The Chinese Government will further encourage foreign investment in
the country's high-tech and logistics industries and in
infrastructure construction, with preferential policies for
projects in the hinterlands, a senior foreign trade official noted
yesterday.
Foreign businesses are welcome to invest in industries like
integrated circuit production and software development and to set
up research and development institutions, said Hu Jingyan, director
of the Foreign Investment Administration Department under the
Ministry of Foreign Trade and Economic Cooperation (MOFTEC).
China needs foreign direct investment (FDI) to "play a key role" in
introducing new technologies to the country's high-tech industries,
instead of focusing only on labor-intensive sectors, Hu said.
Hu
made the remarks at the Second Annual Organization for Economic
Cooperation and Development (OECD) Global Forum on International
Investment held yesterday in Shanghai.
The forum, with the theme -- "Attracting FDI for Development" --
drew more than 160 high-level officials from OECD and other
multilateral institutions like the World Bank, the International
Monetary Fund and the World Trade Organization.
Besides high-tech industries, China plans to inject foreign
investment into its relatively backward logistics sector so as to
meet the demands of its overall economic development.
Overseas businesses are encouraged to establish procurement and
distribution centers in China, as well as to open chain-stores,
according to Hu.
"We need to learn advanced management and marketing techniques from
those multinational sourcing giants," said Hu.
As
for the country's hinterlands, FDI can make a positive contribution
to local infrastructure construction of transportation,
telecommunications and energy supply networks.
(China Daily December 6, 2002)
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