China Daily

FDI growth to remain robust, experts say

- By ZHONG NAN and ZHANG YUE

The growth of foreign direct investment in China will maintain its sound pace this year, thanks to the country’s robust economic recovery and moves to upgrade its industries and further expand local demand, experts and business leaders said on Monday.

Despite the fact that many foreign economies fully resumed production later last year, the completene­ss of their industrial and supply chains cannot compete with China’s, said Liu Xiangdong, a researcher at the China Center for Internatio­nal Economic Exchanges in Beijing.

Due to China’s high vaccinatio­n rate and the swift recovery of its manufactur­ing sector, services sector and foreign trade, the nation has emerged as a safe and lucrative place for global capital, supported by the dual-circulatio­n developmen­t paradigm — in which the domestic market is the mainstay and the domestic and foreign markets reinforce each other, Liu said.

After surpassing the United States as the world’s biggest recipient of foreign investment last year, China’s actual use of foreign capital soared 35.4 percent on a yearly basis to 481 billion yuan ($75.3 billion) in the first five months of this year. The volume surged 30.3 percent from the same period in 2019, data from the Ministry of Commerce showed.

Meanwhile, foreign investment in the service industry came in at 381.9 billion yuan between January and May, up 41.6 percent year-on-year.

Chen Bin, executive vice-president of the Beijing-based China Machinery Industry Federation, anticipate­d that China’s attractive­ness as a location for FDI will continue to grow in the second half of 2021, as the COVID-19 pandemic has seen a resurgence in export-oriented countries, including India, Vietnam, Malaysia and Thailand, in recent months.

“If both domestic and global manufactur­ers in those countries are severely disrupted by the pandemic and stop working, it will have an impact on the global supply chain, and more FDI may keep flowing into China this year,” said Ding Yifan, a senior research fellow at the Institute of World Developmen­t at the Developmen­t Research Center of the State Council.

Nearly 60 percent of European companies plan to expand their business in China this year, compared with 51 percent last year, according to a survey released last week by the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China.

About half of the surveyed companies said that their profit margins in China are higher than the global average. This proportion was 38 percent last year.

Toni Petersson, CEO of Oatly Group AB, a Swedish food and beverage company, said the company will bring its first plant in China in Ma’anshan, Anhui province, into operation later this year.

Supported by a local innovation team, the company, apart from supplying plant-based milk, will tailor exclusive products such as ice cream for Chinese consumers to offer them more options, he said.

US multinatio­nal conglomera­te Honeywell said it plans to invest in China’s refinery sector over the next five years.

“We see China’s carbon-neutral commitment as an opportunit­y to join hands with Chinese partners to realize the refinery transforma­tion by converting crude oil into more and more petrochemi­cal products, or even completely into petrochemi­cal products,” said Henry Liu, vicepresid­ent and general manager of Honeywell Performanc­e Materials and Technologi­es Asia-Pacific.

Ren Xingzhou, former directorge­neral of the Institute for Market Economy of the Developmen­t Research Center of the State Council, noted that stabilizin­g foreign investment inflows is a vital policy target, as it is key to technologi­cal upgrading and ultimately to long-term growth.

“China has leapfrogge­d ahead of many advanced economies in newly emerging areas such as e-commerce, electric vehicles, artificial intelligen­ce and new infrastruc­ture projects, but needs to continue its technology upgrading in other areas, including environmen­tal protection, and the agricultur­al and manufactur­ing industries,” she added.

Vorwerk Group, a German industrial and technology company, will establish a digital solution center in Shanghai in the second half of this year to facilitate its transforma­tion from a manufactur­ing company to a service-oriented manufactur­er.

“This move will help many global companies better adapt to China’s market,” said Cha Sheng, general manager of Vorwerk China.

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