Kuwait Times

China’s Xi vows open economy, but investors want action

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BEIJING: President Xi Jinping vowed yesterday to further open China’s economy to the world, but foreign companies and investors who have complained of “promise fatigue” called for deeds rather than words. Xi made his pledge during a wide-ranging speech to open a week-long Communist Party congress that will hand him a new five-year term as general secretary.

“Openness brings progress for ourselves, seclusion leaves one behind. China will not close its doors to the world, we will only become more and more open,” Xi told some 2,300 party delegates in Beijing.

Xi vowed to “protect the legitimate rights and interests of foreign investors” and said “all businesses registered in China will be treated equally”. The Chinese leader has sought to cast himself as a champion of globalizat­ion as the United States retreats behind President Donald Trump’s “America First” policy.

But US and European firms still complain about being barred from certain sectors and forced to share their technologi­es with local competitor­s to gain access in some industries. “European companies operating in China continue to suffer from ‘promise fatigue’,” the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China said in a statement. “The only cure for this is promise implementa­tion.” Trump, who will visit Beijing next month, has launched a trade investigat­ion into China’s intellectu­al property practices.

An expansive $300 billion plan called “Made in China 2025,” aims to reshape China’s economy but has drawn scrutiny from foreign business groups for its push to foster home grown companies in key industries. “Xi’s were welcome words and noble sentiments,” said Peter Fuhrman, chairman of boutique investment bank China First Capital. “We hope the more obstructiv­e, less visionary government officials across China will take Mr. Xi’s words as a command, not as one option among several,” he added.

‘Shared growth’ Around the world, Chinese conglomera­tes have been on a buying spree, snapping up companies in the entertainm­ent, industrial and robotics industries.

But analysts and diplomats say those same opportunit­ies are not afforded to foreign companies operating in China. With the Trump administra­tion in particular, China has faced scrutiny for its ballooning trade surplus with the United States, which reached a three-year high in September.

Xi said China will “give equal emphasis” to attracting capital and expanding abroad.

It remains to be seen if such words will mollify the Trump administra­tion.

As a candidate Trump repeatedly threatened to label China a “currency manipulato­r” over what he deemed were unfair policies keeping down the value of the renminbi. So far he has backed away from those promises as he sought China’s help in dealing with North Korea. Xi did note China will improve regulation around monetary and macro-prudential policy and “see that interest rates and exchange rates become more market based”. — AFP

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