70, Chap. IX, Oct 1945. C- 110. Ibid. 111. Ibid. 112. Ibid. 113. Ibid. 114. Ibid. 115. Ibid. 116. Ibid. 117. Premier Report de la Sous-Commission de Modernisation de l'Indochine, op. cit. 25X1 A2g0093?01-2ANIS 70, Chap. IX, 2p. cit. 119. 25X1A2g 120. Annuaire des Etats Associes op. cit. 121. 122. Annuaire Statistique du Vietnam, op. cit. 123. Ibid. 124. Ibid. 125. Annuaire des Etats Associe.s, op. cit. 126. Statistiques conomiques et Financieres, No. 20, Feb 19511, Saigon. U. 127. Robequain, op. cit. 128. JANIS 70, Chap. IX, Oct 1945- C. 129. Ibid. 130. State, Saigon Despatch No. 237, 6 Oct 1950. U. 131. Annuaire Statistique du Vietnam, op. cit. 132. Ibid. 25X1A2g 133. Annuaire des Etats Associes, op. cit. 134. Statistiques conomiques et Finan is eres, No. 20, Feb 1954, Saigon. U. 135. Robequain, op. cit. 136. Ibid. 137. Annuaire des Etats Associes, op. cit. 138. CIA NIS 3, Section 64, Mar 1953. S. 139. Robequain, op. cit. 140. CIA NIS 43. Section 64, Mar 1951. S. 141. S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIAHRDP79T00935A000300090001-2 25X1A2g 25X1X7^ 25X1A2gD 001-2 147. Air, FEAF, Intelligence Roundup, Nc . 151, Jun 1954. S. VoL 3 . I and II, 3-944. C. 146. Ibid, 145- CIA 1 ?DD No. 15868T, Military Too 221- Z_of Northern French Indo-China Southern Army Headquarters, 143. 144. 150. Navy,, NA, Saigon Report No. 61-52, 16 Apr 1952. 151. Navy,, NA, Saigon Report No. 51-52, 7 Apr 1952. C. C. 25X1 A2g152. 153. CIATtR IM-389, PPo .2ulation and Manpower in Indochina, I SFm 1QS11_ S. T' ebA1 A1g 154+ 155. 156. State, Saigon Despatch No. 3991, 1 Mar 1954. S. Robequain, op. Li-t- 157.- State,. Saigon Despatch No. 302, 9 Feb 1954. C. 158. StatE', Hanoi Despatch No. 206, 1 Juln 1953. C. 'ia, 25X1 A2gDP7~g$Q0 161. Indochina, Commerce Exterieure, 1936, , 1937, 1938. U. 162. Annus,ire Statistique du Vietnaxa, 19151, 1952, Saigon. U. 163. Indochina, Commerce Exterieure., op. 1 cit. 164. Ibid. 165 . Ibid. 166. FOIAb3bl CIA FDD, Selected Briefs from the I ternational press, No. 12, 13 Aug 1954. C. 167? FOIAb3b1 State, Hong Kong, Review of the HonD, Kong Chinese Press, Nos. 52, 53, 54, 19 Nov 1953. U. 168. State, OIR Report No. 6701, 4 Oct 1)54. S. Eval. RR 2. 169. State, Saigon Despatch No. 892, 4 S p 1954. (For official use only.) - 6o - S-E-C-R-E-T Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA~RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 Approved W(56ftpM 1954 1 ) . Sse mao MengC H I,, N Wen-she,, I.. Yen Kong lung ~?~ ( +.~. ... ,... 0SOh5La I i Z I ;I,~naeo~ ~'? /- oi'hone INDOCHINA NATURAL RESOURCES Circled symbols represent mines Al Bauxite Pb Lead Au Gold Sb Antimony l}fteradit 1,/ i J Nan {\-- Muango Lampeng --~Muang Ph"ae } F, or Chlengmel ^' 1 V ,,9 Vlenu Muango(% ~sTHAI!LND'I V Petroleum field-unexploitel is Rice R Rubber Sn Tin W Tungsten Fe Iron Zn Zinc P Phosphate Anthracite coal-exploited q Bituminous coal-exploited C Lignite - exploited PROCESSING CENTERS A Rice milling Textile ^ Sugar milling Glass ? Fish processing (bottle) Iron processing Coke Zn Zinc foundary monv- ~??- International boundary National Capital Scale 1:7,500,000 0 20 40 80 120 Miles 20 40 8 0 20 40 80 120 Kilometers ILES DE [? POULO CONDORS Appro ~, 59 9 O01 -2 SECRET Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2 S-E-C-R-E-T US OFFICIALS ONLY Approved For Release 1999/09/21 : CIA-RDP79T00935A000300090001-2