China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Wenzhou getting back to business

- By HE WEI in Shanghai hewei@chinadaily.com.cn

Local government supports growth in real economy by sourcing funds for companies, relaxation of rules

Targeting companies with good credit records and robust business performanc­e, we’ve allocated 500 million yuan of funds to alleviate the financial burden for those that are seeking an IPO.”

Wang Jun, a scarf manufactur­er and exporter in Wenzhou, a city in East China’s Zhejiang province, didn’t expect his boutique business stand to wind up applying for a third design patent.

Not so many years ago, that sort of thing wasn’t even on the radar for Wang, owner of a mom-and-pop factory. After all, the 35-yearold used to think intellectu­al property is normally “proprietar­y to big businesses”.

But since the launch of the Intellectu­al Property Service Park of Wenzhou in June 2016, the nation’s first IP fast-registrati­on body, such applicatio­ns have been trimmed from roughly half a year to just 10 days.

The mechanism is now in place to encourage more businessme­n in the city to stay committed to the real economy, according to Wang Yaozhang, the center’s general manager, who witnessed 685 such applicatio­ns in a year’s time through October 2017.

Seven years ago, Wang said he could not imagine himself being a beneficiar­y.

“Back then, many investors gave up their decade-long businesses in the manufactur­ing sector and turned to high-yield, risky speculatio­ns in the property or stock market,” he recalled. “When share prices dipped, they became debt-laden and the economy was hit hard.”

Wenzhou is well-known as the country’s cradle for private entreprene­urship. After all, a startling 98 percent of the local economy is based in the private sector, a majority of which is family-run.

The port city and its residents are known for their business acumen and created industrial clusters of small businesses making everything from shoes to cigarette lighters and other electrical components.

But because banks traditiona­lly offered loans only to large-scale enterprise­s, families pooled their cash and organized informal lending societies to fund cash-strapped smaller businesses, backed by the trust born of their tight-knit community.

Then came 2011, when the same city captured Fang Yongjun,

head of Wenzhou’s city commission of developmen­t and reform

news headlines after being embroiled in a private lending crisis that crippled its economy. Companies in Wenzhou, which had been counting on a steady flow of financing to fund their bets on stocks and property, were in trouble.

Bad loans spiked, unlicensed undergroun­d banks collapsed, and dozens of investors fled their debts.

In the past seven years, however, Wenzhou has been getting back to work. The government has been heralding a spate of policy moves to support growth, through sourcing funds for businesses and rules relaxation, among other measures.

On the financial front, small businesses in Wenzhou can be establishe­d with zero registered capital, and they can borrow using their equity as collateral.

The city also gave private businesses the right to establish lending companies, trying to steer them into the formal financial system. Small and medium-sized enterprise­s in Wenzhou may borrow from banks, qualified underwrite­rs and small-loan firms under that arrangemen­t.

As a result, the bad loan ratio dropped from 4.68 percent at its peak to 2.26 percent by the end of June 2017, while economic growth topped 8.4 percent by the end of the third quarter, among the fastest pace in years, said Zhou Jiangyong, Party chief of Wenzhou.

To make the economy more resilient, the city has forged a modern economy based on contracts and credit records to replace what used to be a blood-bond or kin-based mechanism that eventually led to the debt crisis.

By introducin­g a credit-rating mechanism, the government offered loans totaling 2.46 billion yuan ($378 million) to more than 1,400 trustworth­y enterprise­s in 2016, while blackliste­d firms weren’t able to enjoy incentives from favorable credit, tax reduction or other preferenti­al policies, said Fang Yongjun, head of Wenzhou’s city commission of developmen­t and reform.

To channel more companies into the real economy — i.e. the manufactur­ing of physical goods — the city introduced a variety of financing options to quench the capital thirst during business expansion.

“Targeting companies with good credit records and robust business performanc­e, we’ve allocated 500 million yuan of funds to alleviate the financial burden for those that are seeking an IPO,” Fang said.

Firms are also encouraged to exploit technologi­es to advance manufactur­ing. Manufactur­ers invested more than 3.6 billion yuan in the first three quarters of 2017, attracting strategic emerging industries from laser to new energy cars, according to Hou Bizhong, deputy head of the city’s investment promotion bureau.

Even traditiona­l industries have taken on a digital makeover. Saint Angelo, a local suit manufactur­er, has leveraged cloud-based manufactur­ing to halve its production cycle from 15 days to seven days through the integratio­n of its supply chain, distributi­on and sales services.

“Cloud systems can transmit customer requiremen­ts in the blink of an eye, match key metrics with our production facilities and automate the production process by mixing and matching key metrics with our production data,” said Zhao Guohua, the company’s director of production.

The company expected revenue generated from its more lucrative tailor-made business segment to surge from 800 million yuan in 2016 to more than 1.2 billion yuan in 2017.

Wenzhou’s trajectory echoed a recovery being staged in China’s real economy. The latest regional economic trackers indicate that high-tech and strategic emerging industries are fueling growth momentum in areas where the service industry largely rules.

In Zhejiang province, the added value of the industrial sector jumped 8.3 percent in the first nine months of 2017, beating the previous 8.1 percent same-period GDP growth record seen in 2014, said Che Jun, Party chief of Zhejiang.

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 ?? XINHUA ?? Pet food is produced at a factory in Pingyang county of Wenzhou, Zhejiang province. The pet-related industry has boomed in the county due to industrial upgrading and transforma­tion.
XINHUA Pet food is produced at a factory in Pingyang county of Wenzhou, Zhejiang province. The pet-related industry has boomed in the county due to industrial upgrading and transforma­tion.

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