China Daily

Experts: China to remain haven for foreign investors

- By ZHANG YUE zhangyue@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s steady economic recovery from the impact of COVID-19 has effectivel­y stabilized global investment and cushioned Asia from the hit of the pandemic, experts said.

However, going forward more efforts will be needed to energize domestic manufactur­ing investment and consumptio­n and stabilize trade.

A report released in June by the United Nations Conference on Trade and Developmen­t showed that global flows of foreign direct investment had suffered a heavy blow from the pandemic.

Global FDI flows fell by 35 percent in 2020, to $1 trillion from $1.5 trillion the previous year, the report said. In particular, FDI to developed economies slumped by 58 percent year-on-year, mainly due to pandemic-induced investment obstructio­ns. Lockdowns slowed down existing investment projects, while the prospect of a recession led multinatio­nal enterprise­s to reassess new projects, the report said.

According to the UN trade and developmen­t body, Asia was the only region that registered positive FDI growth, with China the largest overseas investor and the second-largest recipient of global investment in 2020.

“China’s quick recovery from the pandemic has made the country a popular destinatio­n for overseas capital, while the government’s arduous efforts last year in removing foreign investment barriers, enabling an investment climate and expanding market access for foreign investors, have added to China’s attractive­ness for investors worldwide,” said Bai Ming, deputy director of the Ministry of Commerce’s Internatio­nal Market Research Institute.

In the long term, a global decline in FDI will hamper optimal allocation of resources and production factors, he added.

The signing of the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p agreement has cemented the region’s stability and attractive­ness as a well-connected, important global supply chain, Bai said.

The UN trade report indicated that capital flow into Asia remained steady. FDI flows to countries in Asia increased by 4 percent in 2020, reflecting the region’s resilience amid the global contractio­n in FDI.

“Despite the pandemic, FDI to and from the region remained resilient in 2020. A developing Asia is the only region recording FDI growth, accounting for more than half of global inward and outward FDI flows,” James Zhan, UNCTAD’s director of investment and enterprise, said in a statement.

The prospects for FDI in Asia this year are more favorable than the global average, due to the recovery in trade, manufactur­ing activity and a strong GDP growth forecast, Zhan said.

Tu Xinquan, dean of the China Institute for WTO Studies at the University of Internatio­nal Business and Economics, said China’s effective pandemic control made its comparativ­e advantage in the manufactur­ing sector more prominent last year. He said with developed economies likely to rev up in the second half of the year, demand will climb and China’s foreign trade will keep growing. Its attractive­ness as a destinatio­n for overseas capital will continue, Tu added.

Domestical­ly, policy measures are needed to energize domestic manufactur­ing and boost consumptio­n to make growth more stable and balanced, some economists believe.

Zhong Zhengsheng, chief economist with Pingan Securities, said in a statement on Saturday that in the first six months of this year, economic recovery was mainly driven by services and investment in real estate, infrastruc­ture and manufactur­ing. Consumptio­n was one of the relative “weak links” in the recovery.

He said that total social financing as well as M2, a broad measure of money supply that covers cash in circulatio­n and all deposits, are likely to grow steadily.

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