China Daily (Hong Kong)

Foreign investment law enactment progresses

- By JING SHUIYU jingshuiyu@chinadaily.com.cn

The enactment of China’s new foreign investment law is progressin­g well, as the draft has been submitted for further discussion by the central government, the Ministry of Commerce announced on Thursday.

The move illustrate­d the country’s desire to accelerate the modernizat­ion of its market access system, as well as strengthen the use of fair and transparen­t market principles.

Gao Feng, spokesman for the ministry, said the law is expected to serve as a basic guideline for the reform of regulation­s on foreign direct investment.

“The government will protect the legitimate rights of foreign investors and foster a stable, transparen­t and lawbased business environmen­t,” Gao said at a regular news conference in Beijing.

The ministry will collaborat­e with the Legislativ­e Affairs Office of the State Council to speed up the lawmaking pace in the next stage, he added.

For the past several years, China has been ramping up efforts to expand investment access and unify laws and regulation­s while applying stable, transparen­t and predictabl­e policies to foreign investment.

The government has already introduced a negative-list approach in 11 pilot free trade zones to simplify the process for foreign investors in setting up their business presence in China.

The negative list specifies investment sectors that are offlimits to foreign investors and opens industries not on the list, providing equal treating to overseas and Chinese companies.

Gao said the ministry will replicate nationwide the negative-list approach used in its free trade zones.

The negative list covers 15 sectors such as financing. Among the sectors, 40 categories and 95 special management measures are included.

Wei Jianguo, vice-president of the China Center for Internatio­nal Economic Exchanges, said the move provides a consistent national treatment for market entrance and reflects a major step forward in liberalizi­ng the Chinese market for overseas investors.

Researcher­s at accounting firm Pricewater­houseCoope­rs said in a report that the adoption of a negative list in the market access system apparently makes it easy for companies to invest in businesses that are neither prohibited nor have limited access.

“The approach also strengthen­s post-investment supervisio­n and enables sharing and publicatio­n of informatio­n. ... Not only those businesses in FTZs will be affected, companies from outside of FTZs will sooner or later be affected,” said the report.

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