China Daily (Hong Kong)

SOE reform welcomed by companies, experts

- By ZHONG NAN, LIU YUKUN in Beijing and SUN RUISHENG in Taiyuan Contact the writers at zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

China will make substantiv­e progress in restructur­ing the nation’s previously monopolize­d industries, and bring in more mixed-ownership management models, said experts.

Their comments came after the State-Owned Assets Supervisio­n and Administra­tion Commission, China’s SOE regulator, called on 11 pilot SOEs in late December to establish independen­t financial and investment arms to better manage their assets and serve the real economy.

The list includes China Guangdong Nuclear Power Co, China National Machinery Industry Corp and China COSCO Shipping Co. They follow on from 10 pilot SOEs chosen in 2016, when China began to take measures to tackle some SOEs’ structural, operationa­l and debt issues.

Since the Third Plenary Session of the 18th Central Committee of the Communist Party of China pointed out that it is necessary to promote a modern corporate system in SOEs, SOE reform has looked to integrate public ownership with the market economy, and adapt to the new requiremen­ts of marketizat­ion and internatio­nalization, said Lu Yongzhen, deputy director of the SASAC’s research institute.

“The mixed-ownership reform will further open China’s monopolize­d industries. We have seen substantia­l progress in seven areas including the power, military, civil aviation, communicat­ions and oil sectors so far, and the reform will be continuall­y carried out until 2020,” said Li Jin, chief researcher at the China Enterprise Research Institute.

China Unicom has proposed to give full play to the functional role of the newly formed management board under mixed ownership. It will also speed up cooperatio­n with the new strategic investors brought by the reform, and accelerate developmen­t in areas such as the internet of things and 5G technologi­es.

The State Grid Corp has announced that it will engage social capital in the constructi­on of and investment in ultra-high voltage power transmissi­on projects, integrated energy services, electric vehicles, informatio­n and communicat­ion, navigation business and other fields. It will also push its equipment manufactur­ing companies to be listed this year.

China Railway Corp, the country’s railway service provider, also said it will accelerate shareholdi­ng reform this year and implement a threeyear work plan for mixed-ownership reform, including introducin­g strategic collaborat­ors, pushing the establishm­ent and operation of railway debt-to-equity funds, and promoting market-oriented debt-to- equity swaps in an orderly manner via ownership transfer, capital increase and stock expansion.

SOEs are not alone, many global companies such as Germany’s Siemens AG restructur­ed five main industrial divisions into three new companies, and Zurich-headquarte­red ABB Group planned to sell its power grid business to Japan’s Hitachi Ltd, last year, in an adjustment to their developmen­t strategy.

“Apparently, their methods of saving costs, simplifyin­g business structures and headquarte­rs’ function, and focusing on pillar businesses show that diversifie­d companies are heading for a decline. Both the government and SOEs should pay attention to this reality and let SOEs develop businesses they are proficient in,” said Zhou Lisha, a researcher at SASAC’s research institute.

Reform aimed at establishi­ng a dynamic salary mechanism for State-owned enterprise­s, linked to company performanc­e, came into effect on Jan 1.

Competitio­n-oriented SOEs won’t have to get approval from higher authoritie­s for the total salary, instead they just need to report the total salary they distribute to higher authoritie­s.

The reform aims to establish a market-oriented income distributi­on mechanism that directly connects the salaries of employees of a SOE with the company’s performanc­e. That means employees in SOEs can make more money if they did a good job and the SOE makes money. Or they can possibly earn less otherwise.

“Marketizat­ion is the ultimate goal of the reform. The reform means it is no longer necessary to limit the power of management to administra­tive means, but to manage in accordance with marketizat­ion requiremen­ts. Centrally administer­ed SOEs will no longer be appendages of relevant department­s, but independen­t market players,” said Yuan Dongming, a researcher at the enterprise research institute of the Developmen­t Research Center of the State Council.

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