NEWSGD.COM
Home | About Us | Contact Us | Site Map | Chinese
News | Biz | Pearl River Delta | Enjoy Life | Culture | Travelling | Pics | Cities & Towns | Gov Info | Specials
Home> NewsBrief>Guangdong1
Flight of capital denied by foreign investors
Latest Updated at 2008-February-26 10:59:45
Related News
Asian Games to Welcome Foreign Investment
Governor invited Advisors to extend investment and cooperation in Guangdong
China issues new guide for foreign investment
CITIC bidding for stake in US investment bank
Annual investment in Guangdong province's infrastructure exceeeds 100 billion RMB
China's state forex investment company debuts
Foreign investment in tertiary industry surged
Guangdong1
Flight of capital denied by foreign investors
[GD] Woman suspected to have bird flu died
3 dead in south China school killing
Caution: cold again in Guangzhou

Foreign investors remain confident on China and reports in some sections of the media about a large number of enterprises leaving and factories being closed down in the Pearl River Delta are untrue, say trade officials.

"The number of foreign-invested enterprises in Guangdong is still increasing steadily," said a trade official from the South Chinese province.

In 2007, 244 foreign-invested enterprises moved out of Guangdong, and 28 made plans to leave, according to the trade department of the provincial government. The same year, the province approved over 9,000 foreign-invested projects with a contract value of nearly $40 billion. The foreign direct investment the province drew that year was $17.1 billion, up 18 percent year-on-year.

The total number of registered foreign enterprises was 66,789, 6.62 percent more than the previous year, according to the department of foreign trade and economic cooperation of Guangdong province.

The trade official, who did not want to be named, however, said some enterprises are indeed leaving the province. Over 70 percent of these are small and medium-sized companies with investment of under $1 million, and over 60 percent of them are in the labor-intensive manufacturing business such as clothes, shoes, plastic and toys.

Adjustments in economic policies along with rising costs have caused enterprises with narrow profit margins to close down, the official said.

In a move to cut the huge trade surplus, which was up by nearly 50 percent to $262 billion in 2007, the government has, since the first half of last year, cut export tax rebates in some manufacturing sectors. Rising labor costs have also added to the enterprises' woes.

The appreciating yuan, which went up by 6.9 percent in 2006, put manufacturing enterprises in the region - most of which are at the lowest end of the global manufacturing value chain - in an even more difficult position.

The local government has also closed some highly polluting and energy-intensive enterprises to protect the environment and upgrade local industry.

"It is normal for some less competitive enterprises to move," said the trade official, who added the province needs to move out some low value-added, labor-intensive enterprises, while encouraging more high-end manufacturing and modern service enterprises to move in.

"If some companies move to other parts of the world, that's only part of their global strategy for diversification and has nothing to do with their policies in China," said Brenda Lei Foster, president of the American Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai.

"Costs are an issue but that's not what is driving companies out," Foster said.

Editor: Yan

By: Source: China Daily Website

The 102nd Canton Fair unveils new logo

Man. United stars arrive in Guangzhou

[Group Photo]The Zhuxian Cave in Zhuhai

Hu attends opening ceremony of Shenzhen Bay Port

Pirates of the Caribbean 3 premieres in China
This site contains material from other media for content enrichment purpose only.
The Southcn.com website do not endorse such content and do not bear the joint responsibility of their copyright infringement.
The views expressed in written material posted to the bulletin boards of Southcn.com are those of the authors and/or publishers. The Southcn.com website does not endorse information products posted by organizations and individuals here. The originators of these information products are solely responsible for their content.
For copyright infringement issues, you shall contact Southcn.com within thirty (30) days. Email: falv@southcn.com
If you find any error in this page, please drag your mouse to mark the text with error, then press "CTRL" and "ENTER", to inform us. Thanks for your help!
Home  |  About Us  |   Contact Us  |  Site Map  |  Chinese
©2005 WWW.NEWSGD.COM. All rights reserved.registered number 020074 Terms of Use | Advertise | ICP Certificate No.B2-20050252
Guangdong Gov Link
Guangdong Gov Brief
State Structure
Guangdong in Brief
Laws & Regulations
Exchange Rate
Guangdong Guide
   
Museum Museum
University University
Eat Eat
Shopping Duting
Night Life Night Life
Weather Weather
Phone No. Phone Num
Consulate Consulate
Airport Airport
Travel Tips Tours Tips