How China Plus One is Creating Jobs in Vietnam
Over the past decade, a shift in global manufacturing has quietly reshaped Vietnam’s economy. As companies move to reduce their dependence on a single country for production — a strategy known as “China Plus One” — Vietnam has become one of the world’s favored alternatives. The result is a wave of factory investment that is pulling rural Vietnamese workers into steady, formal jobs and helping drive one of the developing world’s most dramatic reductions in poverty.
What “China Plus One” Means for Vietnam
The China Plus One shift took hold after 2018, when U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods pushed multinational firms to diversify their supply chains. Vietnam, with labor costs roughly half those of neighboring China, a young and growing workforce, and membership in 17 free-trade agreements, positioned itself to absorb the change. It has become a leading destination for electronics, footwear and apparel manufacturing.
The investment figures are striking. In 2024, Vietnam attracted around $38.2 billion in registered foreign direct investment and a record $25.35 billion in actual disbursements, up more than 9% from the year before, with most of it flowing into manufacturing, according to figures from Vietnam’s Ministry of Planning and Investment. Much of that capital builds factories, and factories create jobs.
The Anchor: Samsung
No company illustrates the trend better than Samsung. The South Korean electronics giant has invested about $23.2 billion in Vietnam, making it the country’s single largest foreign investor, and now employs roughly 87,000 people across six manufacturing plants. Its footprint is so large that Samsung’s operations accounted for around 13% of Vietnam’s GDP and export turnover in 2024, according to Vietnam’s National Statistics Office. Its network of local suppliers employs tens of thousands more, spreading the benefits well beyond Samsung’s own payroll.
The Role of U.S. Companies
American firms sit at the center of Vietnam’s China Plus One boom. Vietnam is now Nike’s largest manufacturing base worldwide, producing roughly 51% of the company’s footwear, and the factories that supply Nike employ close to 500,000 Vietnamese workers. Apple’s suppliers have followed suit: contract manufacturers like Foxconn now assemble iPads, AirPods and other devices in Vietnam, work that once happened almost exclusively in China. This deepening trade relationship has paid off for both sides. U.S. imports of Vietnamese goods surged more than 360% in the decade to 2023, topping $144 billion, according to U.S. government data reported by CNN.
From Factory Floors to Poverty Reduction
The human impact makes this a development story. Manufacturing jobs have drawn workers out of subsistence agriculture and into the wage economy, often transforming quiet rural provinces into industrial hubs. Regions like Thai Nguyen and Bac Ninh, once farming districts, now host sprawling industrial parks that employ tens of thousands.
That transition tracks closely with Vietnam’s broader gains. The World Bank reports that Vietnam’s extreme poverty rate fell from 14% to under 4% between 2010 and 2023, while GDP per capita climbed from under $700 in 1986 to nearly $4,500 in 2023, a rise that export manufacturing largely powered. For millions of families, a factory paycheck has meant predictable income, access to benefits and a path into the middle class.
Why It Matters
The model has real limits. Much of Vietnam’s electronics work remains lower-margin assembly that depends on imported components, and factory towns can suffer when global demand slumps. Analysts note that sustaining progress will require Vietnam to move up the value chain and build domestic capacity.
Still, the core lesson offers hope to advocates of global poverty reduction: integration into world markets, combined with steady investment, can lift large numbers of people into stable work. For Vietnam, China Plus One has been more than a supply-chain footnote — it has been a jobs engine.
– Jen Phan
Jen is based in Hanoi, Vietnam and focuses on Business and New Markets for The Borgen Project.
Photo: Flickr
