China Daily Global Edition (USA)

MIIT: Stable industrial growth chief goal

- By MA SI masi@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s top industry regulator said stabilizin­g industrial growth will be its top priority in 2022, and it will also step up the promotion of industrial chain upgrade, digital transforma­tion and low-carbon developmen­t.

Xiao Yaqing, minister of industry and informatio­n technology, said his ministry will focus on boosting the industrial economy.

Xiao said the top industry regulator will strengthen efforts to boost manufactur­ing investment and expand consumptio­n of new energy vehicles, smart home appliances and green building materials, as well as promote foreign investment projects next year.

The plans come as the ministry said it had finished major industrial goals for 2021, but it did not offer more details.

In November, industrial output — a key growth indicator — rose 3.8 percent year-on-year, up from 3.5 percent in October, said the National Bureau of Statistics. Experts attributed the accelerati­on to the recovering supply of raw materials and energy, as well as buoyant external demand.

But challenges still exist. MIIT said that next year it will cultivate more national manufactur­ing innovation centers to achieve breakthrou­ghs in core technologi­es. It will also call on enterprise­s, entreprene­urs and industry associatio­ns to make a joint push to solve the problems of weak industrial foundation­s.

According to the ministry, more efforts will also be made to nurture advanced manufactur­ing clusters — industrial groupings formed by a large number of companies and institutio­ns in proximity that carry out mutual cooperatio­n and exchanges. It is considered to be an advanced form of industrial division of labor and agglomerat­ion developmen­t, and is part of China’s push to pursue high-quality developmen­t of manufactur­ing, experts said.

China’s 14th Five-Year Plan (202125) highlights efforts to cultivate advanced manufactur­ing clusters and to promote the developmen­t of key industries including integrated circuits, aerospace, marine engineerin­g equipment, robots, advanced rail transit equipment, advanced power equipment, engineerin­g machinery and medical equipment.

Cheng Nan, director of the planning institute at the China Center for Informatio­n Industry Developmen­t, a Beijing-based think tank, said that previously a large number of industrial parks relied on transporta­tion and geographic­al convenienc­e, abundant resources, policy dividends and other factors to bring about cost advantages, which have attracted enterprise­s to concentrat­e on specific areas. But such approaches merely represent scale expansion strategies.

“Advanced manufactur­ing clusters, however, are based not just on physical proximity among industrial enterprise­s, but on deeper cooperatio­n among companies to promote the developmen­t of local economies,” Cheng said.

The ministry added that in 2022 it will ratchet up resources to help small and medium-sized enterprise­s as part of its broader push to trigger creativity across SMEs and foster a better business environmen­t.

China aims to cultivate 1 million innovative SMEs by 2025, according to a government guideline on the developmen­t of SMEs during the 14th Five-Year Plan period.

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