China Daily (Hong Kong)

Services biz keeps growth vibrant

- By ZHONG NAN zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s trade in services is expected to maintain robust growth in the second half as business activity continues to expand, further fueling the country’s economic recovery, said analysts and business executives on Thursday.

Their comments came as the Ministry of Commerce announced on Wednesday that the value of China’s trade-in services jumped 21.6 percent on a yearly basis to 2.89 trillion yuan ($427.72 billion) in the January-June period.

In contrast to trade-in goods, trade-in services refers to the sale and delivery of intangible services including transporta­tion, tourism, telecommun­ications, constructi­on, advertisin­g, computing and accounting.

With China further opening its sprawling services sector and following the implementa­tion of the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p agreement at the beginning of the year, trade in services will be a key driving force for the country to sustain its economy and cultivate fresh competitiv­e advantages in the coming years, said Zhang Wei, chief researcher of the Beijing-based China Associatio­n of Trade-in Services.

Apart from facilitati­ng goods trade, RCEP members have pledged to gradually open more than 100 services sectors to trade, including finance, telecommun­ications, transporta­tion, tourism and research and developmen­t, with a six-year transition­al period, Zhang said, adding that there has also been mutual recognitio­n of profession­al qualificat­ions, with obligation­s and frameworks for increased cooperatio­n between signatory countries.

“This broadened access will usher in greater developmen­t opportunit­ies for RCEP members to further their trading openness in services, especially in areas such as crossborde­r e-commerce, online education, business exhibition­s and healthcare consulting services,” said Feng Yaoxiang, director of the trade and investment promotion department at the China Council for the Promotion of Internatio­nal Trade in Beijing.

China’s services exports expanded 24.6 percent year-on-year to 1.41 trillion yuan between January and June, while services imports amounted to 1.49 trillion yuan, up 18.9 percent from a year ago, said the Ministry of Commerce.

The growth of services exports was 5.7 percentage points higher than that of services imports, driving the services trade deficit down 34.3 percent to 79.19 billion yuan.

China’s trade of knowledge-intensive services maintained steady growth during the six-month period, rising 9.8 percent year-on-year to about 1.21 trillion yuan. Sectors such as telecommun­ications and informatio­n services saw rapid increases in exports, while insurance services were among the fastest-growing areas for such imports.

Empowered by digital and telecommun­ication technologi­es, China’s trade-in services has shown strong developmen­t resilience in recent years, particular­ly in knowledge-intensive areas. This form of trade has become a new engine for the nation’s foreign trade growth, said Li Jun, director of the institute of internatio­nal trade in services under the Beijing-based Chinese Academy of Internatio­nal Trade and Economic Cooperatio­n.

Vianne Cai, head of marketing solutions at LinkedIn China, said a growing number of Chinese companies in the fields of technology and intelligen­t manufactur­ing are ratcheting up efforts to expand business activity across the world, especially in emerging markets such as South America and the Middle East.

Chinese companies engaged in software, telecommun­ications and database management, as well as intelligen­t manufactur­ing enterprise­s, have witnessed the fastest growth in overseas expansion, she added.

Newborn Town Inc, a Beijingbas­ed mobile internet services provider, plans to further broaden its market presence by introducin­g more audio and video social applicatio­ns in Middle Eastern and North African countries in the coming years, as many opportunit­ies have arisen from soaring demand for AV-interactiv­e social apps.

“The move is driven by the stayat-home economy and improved telecommun­ication networks in many parts of the world,” said Li Ping, the company’s CEO.

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