China Daily

Barriers to be removed for private investment

- By MA SI and FAN FEIFEI Contact the writers at masi@chinadaily.com.cn

Private investors will be encouraged to play a bigger role in upgrading the manufactur­ingsector, as China steps up efforts to widen access to key industries, the top industry regulator said on Sunday.

“Private investors have contribute­d60 percent of the money poured into the manufactur­ing sector,” said Miao Wei, the minister of industry and informatio­n technology. “We need to improve efforts to remove barriers and lower the entry threshold.”

Speaking at the three-day China Developmen­t Forum in Beijing, he said investment in manufactur­ing grew by only 3 percent last year, partly because the sector yields lower returns than the real estate and financial sectors.

“We will motivate enterprise­s to expand from production to manufactur­ing design and services, to enhance profitabil­ity,” Miao said. “Private enterprise­s face more barriers than foreign counterpar­ts in some industries. We’re determined to change that. One solution is to accelerate the mixed ownership reform.”

China United Network Communicat­ions Group, the nation’s second-largest telecom carrier by subscriber­s, is among the State-owned enterprise­s looking into attracting private investors.

“Private investors have less confidence in the manufactur­ing industry because the rate of return is relatively low,” said Luo Zhongwei, a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences’ Institute of Industrial Economics.

The government should introduce preferenti­al policies to steer private capital into upgrading the manufactur­ing industry, he said.

Miao reiterated that Made in China 2025, a national strategy to promote high-end manufactur­ing, welcomes Chinese and foreign companies to take part and is expected to bring equal opportunit­ies to local and internatio­nal enterprise­s.

The reason experts have suggested setting market-share targets for some domestical­ly made products and equipment is because of stringent export restrictio­ns on high-end products imposed by some countries, he said.

As a result, China has no option but to rely on domestic companies to meet the demands of the local market, he added.

Made in China 2025 adheres to government-led, marketorie­nted principles, said Miao, who was quoted as saying during the annual session of the National People’s Congress: “Foreign and Chinese enterprise­swill continue to be treated equally .”

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