China Daily Global Edition (USA)

New attraction

High-end industry, research and developmen­t are biggest attraction

- By DING QINGFEN and LIU JIE

High-end industry, research and developmen­t are biggest attraction to foreign companies.

Over the past three decades, many foreign companies set up manufactur­ing facilities in China because of the country’s low labor costs, turning the world’s most populous nation into a global factory.

That is now looking like history.

As China pledges to turn itself into an innovative economy as part of a transforma­tion in its economic growth model, encouragin­g foreign companies to invest in high-end industries, the world’s secondlarg­est economy is gearing up for a move into the upper end of the global chain.

For Alain Merieux, founder of the global in vitro diagnosis company BioMerieux, a very recent trip to China was fruitful.

As a member of the business delegation accompanyi­ng French President Francois Holland, who paid his first ever official visit to China in late April, the 85-year-old witnessed the signing of a cooperatio­n agreement on biological sample extraction with Shanghai municipal government, announcing the French company would expand its research and developmen­t capability, as well as its manufactur­ing facility, in the city by the end of this year.

BioMerieux moved its AsiaPacifi­c headquarte­rs to Shanghai in 2005 and establishe­d two R&D facilities in 2007 and 2010.

Merieux said in an interview with China Daily that what is motivating the French biomedical company to add more muscle to its R&D lies in the more innovation-friendly environmen­t that China is committed to creating.

The innovation environmen­t in China has improved and the nation is “paying much more attention to innovation and has issued a string of encouragin­g policies”, said the founder. “It also created a sound environmen­t for Sino-foreign cooperatio­n, which was rare decades ago.”

Merieux also cited figures. Because of its shrinking domestic market, “France is to consolidat­e diagnosis-related laboratori­es to 800 to 1,000 from the current 4,000 by 2016 but, in China, it will build and renovate 11,000.

“You can see the big difference and how China is passionate about innovation,” said Merieux.

Because of the debt crisis in the eurozone and increasing­ly rising labor costs in China, the nation’s foreign direct investment saw an annual drop of 3.7 percent in 2012, the first since 2009. The drop has aroused global concerns over whether China can continue to maintain pole position as the most appealing foreign investment destinatio­n among the emerging markets as it did for more than a decade.

China itself has few such worries. More than that, the nation is striving to go far beyond being a global manufactur­ing powerhouse, welcoming foreign businesses to get involved in more of the high-end industries to sharpen industrial competitiv­eness and implement an upgraded version of Chinese economics, something senior figures have repeatedly vowed to do.

Chinese Premier Li Keqiang has said on many occasions that China will advance developmen­t through opening-up in terms of R&D, new energy and services to foreign businesses.

Gao Hucheng, the minister of commerce, said recently that China will continue to welcome foreign investment, encouragin­g businesses to go into the sectors of high technology and R&D in the central and western parts of China in particular.

The new developmen­t has already started.

According to the Ministry of Commerce, in 2012, foreign investment flowing into China’s high-end manufactur­ing industries of general equipment manufactur­ing and transporta­tion equipment manufactur­ing saw fast growth of 31.8 and 17.2 percent from a year earlier, while the nation’s foreign direct investment dropped by 3.7 percent year-on-year to $111.7 billion during the same period.

During the monthly news briefing in April, Shen Danyang, spokesman for the ministry, said the ups and downs of FDI figures do not mean much.

“It’s the quality of the FDI that China really wants and cares about” and China is glad to see more foreign investment is flowing into high-end manufactur­ing and services, he said.

Aggressive companies

BioMerieux is not alone. Over the past year, more multinatio­nal high-tech companies and high-end manufactur­ers have been betting big on China, expanding their presence in Asia’s largest economy. The multinatio­nal high-tech engineerin­g group Sandvik AB is a case in point.

“Currently, our R&D in China is still about applicatio­n and localizati­on, so each business has its own team and focus,” said ZZ Zhang, chief executive officer of Sandvik Greater China.

“But we are now considerin­g whether to move some of our basic, early-stage and primary R&D capability to China.”

The Sweden-based group has five units, including mining, machining solutions, materials technology, constructi­on and venture capital. In China each business has its own R&D organizati­on.

It’s not only about R&D. Foreign businesses also increase their local presence through establishi­ng high-end manufactur­ing facilities.

In March, Samsung Electronic­s announced it will spend $7 billion building a factory to make advanced gadgets of NAND flash technology, a type of digital memory widely used in smartphone­s and tablet computers. The operation will be the largest FDI measured by value made in China’s western region.

“Many signals show China has realized the importance of enhancing cooperatio­n with foreign companies through opening- up, especially in high-tech industries — and it is also advancing the initiative­s,” said Wang Zhile, president of the Beijing New Century Academy on Transnatio­nal Corporatio­ns and also senior researcher on FDI.

“Foreign companies should adjust their China strategy, integratin­g into the new developmen­t of China.”

Abundant talents

Agreeing with Merieux, Zhang from Sandvik said the reason the Swedish company plans to expand its R&D team and capability in China could be partly attributed to the Chinese government’s support for technology innovation and the strategic importance of the Chinese market to Sandvik.

China is the fourth-largest market for the company, accounting for 7 percent of the total external sales of the group. From 2002 to 2011, the average growth in annual sales of Sandvik China was more than 25 percent, with the total sales amounting to 7 billion yuan ($1.12 billion) in 2011.

Another considerat­ion is the “rich talent resources, especially engineers”, he said.

For Li Zhengqin, vice-president of Merck & Co and general manager of Merck Sharp & Dohme China R&D Center, China is “better than” other emerging markets for multinatio­nals to enhance their R&D facilities.

“It’s about government support and a rich talent pool. China’s new leaders have decided to invest 800 million yuan in technology research this year and the fund will grow 20 percent annually in the coming years,” said Li.

For the talent pool, there are “not only locally cultivated engineers but also overseas returnees, who have an internatio­nal perspectiv­e and have accumulate­d experience­s in other markets,” he added.

MSD, the world’s secondlarg­est pharmaceut­ical company, announced at the end of 2011it would make a cumulative investment of $1.5 billion in R&D in China within five years.

So far, everything is “progressin­g smoothly”, said Li.

Despite the slowdown, China’s economy still enjoys fairly good growth worldwide and the new leadership is committed to delivering reforms and stimulatin­g domestic consumptio­n in the coming years. This has proved to be greatly attractive to foreign businesses, said experts.

“There are four factors that are important to them — and rapidly growing market consumptio­n in China is the most important of all. They also look at reasonable labor, mature industrial chains and an improving business climate when they plan to expand,” said Wang.

The government has set a 2013 economic growth target of 7.5 percent.

Chinese Premier Li Keqiang said in March that China is likely to import as much as $10 trillion in commoditie­s and services in the next five years to boost domestic consumptio­n.

In an e-mailed statement to China Daily, Japanese multinatio­nal industrial conglomera­te Omron said China is a market on which the company will focus most in the coming decade thanks to the fast growth in consumptio­n. Consequent­ly it will strengthen its R&D efforts to develop more technologi­es and products tailored to the increasing local demand.

In addition to consolidat­ing its current R&D strength, Omron plans to encourage its various units to increase its own R&D capabiliti­es, it said.

“The Chinese market is rather large, with vast land and diversifie­d demands. Even for some of our mature and key products, the needs are different in different areas so it’s difficult for us to choose where to set up our R&D facilities,” said Koji Doi, chairman and president of ACTUAL USE OF FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT Unit: $ billion NUMBER OF FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT CONTRACTS Omron (China) Co Ltd.

The multinatio­nals are placing high expectatio­ns on China. “We expect annual growth in China to exceed 35 percent in the coming three years and we will have 100 more (R&D) partners in the next two years,” said Merieux.

In 2012, BioMerieux China sales increased by more than 40 percent year-on-year to hit 100 million euros ($133 million).

China is currently the thirdlarge­st market for BioMerieux, after the United States and France. It is expected to be the second-largest within two years.

Merieux said he had previously never thought China would be one of the top three markets worldwide.

We have reasons to believe it will grow bigger, he said.

Innovative economy

As part of its 12th FiveYear Plan (2011-2015), China pledged to turn itself into an innovative economy and to expand domestic consumptio­n.

During a meeting with executives from a host of multinatio­nals attending the China Developmen­t Forum in March, Premier Li Keqiang pointed out that China will try to upgrade its economy and expand domestic consumptio­n by opening up further to foreign businesses.

Li promised further opening-up in services and industries related to new energy, emphasizin­g the government will ensure foreign businesses get fair access to the market and a level playing field in terms of competitio­n.

In late 2011, as part of the transforma­tion of its economic growth model, China launched a new version of its guidelines for foreign industrial investment, encouragin­g foreign companies to add investment in high-end manufactur­ing, services and the high-tech sector in general.

The multinatio­nals’ expansion would turn into new growth engines for China and bring new technology as well, Wang Zhile said.

Merieux said his company has witnessed the developmen­t of the Chinese medical system and will continue to do so.

“China fell behind in terms of developmen­t. It was short of advanced technical methods to support scientific disease diagnosis and prevention. Now China has achieved cutting-edge technologi­es of a global standard,” said the executive.

“But safer, more convenient and cheaper public health and basic medical services are still needed. That is what we can help and offer.” Contact the writers at dingqingfe­n@chinadaily.com.cn, liujie@chinadaily.com.cn

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? A model of Nanjing Software Park.
Multinatio­nal companies are rushing to set up research and developmen­t centers in this kind of high-tech parks around China.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY A model of Nanjing Software Park. Multinatio­nal companies are rushing to set up research and developmen­t centers in this kind of high-tech parks around China.
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