Foreign investment sees 2% decline By Jiang Wei (China Daily) Updated: 2005-12-15 06:50
Realized foreign direct investment (FDI) to China dropped about 2 per cent
year-on-year in the first 11 months this year while contracted foreign
investment grew about a quarter over the previous year.
China realized US$53.1 billion of FDI from January to November, 1.9 per cent
down from 2004, according to the latest statistics published yesterday by
China's Ministry of Commerce.
Contracted foreign investment to China, which indicates the future investment
flow, grew to US$167.2 billion from January to November, reflecting an increase
of some 23.99 per cent.
During this period, the ministry said, the Chinese Government approved 39,679
new foreign-invested ventures, up 1.17 per cent year-on-year.
Statistics from November alone are unavailable. Based on the calculation of
published statistics, monthly-realized FDI grew 24 per cent year-on-year to
US$4.7 billion while contracted investment rose nearly 39 per cent to US$22.2
billion.
Meanwhile, the ministry said that Hong Kong ranked first among all investment
sources in the first 11 months followed by the British Virgin Islands and Japan.
The past 11 months have witnessed both a slow growing and declining FDI to
China, a sharp contrast to the 13.3 per cent annual growth achieved last year.
However, experts said that this does not mark foreign investors' withdrawal
from China.
"I would like to attribute macro-control policies as well as the overall
macro economic situation to the slide (in FDI)," said Liu Manping, a researcher
with the National Development and Reform Commission.
He said the decline was in line with the nation's policies to cool down some
over-heated industries and was also in line with the decline in domestic
investment on fixed assets.
In addition, the expert said that FDI to China last year was too large for
the country to achieve fast growth again this year.
According to a report published by the United Nations Conference on Trade and
Development, China ranked second among investment destinations in 2004, only
after the United States, which received US$96 billion in foreign direct
investment.
"I regard the decline as a rational phenomenon, " Liu said. "And we cannot
say that long-term foreign investment is withdrawing from China."
He said the withdrawal of capital has only been seen in some specific
industries, such as the heavy chemical industry.
However, more foreign investors are seeking long-term ventures in China as
part of their growth strategies.
Many foreign companies, in particular multinational ones, are moving research
and development (R&D) centres to the country rather than solely using China
as a "manufacturing base."
The UN's trade and development report said that there had been over 700
foreign research and development labs built in China since 1993 when Motorola
constructed their R&D centre.
Liu said that China should diversify its strategies in order to encourage and
maintain the flow of investment.
He proposed that local governments should prioritize the quality of foreign
investment as opposed to focusing only on the value of the investment.
They should encourage capital injections into high-technology industries in
order to help upgrade the industrial structure of a region.
However,"on the other hand, they should discourage high energy consuming and
polluting projects," he said.
(China Daily 12/15/2005 page9)
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