As China's industrial upgrade gains momentum, the country will play a bigger part in stabilizing global supply chains, just as it did amid three years of COVID-19 disruptions, which will facilitate the smooth running of the world economy, global business leaders said.
Boasting a complete supply chain support system, strong logistics, a big market and favorable government policies spurring innovation, China holds great appeal for multinationals amid headwinds such as a gloomy global economic outlook, they added.
Deuk-kyu Hwang, president of Samsung Greater China, said "With a complete supply chain support system, China is well positioned to cope with global uncertainties."
As the world's largest manufacturing nation, China ranks first globally in terms of output for more than 40 percent of the world's 500 major industrial products, which has enabled the country to produce goods in urgent need globally amid the COVID pandemic, according to the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology.
Denis Depoux, global managing director of consultancy Roland Berger, said with the optimized COVID-19 containment measures, the winter of 2022-23 to a certain extent could "see a replay of the 2021 situation when China's supply chain supported the economic recovery in Europe and in the US, because of its flexibility and availability".
He said that China's supply chains have improved, as Chinese and foreign companies invested heavily in modernizing their local production systems, especially in 2021 when most of the global manufacturing sector was still badly hit by disruptions related to the pandemic.
Such an investment trend continues, with global business leaders increasingly valuing China's roles as a vast market and crucial part of global supply chains.
Caroline Wu, managing director of Maersk China, a country branch of Danish shipping and logistics services provider A.P. Moller-Maersk, said, "We will continue to invest in China, contributing to Shanghai's position as a global leading shipping and logistics center."
Progress is already evident. Last year, the actual use of foreign direct investment in China's high-tech industries surged by 28.3 percent year-on-year, faster than the overall 6.3 percent growth rate for foreign capital use, according to the Ministry of Commerce.
Meanwhile, the export value of China's technology-intensive mechanical and electrical products and high-tech goods rose to 12.8 trillion yuan ($1.9 trillion) and 6.3 trillion yuan respectively in 2021, up from 7.4 trillion yuan and 3.8 trillion yuan in 2012, according to the latest data from the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology.
Craig Allen, president of the US-China Business Council, said "China is an attractive location for supply chain integration."
China's scale motivates US companies, while the country's ecosystem is strengthened greatly by investments in infrastructure and talent, Allen said.
For more investment information in China, please contact us via susiehu@citilinkia.com.
Hotline: 86-755-82148419, Wechat: 13823131503
Above article is from China Daily