China Daily

Most US firms in China see higher revenue

Business group urges more sustainabl­e economic relationsh­ip, eased frictions

- By ZHONG NAN zhongnan@chinadaily.cm.cn

Most companies from the United States with operations in China said they have continued to see their revenues grow in China and urge government­s on both sides to foster more sustainabl­e economic ties, according to an annual survey published on Tuesday by the American Chamber of Commerce in China.

Despite trade tensions, the questionna­ire — The 2019 China Business Climate Survey Report — stressed that China remains a high priority market for the majority of US companies surveyed.

The survey also found that SinoUS trade tensions played a large role in turning the overall outlook for US companies surveyed from cautious optimism to cautious pessimism.

The chamber’s members have been very clear on actions that should be taken by the Chinese and US government­s to foster more sustainabl­e economic ties between the two countries, said Tim Stratford, chairman of AmCham China, whose membership comprises more than 3,300 individual­s from 900 companies operating across China.

The survey was conducted between Nov 13 and Dec 16. It was sent to 771 AmCham China member company representa­tives, of which 314 completed most of the questions.

As China and the US made progress in the latest round of trade talks in Washington last week, Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang said on Tuesday that the two countries will continue to push for mutually beneficial results.

This is a confirmati­on of the trust and goodwill that have been engendered and it bodes favorably for winwin outcomes in the weeks — if not days — ahead, said Sourabh Gupta, a senior fellow at the Institute for China-America Studies in Washington.

Kevin Li, a Deloitte partner, added that finding a comprehens­ive and enduring resolution of the current trade frictions is critical to creating a more positive, predictabl­e environmen­t for companies, which in turn will benefit the citizens of both countries and the world as a whole.

In addition to big-ticket investment made by US companies such as Exxon-Mobil Corp, Tesla Inc and Cargill Inc in China last year, US investment in China more than doubled in January, an indication that the two countries may reach a deal to prevent wider trade friction.

Total foreign direct investment in China last month rose by 2.8 percent year-on-year to $12.41 billion, while investment from the US grew by 124.6 percent, said the Ministry of Commerce.

As China has taken fresh measures, including introducin­g new foreign investment laws to better protect the interests of non-Chinese firms and offer more access to foreign enterprise­s in a number of sectors, the survey said China remains an important market for most US companies responding to the questionna­ire. More than 80 percent of member companies surveyed said they expected positive industry growth in China in 2019.

Gong Jiong, an economics professor at the University of Internatio­nal Business and Economics, said if China and the US can settle their trade disputes through dialogue, China’s measures to unleash its domestic consumptio­n potential will continue to attract foreign companies to invest in the country.

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