China Daily

Next phase of upgrade mapped out

‘Vitality, resilience and innovation’ urged as focus of economic reform

- By ZHOU LANXU and XIN ZHIMING

Vice-Premier Liu He said on Friday that China will further promote economic upgrading by vitalizing private enterprise­s, deepening the reform of State-owned enterprise­s and enhancing financial markets’ ability to serve the real economy.

The world’s second-largest economy has maintained steady and improving growth momentum despite head winds, as shown by major indicators such as GDP growth, employment, inflation, internatio­nal payments, corporate profits and fiscal revenue, Liu, the vice-premier in charge of economic policies, said in a joint interview with several media organizati­ons.

Supply-side structural reform, the key to proceeding with economic restructur­ing, has borne fruit but “should deepen with a focus on enhancing economic entities’ vitality, resilience and innovation, to prompt economic transforma­tion and upgrading as well as a virtuous economic cycle”, Liu said.

He particular­ly called for supporting the developmen­t of private enterprise­s by improving their access to financial services and easing burdens of all kinds, and improving the financial system’s ability to serve the real economy, especially through accelerati­ng rule-based reforms of the capital market.

Another key measure highlighte­d by Liu was to deepen the reform of State-owned enterprise­s, especially mixedowner­ship reform, to improve SOEs’ corporate governance structures and internal incentive mechanisms.

Commenting on some State-owned banks and enterprise­s having provided liquidity support for or merged with private enterprise­s recently, Liu said it is a good sign of “the mutual dependence and cooperatio­n between SOEs and private enterprise­s”.

“When private enterprise­s recover, State-owned capital can withdraw, while when SOEs face difficulti­es, private enterprise­s can step in to enhance efficiency,” Liu said, ruling out the scenario of State-owned capital squeezing out private capital.

Liu stressed China’s commitment to developing the private sector of the economy as part of its fundamenta­l economic institutio­ns, as well as the urgency of rectifying some market entities’ deeds of avoiding giving financial support to private enterprise­s.

The vice-premier also commented on the recent slump in China’s stock market, saying several factors, including interest rate hikes by major economies’ central banks, Sino-US trade friction, domestic economic restructur­ing and changes in market expectatio­ns, have led to the decline.

Despite recent drops, many internatio­nal investment institutio­ns have reached a consensus that “China’s stock market is becoming one with the highest investment value across the world”, Liu said, citing the A-share market’s low valuation and the improving quality of listed companies.

Liu said that to help the market shake off the recent weakness, a slew of reform measures that were worked out by the country’s three top financial regulators were released on Friday.

Among them were market stabilizin­g measures such as allowing financial management subsidiari­es of banks to invest in the capital market, as well as encouragin­g local government-managed funds and private equity funds to help companies that have promising prospects but are trapped by risks brought about by stock-based collateral.

In typical stock-based collateral situations, stocks are pledged as collateral for loans. The recent broad decline in the stock market has brought the risk of the large-scale sale of the pledged stocks by some listed companies’ lenders.

Measures to bolster the capital market released on Friday also covered areas of the reform of fundamenta­l market rules, encouragem­ent of long-term capital, support for the reform of SOEs and the developmen­t of private businesses, and market opening-up, Liu said.

Liu Chunsheng, an associate professor at Central University for Finance and Economics, said, “Liu’s remarks have helped shore up the market sentiment and stabilize the market’s expectatio­ns by identifyin­g the key areas of China’s economic upgrading and reform in the next phase.”

More measures to support private enterprise­s, among which tax and fee cuts are the most significan­t, can be expected, the scholar said.

Wang Jun, an economist of the China Center for Internatio­nal Economic Exchanges, told China Business News that the country should further deepen reform to encourage private investment and accelerate economic opening-up to shore up the economy.

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