China Daily

FDI remains stable, dynamic

China keeps its attractive­ness to investors despite US trade dispute

- By REN XIAOJIN and ZHONG NAN Contact the writers at renxiaojin@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s foreign direct investment remained stable and dynamic in the first seven months of 2018, as the total volume grew by 5.5 percent year-on-year to $76.07 billion, the Ministry of Commerce announced on Thursday.

From January to July, a total of 35,239 foreign-invested companies were set up in the Chinese mainland, up 99.1 percent year-on-year.

The number of newly establishe­d companies reached 5,648 in July, a 113.1 percent year-on-year increase, while FDI use topped $7.75 billion, up 19.3 percent.

FDI from Singapore, the United States, United Kingdom, South Korea and Japan grew by 23.5 percent, 12 percent, 86.1 percent, 36.5 percent and 30.6 percent yearon-year respective­ly, according to the ministry.

Despite the escalation of the China-US trade dispute, a senior expert said there was no reason to doubt China’s attraction to foreign investment as long as its domestic economy remains stable, therefore the country’s ongoing consumptio­n upgrading boom and service infrastruc­consumers, ture will remain promising to global investors.

Cheng Dawei, a professor at the School of Economics of Renmin University of China, said although the ongoing trade friction between the US and China has not had any negative impact so far, foreign capital still has confidence in China as the FDI flow remained stable.

“Both China’s productivi­ty and consumptio­n power will grow in the long run. Chinese led by middle-income earners, are more open to new products, especially digital ones,” she said.

According to Cheng, China’s completed infrastruc­ture for the entire industrial chain is another competitiv­e advantage the nation possesses that is not easy to be replaced.

“China has a well-developed supporting infrastruc­ture for a wide range of industries with large production capacity, providing solid support for foreign investors intending to manufactur­e here,” she said.

“A complete industrial chain is to some extent more appealing than production capacity. For example, lighters are made in China because the nation has a complete industrial chain for everything from plastic bodies and iron parts to flints,” Cheng added.

A number of foreign companies announced new investment in China in July, including German chemical giant BASF Group’s $10 billion investment plan to build a chemical plant in Guangdong province and Tesla Inc’s move to build an electric vehicle mega-factory in Shanghai.

“China’s manufactur­ing capability and huge market potential will continue to attract innovation-driven companies to move to the market to commercial­ize their latest technologi­es quickly at a lower cost,” she said.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? An employee checks an engine at the A320 family final assembly line of the Airbus factory in Tianjin.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY An employee checks an engine at the A320 family final assembly line of the Airbus factory in Tianjin.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong