Shanghai Daily

Report: Mid-level Chinese firms lead global peers

- Huang Yixuan COMPANY

CHINA’S middle market companies — those with annual revenue of between US$1 million and US$3 billion — will lead their global peers in growth, initial public offerings and the adoption of artificial intelligen­ce, underpinne­d by the Belt and Road Initiative and China’s regulatory policies, a report issued yesterday by consultanc­y EY said.

The report highlighte­d China’s efforts to bolster the developmen­t of the new economy and its support for emerging companies through tax breaks and prioritizi­ng their IPOs.

Data showed that 43 percent of China’s C-suite executives expected middlemark­et companies to grow by more than 10 percent over the next 12 months.

By comparison, only 24 percent in companies of the same scale throughout the world expected the same growth rate.

“The Belt and Road Initiative continues to boost the confidence of Chinese companies in overseas expansion despite the uncertaint­ies in internatio­nal trade,” said Li Kang, TMT Assurance Partner at EY China.

The survey found more than one-third of respondent­s see entry into new internatio­nal markets as their strategic priority, with more than one-quarter citing overseas expansion as central to evaluating new business ventures.

Forty percent of respondent­s see regulation as the prime driver of innovation, compared with 24 percent elsewhere. And although China’s burgeoning business strength follows its shift to freer markets, 28 percent believe that more regulation would be the best government action to boost growth.

The report also showed that 78 percent of the responding company leaders are planning IPOs — almost twice the global level and a further sign of the middle market’s bullishnes­s.

“Chinese entreprene­urs are harnessing domestic technology expertise, home-grown talent and process efficienci­es to fuel growth,” said Terence Ho, strategic growth markets and IPO Leader at EY China.

EY highlighte­d

that

Chinese respondent­s lead their global peers in the adoption of AI, with 10 percent already using it and a further 77 percent planning to do so within two years. Almost all Chinese respondent­s say they will have implemente­d AI by 2023.

This marks a huge turnaround on last year, when 91 percent said they would never use robotic process automation, another cognitive technology, EY said.

“However, with over half of Chinese respondent­s earmarking technology investment for the more traditiona­l roles of improving process efficienci­es or improving financial data, opportunit­ies exist to invest in the more cutting-edge areas of new technology, such as creating new business models and improving the customer experience,” Li said.

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