THE SITUATION IN SOUTH VIETNAM

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CIA-RDP79T00826A002900290001-3
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25
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December 16, 2016
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July 25, 2005
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1
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November 20, 1967
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IR
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25X1 Approved Release 2005/08/01 : CIA-RDP79T0 6A002900290001-3 Intelligence Report DIRECTORATE OF INTELLIGENCE The Situation in South Vietnam (Weekly ) Secret 150 20 November 1967 No. 0377/67 Approved For Release 2005/08/01 : CIA-RDP79T00826A002900290001-3 Approved For Rele 0900290001-3 ARNING contains information affecting the naional defense of the within the meaning of Title IS, section 793 and 794, of the by an unauthorized person is prolifloited by s amended. its transmission or revelation of its contents to or 4 Ati'i 3M t 11, IN6 AND 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/08/01 : CIA-RDP79T00826AO02900290001-3 25X1 Appro\ CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY Directorate of Intelligence THE SITUATION IN SOUTH VIETNAM (13 November - 19 November 1967) Status of prisoners in South Vietnam; Security in Quang Ngai and Quang Nam provinces; Revolutionary Development cadre; Vietnamese armed forces in Revolutionary Development. Section Prices; Currency and gold; New economic administration; Import situation; Infestation of stored US rice; Inflation - the cost of more piasters. ANNEX: Weekly Retail Prices in Saigon (table) Saigon Free Market Gold and Currency Prices (graph) 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/08/01 : CIA-RDP79T00826A002900290001-3 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/08/01 : CIA-RDP79T00826AO02900290001-3 Next 2 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 2005/08/01 : CIA-RDP79T00826AO02900290001-3 25X1 Appr Lower House Activities 9. Lower house plenary sessions during the period 13-16 November have been largely concerned with validating the election of its membership and a debate over the resolution put forward by 30 mem- bers regarding the 17 students drafted as a result of their anti-election demonstration activity. So far, the sessions of the lower house have been more disorganized and livelier than those of the upper house, due largely to the ineffectiveness of the temporary chairman, Nguyen Ba Luong, and the unfa- miliarity with parliamentary procedures of its mem- bers. It also appears that opposition elements will have an influential voice in this assembly judging by their performance on the student resolution issue. 10. As of 16 November, the lower house had vali- dated the election of some 100 of its 137 members, Validation is a continuing process carried on by the validation committee, with each case discussed indi- vidually on its own merits and presented to the as- sembly for its vote. To date, the committee has recommended validation in each case and the assembly voted to accept its recommendations. Remaining cases will probably be disposed of in the next few days. 11. A rather lengthly debate was centered on resolutions to intervene with the government in some way on behalf of the 17 students who were arrested and drafted for anti-election demonstration activity. The issue was finally settled by deciding to appoint a ten-man committee composed of two representatives from each of the corps areas and Saigon and Gia Dinh to "intervene for return to civilian life" of the student demonstrators. The committee reportedly will look into the whole matter of "illegal detainees." Three of the committee members, Nguyen Trong Nho, Nguyen Dai Bang, and Truc Vien, were strong supporters of the original resolutions and are expected to play a major role in the new committee. These three men may be generally characterized as opponents of the present government. Senate Rules Drafting Continues 12. During its continuing consideration of draft rules submitted by the rules committee, the Senate on 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/08/01 : CIA-RDP79T00826AO02900290001-3 Appro ed For Release 2005/08/01 : CIA-RDP79T00826AO02900290001-3 25X1 9 November approved the establishment of 12 standing committees and decided against having a secretary general on its board of presiding officers. At sub- sequent sessions on 11 and 14 November, nine articles dealing with the duties of these standing committees were approved. 13. The 12 committees are agriculture; educa- tion, culture, and youth affairs; communications and public works; economics; labor and social wel- fare; budget, finance, and taxes; information and foreign affairs; interior; defense; judiciary; health; and internal affairs and rules. Each will include between five and ten members, with the excep- tion of the budget and finance committee, which may have as many as 15. Each committee may form subcom- cittees. 14. In discussing its presiding officers, the Senate voted to forgo election of a secretary general and establish instead the internal affairs and rules committee, The position of secretary general was one of considerable power in the Provisional National Assembly, and the senators were apparently reluctant to vest so much power in one man again. The committee will probably be responsible for such tasks as con- trolling the agenda and ruling on legislative pro- cedures. 15~ A major point of contention arose during the debate on 11 and 14 November on articles dealing with the standing committees' duties. Several sen- ators attempted to have responsibility for defining the status of allied forces assigned to either the information and foreign affairs committee or the national defense committee. In both cases, the move was disapproved, although a provision was included as an "annotation" to the defense committee article by which the committee "examines and reports to the upper house on regulations for allied military forces on the territory of the Republic of Vietnam, when such forces are here." Senator Tran Van Lam later told an embassy officer that he expects the status of forces question to rank high on the Senate's list of priorities. 16. Work on the rules has begun to slow after the Senate's energetic start earlier in the month. Some 59 articles of the more than 200 have been ap- proved thus far. The rules drafting process will 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/08/01 : CIA-RDP79T00826AO02900290001-3 Approved For Release 2005/08/01 : CIA-RDP79T00826A0029002f0001-3 probably continue well into December, contrary to some earlier optimistic predictions that it could be completed by mid- or late November. 17. There was a lively debate on 15 November over the rules governing the establishment of blocs within the Senate. The rules drafting committee had proposed that the minimum number to constitute a bloc should be 21--which would have insured the creation of no more than two blocs in the 60-member upper house. This course, according to the committee, would facilitate the movement toward a two-party system and would be in the spirit of Article 100 of the constitution which states, "The Nation encourages progress toward a two-party system." The committee also argued that in its opinion any rules which do not foster such progress'would in a sense be uncon- stitutional. Only ten senators, however, voted for the committee's proposal. 18. The Senate than went on to approve its own measure from the floor to set the minimum bloc membership at 15, which will allow as many as four blocs to be organized. The argument from the floor against the committee recommendation was that while the constitution commits the nation to "encourage" progress toward a two-party system, it says nothing about forcing such movement. New Political Party Developing 19. Senator Tran Van Don announced in early November that a group composed largely of retired generals and formed originally in July as a veterans' association intends to become a political party. During a subseqent conversation with an embassy of- ficer, Don, who is the provisional chairman of the group, known as the Freedom Fighters' Association, clarified the association's objectives and plans. 20. He does not expect that the group can be organized as a political party--a process which he says requires the establishment of national, provin- cial, and village structures throughout a large part of the country--for at least a year and possibly two. Don has already begun establishing contacts in some areas with persons who will probably agree to or- ganize local chapters, but little beyond this has 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/08/01 : CIA-RDP79T00826A002900290001-3 Appr yet been accomplished. He foresees a mass organiza- tion which can successfully compete with the Communists' mass appeal, but no platform or program outlining this concept has yet been drawn up for the association. Among those on the association's executive committee are retired generals Ton That Dinh, Tran Tu Oai, Le Van Nghiem, Mai Huu Xuan, Nguyen Van Chuan, and Thai Quang Hoang. Former General Pham Van Dong is also an association member, serving as chairman of the group's Saigon chapter. 25X1 25X1 25X1 C 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/08/01 : CIA-RDP79T00826A002900290001-3 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/08/01 : CIA-RDP79T00826AO02900290001-3 Next 1 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 2005/08/01 : CIA-RDP79T00826AO02900290001-3 25X1 Apprd A recent decree of the Vietnamese government provides for clemency or a reduction in the sentences of 6,327 prisoners. Another government decree directs the destruction of a number of criminal records; however, the number of persons affected is unknown. Security in Quang Ngai and Quang Nam provinces sharply decreased in September, and in Quang Nam, security continued to decrease in October. The number of Vietnamese RD teams continues to grow, but the strength per team is declining. The number of Vietnamese army battalions in direct support to Revolutionary Development remains around 53. US Army battalions in RD have increased to six. As of 3 November 25,329 persons. had rallied to the government under the Chieu Hoi or "Open Arms" program. On the same date last year only 15,220 persons had rallied; however, recently the weekly returnee rate has been below that of last year. Thus far, only III Corps has been able to double the number of last year's ralliers. Status of Prisoners in South Vietnam 1. In conjunction with the recent National Day celebration and the presidential inauguration, the government of Vietnam (GVN) reportedly released or reduced the sentences of approximately 6,327 prisoners. In addition, the GVN issued a decree on 30 October which grants complete freedom and erasure from all records of charges or convictions of people detained under specific categories of criminal acts. US officials in Saigon are uncertain as to how many persons will be affected by the latter decree. GVN officials have made only vague statements, publicly or privately, concerning both the decree and prisoner release. Approved For Release 2005/08/01 : CIA-RDP79T00826A002900290001-3 25X1 Appro 2. An official in the Vietnamese Ministry of Justice recently informed US officials that the prisoner release and sentence reduction was a direct act of clemency from President N 3. The semi-official Vietnam Press on 31 October reported that, of the 6,327 prisoners who received clemency, 5,482 were released--1,167 political detainees and 4,320 suspects--and 509 civilian and 336 military prisoners had their sentences reduced. 4. Since the specific selection of persons to be released was apparently left in the lands of the local authorities, US officials feel that it was possible that a number of Viet Cong were included among the suspects and political detainees released. This belief is somewhat substantiated by a Vietnam Press report of 3 November which stated that political detainees were released in Thua Thien, Pleiku, Phu Yen, Dinh Tuong, and Kien Hoa provinces after they had taken an oath of loyalty to the government and promised to fight against the Viet Cong. 5. The civilian prison population now totals 32,385. Of this figure almost 15,000 have been sentenced and over 17,000 are still awaiting trial. A breakdown by the category of offender shows 20,535 political prisoners (the largest number of whom are probably Viet Cong or Viet Cong suspects), 5,793 criminal prisoners, 1,002 armed rebels (ethnic minority group dissidents such as the Khmer Kamputier Krom and FULRO), and 5,055 military prisoners. In addition, there are approximately 1,000 prisoners at any given time in interrogation centers throughout the country. 25X1 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/08/01 : CIA-RDP79T00826A002900290001-3 25X1 Apprc 6. US military officials have reported that as of the end of October approximately 8,260 military prisoners of war (POW) were in the custody of the government of Vietnam. This total included about 1,485 ethnic North Vietnamese, 224 regroupees, 5,938 southerners and about 612 persons whose origins are still unidentified. All but about 385 of these prisoners have been captured since January 1966 and about half of the total number--some 4,981--have been captured by US forces. There are an estimated 340 additional POWs in allied medical facilities who are not included in the prisoner total. 7. To house these POWs, US and GVN forces have constructed five major detention centers, one in each corps area and one on Phu Quoc Island. Under normal conditions these centers have a POW capacity of only 11,000; however, with minor internal alterations, they can quarter about 14,000 POWs. Security in Quang Ngai and Quang Nam Provinces pacificatii i on n South Viet em er substantiates earlier information which suggested a declining security situation 1 provinces. here was a decided eptemb i - - n Quail( ivgai and Quang Nam provinces. 9. Quang Ngai's pacification effort suffered a severe setback when the enemy occupied eastern Tu Nghia District for 10 days following the 29-30 August attack on the provincial capital. Eastern Tu Nghia is the most important of the five RD canpaign areas in the province. The intensity of the enemy offensive drove the Regional and Popular Force (RF/PF) soldiers and the RD cadres from a number of hamlets. The Vietnamese Army (ARVN) reaction was delayed and cautious, even after their forces were augmented by two battalions from Quang Tin Province. ARVN forces, however, appear to have been successful in at least temporarily clearing the area, and the RF/PF and the cadres Approved For Release 2005/08/01 : CIA-RDP79T00826A002900290001-3 25X1 Apprc have reportedly returned to the hamlets. The ARVN supporting units have been withdrawn from Quang Ngai, and Vietnamese forces in the province have returned to the security status prior to September. US officials are skeptical of the local forces' ability to preserve security and feel that enemy forces could, and indeed may, repeat their seizure of eastern Tu Nghia? 10. During September, Quang Nam Province experienced a reversal similar to that of Quang Ngai Enemy pressure caused a least a temporary loss of security in coastal Hieu Nhon District which includes the provincial capital of Hoi An. At one point five RD teams had to be temporarily withdrawn from their hamlets because of a lack of security, During October the enemy continued its offensive in Quang Nam and directed much of its effort against the districts of Dai Loc and Hieu Duc, Enemy forces seem to be attempting to force government forces into enclaves in Hoi An, Da Nang, and the district towns, 25X1 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/08/01 : CIA-RDP79T00826A002900290001-3 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/08/01 : CIA-RDP79T00826AO02900290001-3 Next 1 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 2005/08/01 : CIA-RDP79T00826AO02900290001-3 25X1 Approve Retail prices in Saigon declined one percent during the week ending 6 November because of lower prices for domestic rice and other foods. Free market currency and gold prices increased. Most economic posts in the new cabinet are occupied by relative unknowns, and Minister of Economy Ton's record during his previous terms in the position was undistinguished. Import orders during the first nine months of 1967 were smaller than anticipated as the result of existing large inventories of goods in the hands of importers. USAID personnel recently found substantial insect infestation in PL-480 rice stored by the South Vietnamese Government. The relation- ship between the price level and the in- creasing supply of piasters has tightened since 1965, and future additions to that supply will place greater pressure on prices. 1. Retail prices in Saigon declined 1 percent during the week ending 6 November after having risen sharply the previous week. The food price index dropped 3 percent as prices of most varieties of domestic rice as well as of pork, fish, and chicken declined. The price of the type of rice used in calculating the USAID index declined to 22.5 piasters per kilogram, the lowest since mid-February, as de- liveries of new crop rice continued to arrive in Saigon. Prices of nonfood items increased slightly as the price of laundry soap rose again as a result of the high cost of coconut oil. Firewood and charcoal prices also rose, the latter for the first time since early September. (A table of weekly re- tail prices in Saigon is included in the Annex.) 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/08/01 : CIA-RDP79T00826AO02900290001-3 25X1 Approvo 2. The USAID index for wholesale prices of US-financed imports also declined slightly because new arrivals of wheat flour and galvanized iron sheet resulted in lower prices for these items. The price of wire rods, however, rose sharply be- cause of low stocks and lack of new deliveries. Currency and Gold 3. Free market currency and gold prices in- creased on 6 November. The prices of green dollars and MPC (scrip) rose two piasters to 155 and 115 piasters per dollar, respectively. The price of gold leaf increased four piasters to 201 piasters per dollar, the highest rate since mid-August. (A graph on monthly and weekly currency and gold prices is included in the Annex.) New Economic Administration 4. The key portfolio of minister of economy in the new cabinet has once again gone to Truong Thai Ton, while most of the related ministries will be headed by less well known figures. Ton, an agricultural engineer, previously served as minister of economy from June 1965 to February 1966 and from February 1967 to mid-March 1967, but his record was undistinguished. He has had wide experience in government and at the time of his appointment was serving as an economic adviser in the prime minister's office. US officials consider him capable and hard working, but lacking in administrative ability. Judging by past experience, they do not expect any strong leadership on economic matters to come from his office. 5. The scope of Ton's post apparently will be smaller than it was under his predecessor, Nguyen Huu Hanh, who at present retains his position as governor of the National Bank of Vietnam from which he could still wield considerable influence. Under Hanh the ministry, called the Ministry of Economy and Finance, had direct supervisory responsibility for commerce, industry, finance, and transport and communications, but the latter two have now become 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/08/01 : CIA-RDP79T00826AO02900290001-3 25X1 Approv separate ministries. The departments of commerce and industry are now headed by under secretaries-- Nguyen Chanh Ly for commerce and Vo Van Nhung for industry. Ly has been a junior official in the commercial credit section of the National Bank and Nhung is an electrical engineer. 6. As minister of finance, Luu Van Tinh will continue in the general field in which he has been working for many years. He served as minister of finance under Tran Van Huong and in Ky's government as director of the budget and foreign aid as well as an assistant to Hanh on tax policy. The new minister of transport and communications is Luong The Sieu, who has been technical'director of the government-owned Nong Son coal mine near Da Nang, where his predecessor as minister also worked before serving in the cabinet. The other major economic ministries, agriculture and labor, are headed by Ton That Trinh, who worked with Ton as an advisers to the prime minister, and by Pho Ba Long, a de- feated senatorial candidate who has been teaching political science and business administration at the University of Da Lat while on leave from Esso where he worked in public and employee relations. Import Situation 7. Orders for imports this year have been smaller than anticipated as the result of existing large inventories of goods in the hands of importers. The monthly value of goods ordered by commercial importers in Vietnam during the first nine months of 1967 (measured by letters of credit opened) was 20 to 25 percent below the The level in 1966 was quite moval of import quotas and monthly average for 1966. high because of restrictions and the the re- entry of new firms into the importing business. Ac- cording to a joint Embassy/USAID study, the main concern now is the size of inventories and the effect it will have on the market for imported goods next year. By the end of June 1967 both bank and nonbank financing of importers' inventories was estimated to total roughly 25 billion piasters, or about 60 per- cent of the expected value of orders for all of 1967. 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/08/01 : CIA-RDP79T00826A002900290001-3 25X1 Approv The large inventories have allowed consumers access to ready supplies of imported goods at stable prices thus providing a dampening effect on domestic price increases. The danger, however, is that importers may be wary of placing large new orders until in- ventories have run down and prices start moving up. Then a big increase in orders would not only have an unsettling effect on prices but also on port opera- tions and bank liquidity, such as was experienced in 1966. 8. US officials in Saigon expect that the large inventories will discourage any increase in new import orders through the end of this year, but anticipate that orders will pick up early in 1968 as stocks approach more reasonable levels. They see two major problems confronting the import sector of the economy--how to reduce the lag between the time orders are placed and the time the goods arrive and are paid for by the importers and how to get importers to maintain adequate stocks of imported goods and rapidly replace them. There is currently a lag of about seven months between orders and arrivals, down from about nine months early this year. Importers should be able and willing to react quickly before shortages Of goods appear. In order to make this possible, the time lag must be reduced somewhat and sufficient credit must be available to finance the arrival of goods that are running short. US officials hope to tackle the former by streamlining licensing procedures, particularly for the gooc?s financed by the US. Credit conditions will be continually re- viewed with South Vietnamese officials in the hope of easing current bank pressure on importers to repay outstanding loans. Infestation of Stored US Rice 9. tJSAID personnel recently found substantial rodent and insect infestation in PL-480 rice stored in warehouses rented by the Vietnamese Government. The condition apparently exists in warehouses both in Cholon and Thu Duc, which have a combined capacity of 108,000 metric tons, or about two-thirds of the government's stock of imported rice in the Saigon area at the end of September. The infestation 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/08/01 : CIA-RDP79T00826AO02900290001-3 Approved For Release 2005/08/01 : CIA-RDP79T00826A002900290001-3 reportedly is worst in the Cholon warehouses, and .plans are under way to move these stocks into USAID- controlled storage space. USAID, on an emergency basis, has already hired a private firm to fumigate and protect the rice in the Thu Duc warehouses until the government can contract for such services. AID officials reported about 1,500 tons of spoiled rice as of 10 October, but said future losses would be considerably greater and much more costly than fumigation. The survey team also recommended that, if feasible, future contracts for shipment of PL-480 rice and other foods to Vietnam include provisions for improved inspection of ships prior to and dur- ing loading and dusting of foods with insecticides during loading to inhibit or eliminate insect growth during voyages. 10. This recent survey is reminiscent of a similar study made in August by USDA technicians and private American rice millers. At that time they recommended a different system of piling to allow for good ventilation and urged frequent fumi- gation. Inflation - The Cost of More Piasters 11. Under certain circumstances changes in a country's money supply (currency plus checking accounts) can have a direct and substantial impact on the prices of goods and services available in that country. If the supply of money increases at a more rapid pace than the available supply of goods then the price of those goods is very likely to rise as buyers are forced to bid more vigorously against each other. Suppliers rather quickly per- ceive the situation and accommodate the buyers by raising prices. Further, as the purchasing power of money falls (because of the rising price level) no one is particularly anxious to hold money for very long as its purchasing power will decline even further. Consequently, most individuals attempt to spend their money income as soon as they receive it thus further increasing the pressure on prices. This process seems to best explain the severe in- flation that began in South Vietnam in 1965. In 25X1 25X1 Approved or Release - 1-3 25X1 Apprc any event, mid-1965 marked the end of the ability of the South Vietnamese economy to absorb substantial increases in the money supply while maintaining relative price stability. During that year the money supply increased by 54 percent while prices responded by rising 30 percent. In 1966 the money supply in- creased by 28 percent and the price level jumped by 44 percent. 12. By contrast, during the previous decade South Vietnam demonstrated a capacity to absorb large annual increases in the money stock while maintaining a modest 1.4 percent average annual rise in prices. In this respect South Vietnam seems to have outperformed several other developing nations in the Far East. As shown in the table below, be- tween 1956 and 1965 the increase in the price index for South Vietnam was closer to that of Ceylon, Pakistan, and the Philippines while the percentage increase in the money supply was nearer to that of Taiwan and Korea, both of which experienced fairly severe inflation. Money Supply and Price Indexes for Selected Countries, 19 = 100 Money Index Price Index 1960 1965 1960 a Ceylon 107 152 104 113 India 122 193 119 159 Pakistan 126 195 116 129 Philippines 126 204 108 137 South Vietnam 138 391 95 134 Taiwan 189 460 149 167 South Korea 181 468 133 271 13. Until 1965 price stability and a rapidly increasing money supply were compatible largely be- cause of the US Commercial Import Program and ac- companying imports from the US under the Food for Peace Agreements. Goods imported by South Vietnam under these agreements were, in large part, enough to absorb the large annual increases in money, i.e., the increase in the available supply of goods kept 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/08/01 : CIA-RDP79T00826AO02900290001-3 25X1 Appro\ pace with the money supply. A second but significant factor was the absorption of piasters by the agricul- tural sector of the South Vietnamese economy. This sector had traditionally relied on barter, i.e., goods exchanged for goods, instead of currency. Thirdly, and apart from the first two factors, more money is normally required in the course of a country's growth and development. As South Vietnam's national income increased, more piasters and piaster checking accounts were required-to facilitate the greater number of transactions and the larger piaster amount of these transactions. 14. In 1965, when the US began sending large numbers of troops to South Vietnam, it quickly be- came evident that there was little slack left in the economy which would allow substantial additions to the money stock without inflation. The remainder of the subsistence sector became rather quickly mone- tized. And the additions to the money supply were of such magnitude that additional piasters required because of economic growth were even of lesser im- portance than they were before 1965. Consequently, the commercial import and Food for Peace Programs were left with almost all of the burden of prevent- ing inflation in South Vietnam. To a lesser extent the growing black market in currency and gold acted, and still acts, as a deterrent to further inflation by providing South Vietnamese with a source of con- stant value currency to hold as idle balances. If piasters were used, then holding idle cash balances for purposes of future transactions would be costly because the purchasing power of the piaster is con- stantly declining. 15. The South Vietnamese budget deficit is largely responsible for the growing money supply and, consequently, for the upward spiral in prices. Print- ing more piasters appears to be the method employed by the government to raise necessary revenue as tax collections are wholly inadequate. According to re- cent estimates the prospects for price stability in 1968 are not good. Estimates of price increases, based on the possible budget deficit (which provides the net addition to the money supply less borrowing 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/08/01 : CIA-RDP79T00826AO02900290001-3 25X1 Approveq' from the National Bank), go as high as 75 percent for 1968. Former minister of economy and finance Hanh, however, is conservatively predicting about a 35-percent increase. 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/08/01 : CIA-RDP79T00826AO02900290001-3 Approved For Release 2005/08/01 : CIA-RDP79T00826AO02900290001-3 Weekly Retail Prices in Saigon a/ 13 Jun 3 Jan 16 Oct 23 Oct 30 Oct 6 Nov 1966 b/ 1967 1967 1967 1967 1967 s ll It 173 225 291 290 304 300 em Index for a d It F 190 242 326 324- 345 336 ems oo Index for Of Which: (In Piasters) Rice-Soc Nau (100 k.) 1,250 1,700 2,300 2,300 2,300 2,250 Pork Bellies (1 kg. 90 130 200 200 230 220 6 Fish -Ca Tre (1 kg.) 130 150 220 220 270 2 0 Nuoc Mam (jar) 70 90 150 150 150 150 I 140 195 227 228 2-0 233 tems Index for Nonfood Of Which: (In Piasters) Firewcod (cu. meter) 360 56o 500 500 520 530 4 arettes (pack) 10 14 14 14 Ci 14 1 g White Calico (meter) 27 33 45 45 46 16 9 Kerosene (liter) 7.8 10.5 9 9 9 1 6 = 100 Data are from USAID sources. a 9 For all indexes 1 January - 5 . b. Price level just prior to the 18 June devaluation. Approved For Release 2005/08/01 : CIA-RDP79T00826AO02900290001-3 Approved FocRelease 2005/08/01 : CIA-RDP79T008r x4002900290001-3 Saigon Free Market Gold and Currency Prices PIASTERS PER US DOLLAR 100 GOLD: Basis gold leaf worth $35 per troy ounce US $10 GREEN US $10 MPC Military Payment Certificates AUG SEP OCT NOV 1967 Approved For Release 2005/08/01 : CIA-RDP79T00826AO02900290001-3 Secrefpproved For Rise 2005/08/01 : CIA-RDP79T00826A900290001-3 Secret Approved For Release 2005/08/01 : CIA-RDP79T00826AO02900290001-3