The four Resolutions, which the General Secretary called the "four pillars of the Ministry" and have just been issued by the Politburo, demonstrate a breakthrough vision for national development in the new period, including: Resolution 57 on promoting science and technology, innovation - to increase economic productivity; Resolution 59 on extensive international integration - to expand development space; Resolution 66 on innovation in law-making and enforcement - to make institutions no longer a bottleneck; and Resolution 68 on strong development of the private economic sector - to free up social resources.
These are four consecutive Resolutions, one comprehensive reform body, complementing each other, together laying the institutional foundation for a new, more dynamic and more effective development model of the country.
It can be associated with this "four pillars" with the spirit of profound reform is a complete musculoskeletal system like the human body of the national institution for Vietnam to take off.
Because sustainable growth is impossible without a modern legal system, a healthy private sector, a breakthrough technological capacity and a vision of extensive integration.
However, as the General Secretary emphasized, the "four pillars" are there, but whether they succeed or not depends on whether the entire political system truly "turns aspirations into actions".
To make these four institutional pillars a real launching pad, each industry, each locality, each cadre must accompany with a spirit of innovation, responsibility, dare to do, dare to take responsibility.
Another notable point that the General Secretary raised is to innovate thinking, from the way of being worn to being creative; from the management mindset to the mindset of serving and leading. We cannot develop the private sector but still have a "necessity" mentality for the private sector. Technology cannot be innovated but businesses are still bound by cumbersome procedures. And it is even more impossible to integrate deeply if the internal economic force still lacks momentum.
When the General Secretary called the four Resolutions just issued as "four pillars" for development, it was not only a signal of innovation but also a necessary pressure for the entire system to act.
This is the time when reform cannot continue in a proactive and slow manner, but must be implemented with a spirit of commitment, creativity and for the nation.
The Four pillars is also a test of policy management capacity with the following questions: How to avoid the situation of very correct resolution but slow and unsynchronized implementation? How can ministries, branches and localities not stand outside this reform? How to move each part of the institutional " machinery" together smoothly and effectively?
"The Four pillars" will truly become a launching pad to take Vietnam off when the entire political system is united in moving, taking the strong aspiration as the guiding needle and taking concrete actions for the people as a constant motivation.