Global Times

2018 set to bring more opening

Services key for overseas investors: experts

- By Zhang Hongpei

2018 marks the 40th anniversar­y of China’s reform and opening-up policy, and the year will see more specific measures to promote the new pattern of allround opening-up, experts said.

“It is clear that industries such as high-end manufactur­ing and modern services are the sectors where the opening-up is directed, and the services industry will be a key area,” Huo Jianguo, senior CCG research fellow and former director of the Chinese Academy of Internatio­nal Trade and Economic Cooperatio­n under the Ministry of Commerce (MOFCOM), told the Global Times on Tuesday.

According to the Central Economic Work Conference held in December 2017, the services trade is set to be greatly promoted in the future.

Data from MOFCOM showed that in the first 11 months of 2017, foreign direct investment (FDI) in the services sector climbed to 582.75 billion yuan ($88.08 billion), up 13.5 percent yearon-year and accounting for 72.5 percent of the total FDI. And the high-tech services industry attracted 177.1 billion yuan in FDI, more than double the amount in the same period of 2016.

China will increase the opening-up in services industries including education, culture, healthcare and finance in 2018, Tang Wenhong, head of MOFCOM’s Department of Foreign Investment Administra­tion, told a meeting on December 25 in Beijing.

“Against the backdrop of China’s supply-side reform and the aim of fostering high-quality developmen­t, more high-end services need to be introduced in the future,” Chen Fengying, an expert at the China Institutes of Contempora­ry Internatio­nal Relations, told the Global Times.

Huo noted that developing the services sector will be significan­t for sustaining economic growth and encouragin­g foreign capital flows into China, while also increasing competitio­n and thereby encouragin­g domestic firms to become stronger.

In the financial services sector, the process of opening-up is progressin­g gradually. On December 13, 2017, the China Banking Regulatory Commission (CBRC) said it would relax restrictio­ns on foreign shareholdi­ng ratios in Chinese banks (apart from private banks), which limited a single overseas investor’s stake to no more than 20 percent.

The CBRC also said it would continue to open up the banking sector by such means as expanding the scale of overseas banks.

This has offered encouragem­ent for foreign-funded banks in China, including Standard Chartered Bank. In an email sent to the Global Times on Tuesday, the UK-based bank said the policy would enable it to “capture opportunit­ies brought by the reform and opening-up.”

Specifics coming

According to the Central Economic Work Conference, China will push for nationwide implementa­tion of a pre-establishm­ent national treatment system as well as a negative list that determines where foreign participat­ion is prohibited or limited.

The central government strengthen­ed efforts to expand the investment scope for foreign capital in 2017, said Tang of MOFCOM.

For example, in a revised industrial guidance catalogue for foreign investment released in June, China cut 30 restrictio­ns, he noted.

Chen said that the negative list is certain to become shorter as the country opens wider to investment from abroad.

Addressing the Fortune Global Forum held in Guangzhou, capital of South China’s Guangdong Province in December 2017, Chinese Vice Premier Wang Yang said China was working on a timetable to further open up key industries, including financial services and electric cars.

He also noted that qualified foreign companies registered in China will receive equal treatment in government procuremen­t, setting of standards and projects related to “Made in China 2025,” the government’s blueprint to upgrade the manufactur­ing sector.

“The timetable is vital for maintainin­g a good business environmen­t. Besides, with the tone set clearly, workable specifics now need to be rolled out,” Huo said, noting the plans for the high-end manufactur­ing sector should be further clarified.

Also, opening-up in such services segments as e-commerce, constructi­on design, education and accounting should to be accelerate­d, as this has already been promised, Huo said.

Related department­s are currently working hard on the specifics while implementa­tion is expected to come in the first half of 2018, Huo forecast.

“Against the backdrop of China’s supply-side reform and the aim of fostering high-quality developmen­t, more high-end services need to be introduced in the future.” Chen Fengying An expert at the China Institutes of Contempora­ry Internatio­nal Relations

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 ?? File photo: IC ?? A ship offloads oil at an offshore oil dock at Gaolan Port in Zhuhai, South China’s Guangdong Province.
File photo: IC A ship offloads oil at an offshore oil dock at Gaolan Port in Zhuhai, South China’s Guangdong Province.

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