Vietnam’s 2025 reform agenda marked a sharp departure from the caution that typically precedes Party Congresses. This article argues that an unusual concentration of political authority enabled a coordinated push for ambitious administrative, territorial, economic, and governance reforms ahead of the 14th Communist Party Congress. Institutional restructuring, provincial consolidation, cadre rotation, private-sector repositioning, and large-scale infrastructure investment advanced in tandem with tighter Party discipline, expanded information control, and the continuation of intense anti-corruption enforcement. In foreign policy, Vietnam pursued strategic autonomy while navigating heightened external pressures. Together, these developments reveal a reform strategy that couples accelerated development with strengthened Party control, bearing the clear imprint of General Secretary Tô Lâm’s leadership.
Edmund J. Malesky (Sun,) studied this question.
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