China Daily (Hong Kong)

B&R pushes Chinese, global firms to team up

- By JING SHUIYU jingshuiyu@chinadaily.com.cn

The Belt and Road Initiative has already produced several tangible results, which will continue to boost revenue growth of both Chinese and foreign companies, while improving their ability to execute big-ticket projects, an executive of CITS American Express Global Business Travel said.

“This grand initiative will not only rejuvenate ancient trade routes, but also further open up markets and accelerate economic integratio­n on a transparen­t, equal and innovative ground,” Kevin Tan, vicepresid­ent and general manager of the travel firm’s China operations, said.

The B&R initiative, proposed by China’s leader, envisages infrastruc­ture networks and economic ties connecting China to the rest of Asia and to Europe, Africa and the wider world, Tan said.

“It will no doubt drive economic growth and efficiency, social welfare and customer satisfacti­on in all the countries and regions participat­ing in the initiative,” Tan said.

Forty percent of companies and organizati­ons in the initiative’s footprint have reported plans to expand business travel budgets because of the opportunit­ies presented by the humongous project, Tan said, quoting data from the CITS American Express Global Business Travel 2017 China Business Travel Barometer.

“China is on the way to become an important economic entity in the world and will shape the future of the global economy to a degree that we can currently not yet predict,” Tan said.

Like Tan, many executives from multinatio­nal companies have a firm belief that the initiative will provide fresh momentum to global economic growth.

A consensus has developed among them that the Belt and Road Initiative is “not just China’s initiative, but also a global opportunit­y”, he said.

Karel van de Pijpekamp, CEO of Internatio­nal SOS China, a firm specializi­ng in medical and travel security assistance, said the undertakin­g has great potential for Chinese companies and foreign companies to work together. He called on MNCs to imbibe the “philosophy” of the initiative.

As China’s role on the world stage becomes more significan­t, the country is making a constructi­ve contributi­on to global economy, said van de Pijpekamp.

Cooperatio­n based on the Belt and Road Initiative needs to be gradually deepened, from a single aspect to multifacet­ed ones, Rachel Duan, president and CEO of GE China, said.

A breakthrou­gh in models of global cooperatio­n would be achieved through joint efforts in market developmen­t, financing and operation, Duan said.

According to David Wijeratne, growth markets center leader of Pricewater­houseCoope­rs, one of the global Big Four profession­al services firms, those partnershi­ps can prove to be beneficial for both Chinese and foreign companies in many ways.

“Gaining knowledge through foreign partnershi­ps can help Chinese enterprise­s further develop expertise, and enable them to enhance global credibilit­y in the infrastruc­ture sector,” Wijeratne said in an article published on the World Economic Forum website.

“For foreign companies, a collaborat­ion with Chinese companies in infrastruc­ture projects in third-party countries can help open up access to its large domestic market. Furthermor­e, foreign companies can partake as a private investor in projects that are risk-guaranteed by Chinese institutio­ns, with an improved risk-return ratio,” Wijeratne wrote.

Wijeratne cited successful partnershi­p examples, wherein foreign multinatio­nals have become establishe­d equipment suppliers to Chinese engineerin­g, procuremen­t and constructi­on companies and have thereby benefited from a boost in orders both in thirdparty markets as well as in China.

“Many of these foreign companies also possess previous experience in large-scale projects in developing countries that are more complex. This is typical to B&R projects, with foreign companies able to contribute by establishi­ng connection­s with local stakeholde­rs, as well as having prior knowledge of managing an infrastruc­ture project in developing countries,” Wijeratne wrote.

This can help reduce operationa­l risks, which may be otherwise further enhanced especially when operating in less familiar business environmen­ts, he wrote.

Ever since the country proposed the B&R Initiative, trade and investment relations between China and its partners have been strengthen­ing, official data showed.

Trade volume between China and other B&R economies expanded 17.8 percent year-onyear to 7.4 trillion yuan ($1.14 trillion) in 2017, according to the Ministry of Commerce.

China’s exports to countries and regions involved in the initiative increased by 12.1 percent in 2017 from one year earlier, while imports from the economies rose 26.8 percent year-on-year, according to the commerce ministry.

 ?? XINHUA ?? A local employee works on a ceramic tile production line at an industrial park, the first China-invested joint venture industrial park, in Uzbekistan.
XINHUA A local employee works on a ceramic tile production line at an industrial park, the first China-invested joint venture industrial park, in Uzbekistan.

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