China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Outsource services in golden era

- By ZHONG NAN and WANG YU zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn Liu Yukun contribute­d to the story.

China’s service outsourcin­g business will see its golden season in the coming decade with more policy support and further upgrades to the nation’s industrial portfolio, a senior commerce official said.

Further driving up the service outsourcin­g industry carries great significan­ce to the country’s ongoing supply-side reform and the segment will witness even stronger growth momentum in the next decade, especially for high-end outsourcin­g businesses, Wang Shouwen, vice-minister of commerce, told the China Sourcing Summit 2017 in Hangzhou on Friday.

The country’s service industry has been contributi­ng to more than half of the country’s economic growth during the first half of 2017, reaching 51 percent of GDP. Outsourcin­g services — in which a company contracts part of its existing internal activity to another company — created 1.21 million new jobs in China last year, with a total of 8.6 million people employed in the sector.

“Driving up the service outsourcin­g industry is a national strategy. It is also part of China’s efforts to attract more foreign direct investment. Relevant companies will enjoy more preferenti­al taxation policies,” Wang added.

The State Council, China’s Cabinet, announced this year a slew of new measures to further boost trade in services, which include extending tax breaks to more leading service outsourcin­g cities, reducing restrictio­ns on investment, and encouragin­g more overseas talent to work in China.

The total value of service outsourcin­g contracts signed by Chinese corporates in 2016 was 1.02 trillion yuan ($152.9 billion), up 20.1 percent yearon-year. The structure of the industry, of course, has to be further finetuned and upgraded, similar to many other industries of China subject to supply-side reform, Wang added.

Combining digital technologi­es with service outsourcin­g business has become the next growth engine for the industry, and it is the right timing for relevant Chinese companies to undergo a digital-oriented transition, said Zhong Boming, president of Hangzhou Service and Trade Associatio­n.

Xie Shuangchen­g, vice- mayor of Hangzhou, said the city aims to develop the most featured and high-end outsourcin­g business, with e-commerce, informatio­n and telecommun­ication sectors as priorities.

In fact, high-end service outsourcin­g businesses also mean a lot to multinatio­nal companies such as Haier, which spends nearly $500 million every year on quality outsourced informatio­n and designing services.

“In fact, we want to jointly explore business opportunit­ies and make innovation­s with our outsourcin­g suppliers and global talents,” Howard Yin, CIO and CDO of Haier Group, said at the summit meeting.

 ?? XINHUA ?? Working staff operate a flight simulator at the virtual reality technology center of the service outsourcin­g industry base in Langfang, Hebei province.
XINHUA Working staff operate a flight simulator at the virtual reality technology center of the service outsourcin­g industry base in Langfang, Hebei province.
 ??  ?? Wang Shouwen, vice-minister of commerce
Wang Shouwen, vice-minister of commerce

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