China Daily/Xinhua
Web Editor: liuranran
China's investments into members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations will increase greatly in the long term, a result in part of Chinese companies' greater determination to invest abroad, said Gao Hucheng, vice-minister of commerce.
Folk dancers at the 8th China-ASEAN Expo, held
in Nanning, capital of Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region, in October,
2011. The annual expo was initiated by Premier Wen Jiabao in 2003 as a
platform to promote trade ties and good-neighborly relations. During the
first half of the year, Chinese companies invested as much as $1.49
billion in ASEAN, up by 34.3 percent year-on-year. [Photo: Xinhua]
China's investments into members of the Association of Southeast
Asian Nations will increase greatly in the long term, a result in part
of Chinese companies' greater determination to invest abroad, said Gao
Hucheng, vice-minister of commerce, on Friday.
"Greater cooperation on investment will lead to mutual benefits for
China and ASEAN," Gao said during a news briefing at the 9th China-ASEAN
Expo and the 9th China-ASEAN Business and Investment Summit.
Gao said there is a "possibility that some individual Chinese
projects could be affected by the world economic situation and foreign
governments' policies and markets for some definite period of time".
Even so, he said, the effects will be "temporary" and will not
overshadow China's investments in ASEAN.
Some ASEAN countries, including the Philippines and Vietnam, have
entered into disputes concerning the sovereignty over islands in the
South China Sea. The disagreements could affect economic and trade
relations between China and ASEAN, experts said.
During the first half of the year, Chinese companies invested up to
$1.49 billion in ASEAN, up by 34.3 percent from a year earlier,
according to the Ministry of Commerce.
By the end of June, China's cumulative investment in the region
reached $18.8 billion, of which "more than 70 percent" was made during
the past four years, Gao said.
"From the long-term perspective, we are confident that China's
investments in ASEAN will increase quickly, in light of the trust" that
exists between the two sides and the ways in which their economies
strongly complement each other, Gao said.
China and ASEAN signed the Framework Agreement on Comprehensive
Economic Cooperation in November 2002, marking the beginning of the
China-ASEAN free trade agreement.
The pact called on China and ASEAN to remove restrictions that limit their investments into each other.
There are vast opportunities for the two sides to cooperate more on
transport, tourism, power, machinery, household appliances, textiles and
mining, Gao said.
China and ASEAN are "discussing or moving toward establishing a
series of large cooperative projects in infrastructure, agriculture,
manufacturing and processing".
As part of its 12th Five-Year Plan (2011-2015), the Chinese
government is encouraging domestic companies of all types to invest
abroad through mergers and acquisitions.
In 2011, China's outbound direct investment increased by 1.8 percent
year-on-year to $60 billion. And the first half of this year has seen it
rise by 48.2 percent year-on-year to $35.42 billion.
Also in the first half, countries and regions including Hong Kong,
ASEAN, the United States and Russia witnessed the amount of capital they
receive from China increase by double-digit percentages.
"Indonesia, Thailand and Cambodia led the way in the ASEAN region" in absorbing Chinese investment, Gao said.
Gao attributed the increase to Chinese companies' greater ability to
compete in capital, technology, design and management, the
"comprehensive policy system" established by the Chinese government,
"strong complementary areas" and the "dynamism of Southeast Asian
economies".
While Chinese ODI is expected to increase in the years ahead,
emerging markets in the ASEAN region, Africa and Latin America will be
attractive to Chinese companies, Chinese experts and officials said.
By 2011, China had been the largest trade partner for ASEAN for three
consecutive years, and ASEAN has overtaken Japan to become the third-
largest trade partner of China. China is also the fourth-largest export
market for ASEAN, and its third-largest source of imports.
Meanwhile, ASEAN's direct investments into China have been
increasing. In 2002, the region invested $3.26 billion in China, and the
amount increased to $7 billion in 2011.
Chinese financial institutions have been adopting financing
conveniences to encourage investment between China and ASEAN members.
In 2009, the Chinese government announced it would provide $15
billion in loans to ASEAN nations in the next three to five years. Last
year, the country said it would add $10 billion to that total.
By Ding Qingfen
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