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MAPI: China’s Economic Reforms Offer Both Challenges And Opportunities

Despite being comprehensive and ambitious, China’s new economic reform agenda is criticized for being vague and not overwhelmingly innovative. According to a new report, however, what is encouraging this time is that China’s leaders have demonstrated a stronger will to ensure successful implementation.

ARLINGTON, Va. -- Despite being comprehensive and ambitious, China’s new economic reform agenda is criticized for being vague and not overwhelmingly innovative. According to a new Manufacturers Alliance for Productivity and Innovation (MAPI) report, however, what is encouraging this time is that China’s leaders have demonstrated a stronger will to ensure successful implementation.

In China’s Economic Reform Proposals Have Strategic Implications for Multinationals, Economist Yingying Xu, Ph.D., notes that China’s new leaders, including President Xi, recently revealed their economic reform agenda for the coming decade. Proposals cover the financial system, fiscal and tax policy, state-owned enterprises (SOEs), urbanization, and inward/outward foreign investment. Xu concludes the upcoming changes present both opportunities and challenges for foreign companies operating in China.

“Rebalancing and structural reform will be China’s most fundamental challenges over the coming decade,” she said. “The preferential treatment enjoyed by foreign businesses in the past in exchange for China’s top-line growth target will no longer be aligned with the country’s macro policy priorities. The pendulum may swing in the other direction and foreign companies could be under more scrutiny.”

The report predicts that success for foreign firms will increasingly depend upon being able to articulate a clear and compelling local value proposition and creating more sophisticated levels of engagement with different levels of government and local firms.

“China’s need for modernization in multiple sectors such as healthcare, banking, finance, education, and environmental protection, will open new opportunities for foreign companies,” Xu concluded. “However, these companies will need to have sufficient patience, persistence, and strong stomachs for operating with considerable ambiguity in governmental guidelines and policies.”

The Manufacturers Alliance for Productivity and Innovation (MAPI), founded in 1933, contributes to the competitiveness of U.S. manufacturing by providing economic research, professional development, and an independent, expert source of manufacturing information. For more information, visit www.mapi.net

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