China's rapid economic
growth in recent years has brought more opportunities to foreign
investors and boosted global economic development, a Chinese
commerce official said Wednesday.
Foreign investors have remitted US$57.94 billion in
profit from China to their home countries and elsewhere in the
world since China joined the World Trade Organization (WTO) five
years ago, said Yi Xiaozhun, vice minister of Commerce.
China imported products to
the value of US$2.4 trillion during the same period, Yi told an
international symposium on the fifth anniversary of China's
accession to the WTO, held in Shanghai.
"The two figures show that China's fast economic
growth since its entry into the WTO has brought more opportunities
to foreign investors and has been a factor in boosting global
economic growth," Yi said.
According to Ministry of Commerce figures, 71 foreign
banks had set up 214 agencies in China by the end of June this year
and they can conduct Renminbi business in 25 Chinese
cities.
China has approved 23
Sino-foreign joint fund management companies and seven Sino-foreign
joint securities ventures, as well as seven foreign auto financing
firms and three financing firms under foreign corporate
conglomerates.
China had 82 insurance
companies by the end of last year, 41 of which are foreign
subsidiaries, the ministry figures show.
China had approved 1,341
foreign-funded commercial businesses by the end of last year, which
opened 5,657 stores across the country. Foreign-funded chain stores
make up one quarter of China's total supermarkets.
Liu said about two-thirds of China's imports in the
last five years have come from developing countries in Asia and
Africa, contributing significantly to the economic development in
those countries.
According to World Bank figures, China has contributed
an average of 13 percent to global economic growth every year since
its entry into the WTO five years ago.
(Xinhua News Agency September 7, 2006)
|