China Daily

Back at work

- LI XIAOXIN / FOR CHINA DAILY

Workers resume renovation of a hotel, which was halted by the novel coronaviru­s outbreak, in Mianyang, Sichuan province, on Tuesday. As of Wednesday, 84 percent of small and medium-sized enterprise­s nationwide had resumed work, the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology said on Thursday.

Chinese businesses have resumed normal operations at a much faster pace than anticipate­d, thanks to the timely measures enacted in the country to curb the novel coronaviru­s outbreak, the nation’s top industry regulator said on Thursday.

By Tuesday, China’s major industrial enterprise­s had an average work resumption rate of 99 percent and 94 percent of the employees have returned to work, said Xu Kemin, an official with the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology.

“As the coronaviru­s is spreading rapidly across the globe, the manufactur­ing sector now faces some new problems such as dwindling domestic and overseas market demand, rising production costs, financing difficulti­es and logistics impediment­s,” he said.

According to Xu, to hedge against the risks, the ministry will come up with a series of measures to promote the coordinate­d resumption of industrial chain operations, including vitalizing the domestic market, developing new forms of businesses such as telemedici­ne, online education and telecommut­ing, and speeding up constructi­on of new infrastruc­ture in fields like 5G networks, the internet of things, big data, artificial intelligen­ce, industrial internet and smart cities.

More efforts will also be made to solve problems faced by companies due to the coronaviru­s outbreak, accelerate the resumption of work in key areas and key industries, maintain the stability of the intertion national supply chain and increase the supply of active pharmaceut­ical ingredient­s, daily necessitie­s and protective goods for internatio­nal market.

The government has also rolled out a series of measures such as offering financing support to help those hit by the epidemic, such as small and medium-sized enterprise­s.

As of Wednesday, small and medium-sized enterprise­s nationwide had a work resumption rate of 84 percent, up from 76.8 percent at the end of March, according to ministry data.

Qin Zhihui, deputy director of the ministry’s small and mediumsize­d enterprise­s bureau, said SMEs in 25 regions had a work resumption rate of over 80 percent, with companies in Hubei province making rapid recovery strides.

SMEs in the secondary industry had a much higher work resumprate than those in the producer service industry, which also reported a higher rate than the consumer service sector. Meanwhile, the bigger SMEs were way ahead of micro businesses in terms of work resumption, Qin said. Many SMEs also saw a sharp decline in orders as demand fell due to the rapidly spreading epidemic.

The ministry will look to implement supportive policies in a meticulous manner and encourage SMEs to use digital technologi­es, while fostering a strong public service system.

He Fei, a senior researcher at the Financial Research Center of the Bank of Communicat­ions, said some SMEs may still find it hard to restore production capability to normal levels.

“Unlike large enterprise­s, production resumption for SMEs still faces some constraint­s due to lack of funding, shortage of employees and protective medical gear,” He said.

The government should accord top priority to work resumption in SMEs as such a move will help in the faster recovery of industrial chains, the researcher said.

“The government must take measures to further cut taxes and rents for SMEs. More efforts are also needed to provide financial services that are conductive to resolving funding issues,” He said.

The All-China Federation of Industry and Commerce and more than 100 financial institutio­ns have launched a noncontact loan plan to support SMEs. Till date, loans of more than 300 billion yuan ($42 billion) have been disbursed to over 8 million SMEs, selfemploy­ed traders and farmers.

He Fei, a senior researcher at the Financial Research Center of the Bank of Communicat­ions The government must take measures to further cut taxes and rents for SMEs. More efforts are also needed to provide financial services that are conductive to resolving funding issues.”

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 ?? XINHUA ?? A technician works at a numerical control equipment plant in Dalian, Northeast China’s Liaoning province.
XINHUA A technician works at a numerical control equipment plant in Dalian, Northeast China’s Liaoning province.

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