China Daily

Tweaks on cards for negative lists

New measures to further liberalize market access for foreign investors in the nation

- By JING SHUIYU and REN XIAOJIN Contact the writers at jingshuiyu@chinadaily.com.cn

China is expected to release and implement two updated foreign investment negative lists by June 30, a concrete move to further liberalize market access for foreign investors, the Ministry of Commerce said on Thursday.

“The improved lists, one for nationwide implementa­tion and one for pilot free trade zones, would further remove or loosen existing restrictio­ns on foreign investment”, said Gao Feng, a spokesman of the commerce ministry.

Besides the finance and automobile sectors that have already been announced, other sectors subject to the upcoming lists will include “energy, resources, infrastruc­ture, transporta­tion, commercial and profession­al services”, Gao said.

There will be a transition­al period for some industries, and the new lists will set out specific opening-up measures that will be unveiled in the next few years, he said.

Negative lists identify sectors where foreign participat­ion is restricted. It is a common practice adopted in many countries to manage foreign investment.

Wei Jianguo, vice-president of the China Center for Internatio­nal Economic Exchanges, said further opening-up is a prerequisi­te for a high-level trade structure, and a key driver to ensure highqualit­y economic growth.

Easing restrictio­ns on foreign investment could help improve the business environmen­t for all companies, sharpen domestic companies’ focus on innovation and improve their competitiv­e position, said Wei, a former vice-minister of commerce.

China has rolled out a slew of measures to further broaden its market access since the beginning of 2018, a year that marks the 40th anniversar­y of the country’s reform and opening-up policy.

In April, the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission said the limits on investment in shipbuildi­ng, new energy vehicles, and aircraft manufactur­ing will be removed by the end of this year. The country will also gradually remove investment limits in the automobile sector in the next five years.

Zhuge Qin, deputy secretary-general of Beijing Business Aviation Associatio­n, said such measures were a good beginning, as foreign capital will help in further developmen­t of the domestic industry. “Foreign investors can consider moving business operations like aircraft maintenanc­e to China,” he said.

But he also said it is not certain if the foreign investors would transfer advanced technology to China. Many investors are keen on aircraft assembling while materials, machine parts manufactur­ing and avionics systems are less preferred, he added.

“Although such policies will benefit the industry, investors need to find what the market really needs,” Zhuge said.

Data from the commerce ministry showed that foreign direct investment into the Chinese mainland surged 7.9 percent year-on-year to 877.56 billion yuan ($136.36 billion) last year, a record.

Earlier this week, the State Council, China’s cabinet, said the country will further enhance investment facilitati­on based on internatio­nal standards. Provincial government­s will be given the right to set up or alter the businesses of foreign-invested enterprise­s with total investment of $1 billion or less mentioned in the upcoming lists, according to a statement.

 ?? XINHUA ?? Employees work on the production line of a BMW joint venture in Shenyang, capital of Liaoning province.
XINHUA Employees work on the production line of a BMW joint venture in Shenyang, capital of Liaoning province.
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