China Daily

CETC speeds reform efforts

- By MA SI masi@chinadaily.com.cn

China Electronic­s Technology Group Corp, a State-owned technology giant, will step up efforts to optimize corporate structure and encourage innovation amid the central government’s deepening of Stateowned enterprise reform.

“Our goal is to lead the developmen­t of China’s electronic­s industry and build the cornerston­e of national security,” said Xiong Qunli, chairman of CETC. “We will ramp up resources to cultivate innovation and accelerate structural reform.”

As of August, the company has successful­ly integrated 19 research institutes to set up seven units, simplifyin­g hierarchy, boosting operationa­l efficiency and saving costs.

CETC has already been working to overhaul its structure, which previously consisted of 47 electronic informatio­n research institutes. Such a fragmented structure led to a slate of problems such as scattered investment­s, redundant constructi­on and disordered internal competitio­n.

“We have shifted our focus to five areas — military electronic­s, civilian products, internatio­nal management, scientific and technologi­cal innovation, and asset manage- ment and capital operation,” Xiong said.

In 2016, CETC recorded 188 billion yuan ($ 28.7 billion) in revenue, marking an almost 20-fold increase compared to the number in 2002, when it was founded. Its profit also surged to 18.3 billion yuan, highlighti­ng the company’s strong momentum.

The reform is part of the wider SOE reforms administer­ed by the State-owned Assets Supervisio­n and Administra­tion Commission, the country’s top regulator of SOEs. It is designed to increase the competitiv­eness of SOEs as China works to replace old growth drivers with new ones, with emphasis on innovation, technology and efficiency.

According to Xiong, the company also has been closely aligning businesses with national strategies. It has stepped up overseas investment­s to better serve countries and regions related to the Belt and Road Initiative. CETC is also ramping up resources to cultivate innovation.

It has set up an intellectu­al property center, intended to motivate employees to come up with innovative ideas and experiment­ing with cuttingedg­e technologi­es. As part of its financial incentives, the company said at least half of the revenue generated from new patents will be rewarded to core employees who invent the patent.

As a result, the number of patent applicatio­ns at CETC surged 80 percent after the reform.

“SOEs are the backbone of national scientific and technologi­cal innovation. CETC is engaged in informatio­n technology, a sector where global R&D spending is pouring in to get a dominant position. Innovation is exploding. CETC has done a very good job,” said Xiang Ligang, an independen­t expert of the informatio­n technology.

The State Council, China’s Cabinet, issued an action plan earlier this year, ordering the country’s major SOEs supervised by the central government, excluding financial and cultural enterprise­s, to complete corporate reforms by the end of 2017.

 ?? XINHUA ?? An employee of China Electronic­s Technology Group Corp checks a balloon before its ascent for an experiment.
XINHUA An employee of China Electronic­s Technology Group Corp checks a balloon before its ascent for an experiment.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong