China Daily (Hong Kong)

Nation will fine-tune SOE management abroad

- By ZHANG YUNBI zhangyunbi@chinadaily.com.cn

China must perfect its systems of operating Stateowned businesses abroad to better evaluate their performanc­e and hold misbehavin­g staffers accountabl­e, Premier Li Keqiang said on Tuesday.

The goal is to “ensure the safe operation of State-owned assets and that their value is maintained or increased”, Li said in Beijing at the State Council’s annual meeting on maintainin­g clean government.

The State Council, China’s Cabinet, holds the meeting each year to review the government’s work in fighting corruption and other misconduct over the previous year and to outline priority tasks that will boost self-discipline.

At the meeting, Li noted that as State-owned enterprise­s and capital go global, “supervisio­n and management must catch up in a timely manner”.

China’s centrally administer­ed SOEs include 9,112 business entities operating in about 185 countries and regions.

The SOEs have total overseas assets of more than 5 trillion yuan ($725.6 billion) and 346,000 employees operating overseas, Xiao Yaqing, head of the State Council’s State-Owned Assets Supervisio­n and Administra­tion Commission, said earlier this month.

While delivering the Government Work Report at the annual plenary session of National People’s Congress on March 5, Li underlined the need “to prevent the loss of State assets” and to enable SOEs to become leaner and healthier and increase their core competitiv­eness.

At Tuesday’s meeting, the premier warned that “the State-owned assets are the common wealth of all of China’s people” and must never become the easily gained, illgotten possession­s of any single person.

Li Wei, a researcher at the National Academy of Developmen­t and Strategy at Renmin University of China, said that some State-owned companies have underestim­ated the risks of overseas investment, leading to financial loss.

Some cases involving investment overseas have underscore­d the importance of stepping up supervisio­n of the operations of China’s Stateowned enterprise­s, he said.

Also on Tuesday, Premier Li said the government will speed up the process this year of stipulatin­g in lists all of the powers and responsibi­lities of the State Council’s department­s.

These management lists will provide a general inventory to regulate the government’s powers and responsibi­lities, Li said.

The government’s efforts in reducing powers will be maximized, Li said.

As China has set the goal of eliminatin­g poverty within the country by 2020, boosting the efficiency and the supervisio­n of poverty alleviatio­n efforts was raised at Tuesday’s meeting.

Li said the focus should be on directing the alleviatio­n efforts and resources to where they will do the most good rather than to those not in actual need.

Particular­ly, when offering subsistenc­e allowances, there should be no cases of providing favors, courting connection­s, or influence-peddling, Li said.

The State-owned assets are the common wealth of all of China’s people.” Premier Li Keqiang, warning that such assets are never to be anyone’s ill-gotten possession­s

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