Yes, absolutely.
Vietnam, as I mentioned, is a single-party state and has been relatively stable in its political situation. We have seen, I think, over the last couple of years—some of it perhaps opportunistically because of the pandemic—a closure in digital spaces and thus an increase in censorship, and a lower level of tolerance for political opposition. In response to political activism, human rights activism, we've been seeing an uptick in arrests for that. These are reasons for concern, concerns that we do let the Vietnamese know that we have. At the same time, there has been increased opening and progress on things like gender rights and gender equality and ethnic minority rights in the country, so there's reason for optimism.
Coming from where I did, working on China, we're always monitoring political developments to see the extent to which, even in a one-party state, there is division of and limits to power, and in the Vietnamese system, you still have a very strong sense of collective leadership where power is diffuse. In fact, some would say it's almost too diffuse; provinces have an enormous amount of influence over decision-making, which can sometimes make things slow for business. But we haven't seen a very overt crackdown or consolidation of power the way that we had seen, for example, in China, but it's certainly something that we watch for.
Right now, Vietnam is in the midst of an anti-corruption campaign, and whether or not this is going to change the political landscape significantly is yet to be seen, but that's something we're also watching.