Vietnam Names Pham Duc an as Central Bank Governor, State Media Says

By Phuong Nguyen, Khanh Vu and Francesco Guarascio

HANOI, April 8 (Reuters) – ⁠Vietnam’s ⁠parliament on Wednesday approved career ⁠banker Pham Duc An as the new central bank governor for a five-year ​term, state media said.

The change is part of a regular leadership turnover and is not expected to have a significant ‌impact on monetary policy, but it ‌comes at a delicate moment when central banks around the world grapple with an energy crisis caused by ⁠the Iran war.

An ⁠is a member of the ruling Communist Party and has extensive experience in ​domestic commercial banking.

He spent about two decades at the Bank for Investment and Development of Vietnam (BIDV), one of Vietnam’s leading state-owned commercial lenders. He also worked at other banks, including the Vietnam–Russia Joint Venture Bank in 2011-14, according to Vietnam’s ​government.

An replaces Nguyen Thi Hong, who has led the State Bank of Vietnam (SBV) since 2020. During ⁠her tenure, ⁠the central bank oversaw the ⁠country’s  largest-ever bailout , injecting  more ​than $25 billion into Saigon Commercial Bank over about two-and-a-half years after a run on the lender in October 2022.

The ​leadership change,  reported by Reuters  in late ⁠March, follows the five-yearly congress of the Communist Party in January and the appointment of Le Minh Hung as the country’s  new prime minister  on Tuesday. The central bank governor is a member of the government in Vietnam.

INFLATION, GROWTH MANDATE

The SBV has a primary mandate to control inflation, with growth-supporting policies as a secondary objective. In recent ⁠years, however, it has repeatedly raised credit-growth targets, fuelling economic expansion as the Communist Party pushed ⁠for faster growth.

That unconventional credit-growth tool, which involves setting caps that effectively work as targets, is a key instrument the bank uses to conduct monetary policy.

Last year the credit-growth target for the banking system was raised to 20% from 16%, with specific goals for each bank. After concerns over asset-bubble risks, this year’s target in January was  lowered to 15%,  although it is often adjusted during the year.

During Hong’s term, the SBV tried at times to soften the impact of political decisions that could pose risks to long-term stability.

Last year it  warned about risks  from a bid by leading conglomerate ⁠Vingroup   for a major railway project that would have transferred most financial risks onto the state budget. Vingroup later withdrew its bid.

“Growth must go hand-in-hand with inflation control and macroeconomic stability, and stability will not be sacrificed for short-term growth,” Hong said in one of her last public speeches ​in late March.

On Monday, she  was appointed  a deputy head of parliament.

(Reporting by Francesco Guarascio, ​Khanh Vu and Phuong Nguyen; Editing by John Mair)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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