| Foreigners trade rights improved
(07/24/2001) (China Daily)
The government's decision last week to relax its control over
foreign-invested companies' import and export rights is a key way to boost slack export
growth this year, experts said.
The Ministry of Foreign Trade and Economic Co-operation
(MOFTEC) will now allow foreign-invested manufacturing companies to export any
non-monopolized products not under quota or licence management, regardless of who made the
products, according to a notice last week.
Although MOFTEC also ruled that these companies must export
at least US$10 million each year and must not have broken laws and rules on taxation,
foreign exchange and foreign trade in the last two years, experts said the measure is
extensive and could have considerable impact on China's export growth this year.
"Manufacture companies are the pillar force in
foreign-invested companies' export and the threshold of US$10 million export each year is
not very high for them,'' said Zhang Yaxiong, a researcher with the State Information
Centre.
He said the measure is a big step towards relaxing government
control over trading rights.
"This could enable foreign-invested companies to make
full use of their sales networks and channels abroad to boost China's exports,'' said Long
Guoqiang, a researcher with the Development Research Centre under the State Council.
China's export growth is expected to slow dramatically from
last year's 28 per cent increase due to weak external demand and last year's particularly
large increase.
Some economists say there could be no growth year-on-year for
2001.
But the others say it could still up to 8 per cent from last
year if the government adopts more trade liberalization measures like this one.
Foreign-invested companies accounted for half of China's
total exports in the first six months of the year. Their export volume increased 16.9 per
cent in that period to US$62.3 billion, while the overall increase for China was 8.8 per
cent.
"China's overall export growth could accelerate by a
half of a percentage point for every 1 percentage point of extra growth by
foreign-invested companies' export,'' Long said.
MOFTEC said the measure was taken to prepare China for its
pending entry into the World Trade Organization (WTO).
China has promised to let all companies conduct foreign trade
business within three years of WTO accession, widely expected by the end of the year.
(China Daily by Meng Yan)
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