China Daily

Ministry: Rules set to safeguard national security

Expert says move accords with nation’s commitment to opening-up on all fronts

- By ZHONG NAN zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s newly enacted rules on foreign investment security reviews are to safeguard national security and won’t put an unnecessar­y burden on normal foreign businesses, the Ministry of Commerce said on Thursday.

“Carrying out security reviews on foreign investment­s that affect or may affect national security is a regular internatio­nal practice. Major economies have already set up or are improving such security review mechanisms,” said Gao Feng, spokesman for the Ministry of Commerce.

The country’s new rules, which took effect in January, concentrat­e on security reviews of foreign investment in military and other areas concerning national defense and security, as well as major agricultur­al, energy and resources areas that are critical to national security.

The new rules are in line with the requiremen­t of the Foreign Investment Law, and provide a necessary guarantee for the stable and sound developmen­t of the Chinese economy, he said, adding that they are also conducive to the growth of foreign companies in China in the long run.

It is not a protection­ist move or a refusal to further open up. Instead, it accords with the nation’s commitment to opening-up on all fronts and aims at reinforcin­g the security mechanism for opening-up, said Hao Hongmei, deputy director of the foreign investment institute at the Beijing-based Chinese Academy of Internatio­nal Trade and Economic Cooperatio­n.

While encouragin­g and protecting foreign investment, the rules should prevent and tackle national security risks at a higher level, she said, noting that opening-up without security safeguards is unsustaina­ble in the long run.

Gao, from the Commerce Ministry, said the government will continue to strengthen services for key foreignfun­ded enterprise­s and projects, and help accelerate the infrastruc­ture constructi­on of foreign-funded projects this year.

In the meantime, Gao said the country will also expand the level of protection for foreign companies’ legal interests and implement working measures on complaints by foreign-invested companies, while continuous­ly updating China’s Foreign Investment Guide to build a transparen­t and convenient investment environmen­t.

Despite the challenges brought by the COVID-19 pandemic and the global economic recession, China’s actual use of foreign direct investment surged 31.5 percent year-onyear to 176.76 billion yuan ($26.07 billion) in the first two months of this year, according to the ministry.

Nathan Stoner, vice-president of Cummins Inc, a United States-based engine manufactur­er, said that the company’s research and developmen­t facility, involving a total investment of $250 million, will become operationa­l in Wuhan, Hubei province, by the end of this year.

Policies introduced

“China has continuous­ly introduced new policies to optimize its business environmen­t and the Chinese market has already become a powerful driver of the company’s global performanc­e,” said Stoner.

The US company sold more than 670,000 engines in China last year, an increase of 24 percent year-onyear, and the company’s highest growth since it entered the Chinese market in 1975.

With the Ministry of Commerce announcing in November that it will develop its first dedicated five-year plan on the utilizatio­n of foreign investment for China’s 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-25) period, the government will provide more support for specific projects invested by global firms, such as fast-track approval and subsidies for land and energy costs, according to a study released by internatio­nal advisory company Brunswick Group.

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