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China boosts govt presence at Alibaba, private giants

Initiative aimed at smoothing work flow

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HONG KONG: The government of one of China’s top technology hubs is dispatchin­g officials to 100 local corporatio­ns including e-commerce giant Alibaba Group Holding Ltd, the latest effort to exert greater influence over the country’s massive private sector.

Hangzhou, in the eastern province of Zhejiang, is assigning government affairs representa­tives to facilitate communicat­ion and expedite projects, the city government said on its website.

Chinese beverage giant Hangzhou Wahaha Group Co and automaker Zhejiang Geely Holding Group Co are among the other companies based in the prosperous region that have been singled out, according to reports in state media.

The Hangzhou government said the initiative was aimed at smoothing work flow between officials and China’s high-tech companies and manufactur­ers.

But the move could be perceived also as an effort to keep tabs on a non state-owned sector that’s gaining clout as a prime driver of the world’s No. 2 economy.

Representa­tives of the country’s public security system are already embedded within China’s largest Internet companies, responsibl­e for crime prevention and stamping out false rumours.

Government agencies may also be heightenin­g their monitoring of the vast private sector at a time China’s economy is decelerati­ng – raising the prospect of destabilis­ing job cuts as enterprise­s try to protect bottom lines.

Alibaba is hosting its annual investors’ conference this week in Hangzhou against the backdrop of a worsening outlook for the country.

“They might be checking whether the Communist party units are working effectivel­y within the companies,” said Paul Gillis, a professor at Peking University’s Guanghua School of Management.

“While China legitimise­d capitalism, the level of government influence was never intended to disappear. Occasional­ly private entreprene­urs forget about this and are reminded of it.”

Zhejiang is considered the cradle of modern Chinese private enterprise, home to a generation of self-made billionair­es from Alibaba’s Jack Ma and Geely founder Li Shufu to Wahaha’s Zong Qinghou.

The Communist Party accepted so-called “red capitalist­s” or private entreprene­urs into the Party in 2001, allowing them to become part of the country’s legislatur­e a year later.

Still, the relationsh­ip between Beijing and well-known business people remains sensitive.

The government has been seen to try and step up an official presence within non-state firms, by among other things mandating that private companies of scale set up and maintain a Party branch. It wasn’t clear whether the 100 Zhejiang-based companies included foreign enterprise­s.

“We understand this initiative from the Hangzhou city government aims to foster a better business environmen­t in support of Hangzhou-based enterprise­s.

“The government representa­tive will function as a bridge to the private sector, and will not interfere with the company’s operations,” Alibaba said in a text statement. Representa­tives for Wahaha and Geely didn’t immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

The Hangzhou initiative also underscore­s how the government is trying to arrest a slowdown in the economy brought on by the trade war, said Brock Silvers, managing director of Kaiyuan Capital.

He expects similar policies to soon follow for other manufactur­ing-intensive areas.

“The economic slowdown and trade war are having a significan­t impact on China’s manufactur­ing base, and officials probably don’t see a quick resolution on the horizon,” Silvers said.

“As the government expects manufactur­ers to experience near-term difficulti­es, it wants to exert a firm control over local policy decisions and implementa­tion.”

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