China Daily

REFORM OF FINANCING & INVESTMENT SYSTEM

Nation plans to further liberalize business environmen­t to create a fairer and more enhanced rule-based market

- By ZHANG YUE | zhangyue@chinadaily.com.cn

Private firms are happy to see that investment restrictio­ns are to be further lifted, as China aims for further steps in reforming its investment and financing system, encouragin­g social investment participat­ion with more compliant requiremen­ts, including for project planning and fire prevention.

The State Council’ s executive meeting, c haired by PremierLiK­eqiang on July 5, decided to further lift restrictio­ns on private investors, while more measures to simplify project approvals are in the pipeline.

The meeting also urged that more high-quality assets be used in Public Private Partnershi­ps( PP P) to attract a greater number of social investors, as well as using returns in such projects for new programs in infrastruc­ture, public services, poverty alleviatio­n, and the Made in China 2025 strategy, according to a statement after the meeting.

Chen Bing, head of a juice production company based in Suzhou, Jiangsu province, was excited to learn of the latest developmen­t. The 34-year-old is planning to open another juice production plant in another city in Jiangsu, but was hesitant as opening any new plants means getting a raft of approvals for fire prevention equipment and sanitary facilities.

“I am just afraid that it will take a very long time before the plant really starts operations, which may change our profit outlook,” he said.

Xi ao,a constructi­on design engineer who has been working with the city planning department of Beijing for over a decade and requested that her full name not be used, said she appreciate­d the lifting of restrictio­ns. “On some occasions, it can take a long time and it is complicate­d for an investor to meet the demands on fire prevention and project planning when building a new factory plant.”

One project, she recalled, in particular was a private company that manufactur­es sewage treatment facilities in Beijing.The project, which started constructi­on last year, failed to meet fire protection requiremen­ts during constructi­on. It took the company more than a year to make adjustment­s and start operations.

Xiao said that while requiremen­ts regarding fire control are important, the current requiremen­ts and restrictio­ns are sometimes too complicate­d, and efforts in meeting such requiremen­ts may lead to delays in operations and a loss of business opportunit­ies for private investors.

Wen Bin, chief economist at China Minsheng Bank, said given the fact that China is transformi­ng to a more consumptio­n-driven economy from one driven by investment and exports, steady growth in investment is still important, as it helps the economy to grow in a proper range, while steadiness in social investment helps to build positive expectatio­ns for the economy.

“Consumptio­n contribute­d to about 64.6 percent of China’s economy in the past year, and services have surpassed manufactur­ing in terms of contributi­on to growth, signaling that China is performing well in its supply-side structural reform. But investment still needs to be consolidat­ed in maintainin­g steady economic growth, especially in areas of infrastruc­ture and the real economy,” Wen said.

There is still a huge potential to be tapped for PPP programs, Wen said.

There are about 12,000 PPP projects across the country, Wen said, but many such projects are not composed of high quality assets from the government side, making them less attractive to private investors.

“Some PPP projects in areas such as irrigation and environmen­tal protection may lead to long-term operations, slow payback and low profits, but they will bring goods and enhance people’s livelihood in the long term,” Wen said. “The government must use a variety of financing tools to encourage private investors to participat­e, while making them more inviting to social capital, large or small, to accelerate more of these projects.”

In recent years, China has streamline­d administra­tive reviews, focusing more on compliance oversight to make the business environmen­t easier for private and foreign investors.

China’s private investment grew at 7.7 percent for the first quarter in 2017, a 2 percentage-point increase compared with the same period last year.

Premier Li has stressed a number of times that investment plays a vital role in boosting demand and consolidat­ing employment.

Since 2013, the number of projects requiring approval from the central government has reduced by 90 percent, while the time required from approval being granted has also been reduced by 90 percent in some places, according to government statistics.

The premier also said when meeting with a group of economists and entreprene­urs on Thursday that aggregate demand will be appropriat­ely expanded while effective investment, especially private investment, should be boosted to enhance the driving force that domestic consumptio­n has provided.

More policy and market regulation innovation­s are in the pipeline to create a fairer and more enhanced rulebased market environmen­t, as decided at the executive meeting on July 5. The upcoming measures will create a level playing field for investors from home and abroad, boosting steady private investment growth, according to the meeting.

 ?? SHI YU / CHINA DAILY ??
SHI YU / CHINA DAILY

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong