Vietnam The Society and Its Environment
Village official, late French colonial period
SEVERAL MONTHS BEFORE his death in 1969, Ho Chi Minh declared
that Vietnam would "certainly be reunified under the same roof"
no matter what difficulties and hardships might lie ahead. In
1976 the country was territorially reunited--under Hanoi's roof--
after more than twenty years of separation. This historic event
proved, however, to be only the first step toward the ultimate
test of reunification--the development of sociocultural,
economic, and political processes that could best serve the
aspirations and needs of the Vietnamese people. In 1987 Vietnam
was, in some respects, still a divided nation and still at war--
not for liberation from the bondage of neo-colonialism but for
the triumph of socialism in what was officially called the
struggle between the socialist and the capitalist paths.
The struggle between socialism and capitalism unfolded in an
environment of social and religious patterns molded by centuries
of cultural influences from Confucianism, Buddhism, Taoism,
indigenous animism and, more recently, Roman Catholicism. The
communist government disparaged some of these influences as
feudal, backward, superstitious, reactionary, or bourgeois and
targeted them for reform. Others, including Buddhism,
Catholicism, and minor faiths, were tolerated.
The Vietnamese people were continually urged to discard
vestiges of the old society and to adopt instead new values
associated with love of labor, collective ownership, patriotism,
socialism, and the proletarian dictatorship under the Vietnamese
Communist Party (VCP, Viet Nam Cong San Dan). In 1987 these
values were at best an abstraction to most Vietnamese, except
perhaps for a fraction of the party's fewer than 2 million
members. Despite the increasing dependence of families, simply
for subsistence, on organizations sponsored by collectives and
the state, the strongest bond in the society by far was that of
family loyalty. Such loyalty was particularly evident after the
mid-1970s, when living conditions deteriorated amid indications
of growing government corruption.
Much of Vietnam's contemporary history has been a grim
struggle, not on behalf of patriotism or socialism but for
survival. With a per capita income estimated at less than US$200
per year, the Vietnamese people in the 1980s remained among the
poorest in the world. In 1987 the society was predominantly
rural; more than 80 percent of the population resided in villages
and engaged primarily in farming. Among the urban population,
party and government officials supplanted the former elite, whose
privileged status had been derived mainly from wealth and higher
education. In theory, Vietnam had eliminated all exploiting
classes by developing a class structure composed of workers,
peasants, and socialist intellectuals. In practice, a small-scale
bourgeoisie continued to operate in the South's industrial sector
with the permission of the state, and, according to an official
source, some cadres in the south were exploiting peasants in the
tradition of former landowners.
Theoretically the society is multiracial, but actually it is
dominated by an ethnic Vietnamese elite. Vietnamese, who
outnumber other ethnic groups, are overwhelmingly lowlanders;
minority peoples, who are divided into nearly sixty groups of
various sizes and backgrounds, are mostly highlanders. With the
exception of the Chinese, or
Hoa (see Glossary), who are mostly
lowlanders, the minority peoples traditionally lived apart from
one another and from the Vietnamese. In the 1980s, however, the
distance between the highland and lowland communities gradually
narrowed as a result of the government policy of population
redistribution and political integration.
Under this policy, lowlanders were sent to remote,
uninhabited areas of the highlands both to relieve overcrowdingin the cities and in the congested Red River Delta-and to
increase food production. Both aims were part of the government's
effort to raise the standard of living, which in turn was linked
to another urgent national priority--family planning. In 1987 the
rate of population growth continued to outstrip food production.
Given the people's traditional belief in large families, the
government faced a major challenge in its attempt to reduce the
annual rate of population growth to 1.7 percent or less by 1990.
Data as of December 1987
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