The Borneo Post

European firms say China business ‘more difficult’

-

BEIJING: European companies complain they still face a tough business climate in China despite Beijing’s pledges of openness, with about half saying it has become tougher in the past year, according to a survey released yesterday.

The study comes as President Xi Jinping looks to portray the world’s number two as being at the forefront of the globalisat­ion cause just as the United States appears to be stepping back from the world stage.

Among the litany of complaints were the uncertain legal environmen­t, higher cost of labour, regulatory headaches and the ‘Great Firewall’ that censors much of the global internet.

“As its economy matures, the longstandi­ng inefficien­cies in China’s business environmen­t are rendered all the more glaring,” according to the report by the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China.

Mats Harborn, the chamber’s president, echoed those concerns, telling journalist­s that “the regulatory environmen­t is actually holding the economy back.”

New cybersecur­ity regulation­s make it more costly to jump the firewall, requiring businesses to sign up for expensive government­approved virtual private networks that allow users to circumvent filters and access the global internet.

Two-thirds of companies believe that censorship and blocking of certain sites has a negative impact on their business.

This is the “great contradict­ion,” said Harborn.

“We have China which claims itself a leader in globalisat­ion,

As its economy matures, the longstandi­ng inefficien­cies in China’s business environmen­t are rendered all the more glaring.

talking of the importance of integratio­n, but the cybersecur­ity law is creating problems.”

The survey found 48 per cent of European firms felt it had become “more difficult” to do business in the past 12 months.

And a fifth say they have been victims of forced technology transfers, a practice denounced fiercely by Washington as it carries out a probe on the issue while threatenin­g tariffs in retaliatio­n.

And there is little optimism for the future as nearly half of European businesses believe barriers to business will harden in the coming five years, while a quarter believe they will never witness a “significan­t opening” of the market. But progress was reported in some areas.

Some 61 per cent of the 532 European companies polled by the chamber said they are “optimistic” about the growth of their sector in the country, compared with 55 per cent the previous year.

Just over half of surveyed companies, 51 per cent, consider that they are treated “unfavourab­ly” compared to their local competitor­s, compared to 54 per cent last year. — AFP

European Union Chamber of Commerce in China

 ??  ?? A worker welds a pressure vessel at a company manufactur­ing industrial equipment in Nantong, Jiangsu province, China June 19. — Reuters photo
A worker welds a pressure vessel at a company manufactur­ing industrial equipment in Nantong, Jiangsu province, China June 19. — Reuters photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia