China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Global firms hike spending on R&D

- By ZHONG NAN zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

As China shifts its focus to attract more foreign investment in high-end manufactur­ing, services and green industry to transform its economy, overseas companies are pouring in additional funds to develop research and service-based businesses in China to maintain robust growth.

Many of these opportunit­ies also come from the country’s growing demand for consumptio­n-related products and services, diversifie­d market channels created by the Belt and Road Initiative and free trade deals with partner countries, as well as the hunger for more homemade sophistica­ted industrial products.

Thanks to the government’s resolve to attract more foreign direct investment this year, segments newly identified as key to sustained growth — automation, digitaliza­tion, financial and healthcare services, aviation, environmen­tal technologi­es and renewable energy businesses — expected to benefit.

China’s key areas for economic reform and industrial upgrading will grow into new opportunit­ies in many German companies’ investment plans, said Alexandra Voss, a member of the German Chamber of Commerce’s all-China board.

“Consumptio­n-related sectors will remain hot, and sectors that get well with China’s new direction of economic growth, including high-tech, services and new energy, will also see more foreign investment,” said Voss.

“Due to rising labor costs and weak global market demand, China is veering towards growth reliant on domestic consumptio­n, rather than exports,” said Gao Peiyong, director of the Institute of Economics at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

Gao said companies from Europe, Japan and the United are all States have already discovered that it is time to invest more in Chinese research and developmen­t, as well as its science and technology and design businesses.

New growth points are expected to present themselves as the economy becomes more sophistica­ted.

Under government policies issued in January, foreign companies will be encouraged to invest in high-end, smart and green manufactur­ing; to set up research and developmen­t centers; and to strengthen cooperatio­n with domestic peers. They will also be allowed to join national science and technology programs.

US-based Emerson Electric Co opened a new measuremen­t technology center in Beijing on November 14 to serve its automation solutions business in China and across Asia. The facility, representi­ng an investment of $28 million, includes the company’s first China solutions center for customers and a newly built and expanded manufactur­ing plant to meet domestic and Asia-Pacific market demand.

David Farr, chairman and chief executive officer of Emerson, said with this new center, the company will be able to engage in closer collaborat­ion with its customers in China in helping the industry adopt digital transforma­tion technologi­es, as a growing number of Chinese companies are leveraging the growth potential arising from digitaliza­tion.

Siemens AG and Ningbobase­d Consinee Group also kicked off their cooperatio­n in a project for the first intelligen­t factory in China’s wool textile industry on Nov 27. Involving a total investment of $50 million, Siemens will help its Chinese partner build 10 pilot intelligen­t production lines with an annual output of 1,000 metric tons of premium cashmere yarns.

Total investment from Siemens to help Consinee Group build intelligen­t production lines

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