China Daily (Hong Kong)

More reforms in pipeline for SOEs

- By ZHONG NAN zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

China will prioritize and accelerate the restructur­ing of steel, coal and power businesses in its major Stateowned enterprise­s to improve operationa­l efficiency and enhance the profitabil­ity of State assets, the top State-owned assets regulator said on Wednesday.

Eager to crack hard nuts such as overcapaci­ty, low commodity prices and financial losses, the State-Owned Assets Supervisio­n and Administra­tion Commission will deepen the reform of SOEs from these three priority sectors via business reshuffles, reorganiza­tion and mixed ownership reforms.

In addition to steel, coal and power, other sectors, including petroleum, gas, railways, telecommun­ications, civil aviation and military-related industries, will also be given priority to conduct mixed ownership reforms, said Xiao Yaqing, minister of the SASAC.

Xiao said the government will invest more in optimizing management and operations to help unprofitab­le SOEs and reduce the number of “zombie companies” this year.

“Zombie companies” are economical­ly inviable businesses, usually in industries with severe overcapaci­ty, which only survive due to financing from the government and banks.

“Affected by lower coal prices and the saturated global steel market, the steel, coal and power sectors are confronted with more overcapaci­ty problems and comparativ­ely accommodat­e more ‘zombie companies’. This is the fundamenta­l reason why these three areas have to be addressed first,” said Ding Rijia, a professor at the China University of Mining and Technology in Beijing.

The central government ($87.36 billion) to support SOEs and private companies.

Chen Qingtai, former deputy director of the Developmen­t Research Center of the State Council, said the central government’s reforms aim to explore new State-owned asset management models focused on the management of capital, find effective methods for a mixed ownership economy and improve corporate governance.

“SOEs with overcapaci­ty, pollution and financial loss issues pose a major threat to China’s economic structure,” reorganize­d 22 central SOEs, said Fan Hengshan, deputy including China Ocean Shipsecret­ary-general of the ping (Group) Co and China National Developmen­t and Shipping Group, CNR Corp Reform Commission, the and CSR Corp, over the past nation’s top economic regulathre­e years. Ittor.alsoestabl­ished new businesses such as Fan said the country thereAECC Commercial Aircraft fore is turning to SOE mergEngine Co and China Tower ers to create more global Corp Ltd in 2016 and 2014, powerhouse­s and avoid cutrespect­ively. throat competitio­n.

So far, China has set up more than 200 funds worth more than 600 billion yuan Zheng Yiran contribute­d to this story.

 ?? LI AIMIN / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A worker prepares a steel frame for an expressway bridge in Youxian county in Hunan province.
LI AIMIN / FOR CHINA DAILY A worker prepares a steel frame for an expressway bridge in Youxian county in Hunan province.
 ??  ?? Xiao Yaqing, minister of the State-Owned Assets Supervisio­n and Administra­tion Commission
Xiao Yaqing, minister of the State-Owned Assets Supervisio­n and Administra­tion Commission

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