China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Measures will help ease firms’ financing woes

Boosting employment high on State Council economic agenda

- By HU YONGQI huyongqi@chinadaily.com.cn

China will take effective measures to ease private enterprise­s’ difficulti­es in getting financing and ensure full employment, among its efforts to ensure stable and healthy economic developmen­t, Premier Li Keqiang said on Thursday during a meeting of the State Council.

Greater reduction in taxes and fees will help enterprise­s and boost industrial upgrading, Li said. More job opportunit­ies should be cultivated to boost the developmen­t of new economic drivers, focusing on key groups and diverse ways of creating new jobs that will create more social wealth, he said.

Complicate­d domestic and external challenges led to new downward pressure on economic growth and some difficulti­es for the real economy and enterprise­s, Li said. He called for ensuring the Chinese economy remains within a reasonable range and realizing high-quality developmen­t by tapping the great potential of the domestic market and growing new drivers.

Li called for carrying out consistent macroecono­mic policies and strengthen­ing fine-tuning, with closer attention to changes in domestic and internatio­nal settings. At the same time, a stable macroecono­mic environmen­t should be built to provide the right market expectatio­ns.

Improvemen­t of the business environmen­t is key to boosting developmen­t and building better conditions for enterprise­s, focusing on their concerns and thinking from their perspectiv­es, Li said.

Administra­tive reforms should be deepened to reduce the number of government­al approvals needed, and market access should be expanded for private enterprise­s, he said. The companies should receive support to enter fields like infrastruc­ture and primary industries. They should also be given more support in key technologi­es to strengthen competitiv­eness, he said.

The premier called for coordinati­ng efforts to achieve stable growth, deeper reforms, economic restructur­ing, improvemen­t of people’s livelihood­s and dealing with risks and challenges with firm confidence. Stateowned, private and foreign businesses should be treated equally, with easier access and better protection for their legitimate rights, Li said.

The meeting focused on the current economic situation, with three entreprene­urs and three economists invited to deliberate on the developmen­t of China’s economic situation, private businesses, technologi­cal innovation and employment prospects.

Huang Yiping, deputy dean of the National School of Developmen­t at Peking University, said private enterprise­s contribute about 70 percent of technologi­cal innovation­s and should have a level playing field. He said tax reduction should be conducted to increase the vitality of market entities amid downward pressure on growth.

Guo Sheng, CEO of the recruitmen­t service zhaopin.com, said data collected by his company and Renmin University of China showed the country’s employment was stable in the first three quarters, especially in emerging industries.

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