BEIJING, Oct. 31,
2024 /PRNewswire/ -- A recent survey of foreign
businesses showed that the vast majority of those surveyed found
China's business environment
satisfactory or better, with most of them holding favorable views
toward accessing the market and obtaining business premises,
China's top trade promotion body
said on Thursday.
Remarkably, a growing number of European businesses are
optimistic about China's market
prospects, while an increasing number of US businesses think the
attractiveness of the Chinese market is improving, according to the
survey.
The steadily improving sentiment of foreign businesses toward
the Chinese market reflects both the brighter outlook of
China's economy and better
business environment, thanks to a slew of proactive measures by the
Chinese government to boost growth and expand opening-up, experts
said.
At a press conference on Thursday, Sun
Xiao, a spokesperson for the China Council for the Promotion
of International Trade (CCPIT) revealed that a recent survey of
more than 400 foreign businesses showed 90 percent feel
China's business environment was
"satisfactory" or better in the third quarter, with the highest
proportion of them offering an assessment of "satisfactory" or
better for indicators such as "market access" and "obtaining
business premises."
"In terms of the market situation, the foreign businesses that
participated in the survey continue to be optimistic about the
Chinese market," Sun said, pointing to significant improvement in
European and US businesses' sentiment toward the Chinese
market.
According to the survey, in the third quarter, 41.67 percent of
European companies believe that the prospects for the Chinese
economy this year are "good," an increase of 14.17 percentage
points from the previous quarter. Also, 47.92 percent of the
European companies surveyed believe the attractiveness of the
Chinese market is "growing," 5.42 percentage points higher than
that of the previous quarter.
Moreover, 60 percent of surveyed US businesses think the
attractiveness of the Chinese market is "growing," up 15.26
percentage points from the previous quarter, according to CCPIT.
That is significantly higher than the nearly 50 percent of all
surveyed foreign businesses that think the attractiveness of the
Chinese market is "growing."
Beyond improving sentiment, foreign businesses' willingness to
invest in China is also
increasing. Nearly 20 percent of surveyed foreign businesses plan
to expand investment in China, up
2.07 percentage points, with willingness of EU businesses' to
expand investment being relatively higher, with a 2.5 percentage
point improvement from the previous quarter, the survey showed.
Optimizing environment
The survey showed that foreign businesses have been able to
truly feel the improvement in China's business environment following a slew
of measures, including streamlining procedures, expanding
opening-up and continuously sending signals of further opening-up,
said Zhou Mi, a senior research fellow at the Chinese Academy of
International Trade and Economic Cooperation.
"These measures not only help foreign businesses expand their
existing operations in China, but
also see the potential for future development. Therefore, they
generally feel China's business
environment is satisfactory," Zhou told the Global Times on
Thursday.
As part of China's broad
efforts to optimize the business environment, CCPIT has held more
than 540 symposiums on foreign-funded enterprises and conducted
field surveys on more than 3,300 foreign-funded enterprises, among
other measures, Sun said, adding that CCPIT also recently organized
four trips to localities for foreign businesses.
"What we can feel from this is that foreign businesses are
optimistic about the Chinese market and have strong confidence in
China," the CCPIT spokesperson
said.
Li Changan, a professor at the Academy of China Open Economy
Studies of the University of International Business and Economics,
said that China's efforts to
optimize the market environment for foreign businesses are not only
comprehensive but also targeted, so as to address specific issues
faced by foreign companies.
"Relevant policies have also been refined to address various
issues, including reducing barriers for foreign businesses and
lowering the burden for them," Li told the Global Times on
Thursday. "In light of China's
emphasis on high-standard opening-up, it is natural that foreign
businesses hold China's business
environment in higher regard."
In addition to efforts to optimize the business environment,
China has also moved steadily to
open up more sectors for foreign investment. For instance, starting
on Friday, China will implement a
new, shorter negative list of sectors that are off-limits to
foreign investment, meaning more areas are open to foreign
businesses.
The biggest highlight of the new negative list is that it marks
the end of all restrictions on foreign investment in the
manufacturing industry, according to a notice issued by the
National Development and Reform Commission and the Ministry of
Commerce in September.
In addition to the manufacturing sector, China has also been continuously expanding
opening-up in other fields such as the services industry and the
financial sector. Last week, the Ministry of Industry and
Information Technology launched a pilot program for expanding
opening-up in value-added telecom services in four designated areas
in Beijing, Shanghai, South
China's Hainan and
Shenzhen, South China's Guangdong Province.
Foreign businesses' growing optimism about the Chinese market
also comes as Chinese policymakers have been stepping up policy
measures, including cutting the reserve requirement ratio and
lowering interest rates, to boost economic growth. Markets are also
closely watching for further support measures from China, after the Ministry of Finance said
earlier this month that it will introduce a package of targeted
incremental fiscal policy measures in the near future to boost the
economy.
In a sign of improving economic activity following the policy
measures, China's manufacturing
purchasing managers' index, a gauge of factory activity, rose to
50.1 in October, marking a return to expansion territory from 49.8
in September, official data showed on Thursday.
Zhou said that as the global supply faces challenges,
China's growing market scale and
spending power offer foreign businesses better options with stable
supply chain and lower risks.
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SOURCE Global Times