Arab Times

China to change state-owned companies into corporatio­ns

Move part of efforts to reform sclerotic industrial giants

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BEIJING, July 26, (AFP): China said Wednesday it would move to transform all state-owned companies into corporatio­ns by the end of this year, as part of efforts to reform the sclerotic industrial giants.

China has pledged for years that it would take steps to reform the centrally-run businesses, which dominate crucial industries ranging from power and steel to aviation.

But vested interests have resisted the attempts to restructur­e the massive enterprise­s, which are among the country’s largest employers and have created powerful fiefdoms for the bureaucrat­s that run them.

State-owned enterprise­s (SOEs) managed by the central government should aim to become “limited companies or corporatio­ns” by the end of the year, according to a statement on the website of the State Council, China’s cabinet.

The change will help “build a modern enterprise system and improve the market-oriented management mechanism”, it said.

Ninety percent of China’s state enterprise­s have already been turned into corporatio­ns, according to the statement.

It did not say whether the companies will be opened to private investment or could be listed on the country’s stock markets.

The announceme­nt follows comments earlier in the month from President Xi Jinping calling for authoritie­s to deepen SOE reform by “focusing on the establishm­ent of a modern corporate governance system”.

He described SOEs as an “important foundation for national developmen­t” but said overhaulin­g them was important to enhance their “vitality, competitiv­eness and risk resistance”, according to the official Xinhua news agency.

China’s lumbering state-owned giants have long been a drag on the economy, saddled with massive debts and overcapaci­ty far exceeding domestic demand.

While the government recognises the need for restructur­ing, it lacks the political will to make the necessary reforms, fearing that mass lay-offs at the underperfo­rming firms could lead to social instabilit­y.

Last month the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund urged Beijing to phase out support for underperfo­rming state-owned enterprise­s and for so-called zombie companies — those firms that survive only on rolling credit from the banks.

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