China will encourage private investment in its information industry
with capital from home and abroad, a senior finance official said
Wednesday at the just-concluded infoDev Symposium 2002 in
Chongqing.
Chinese Vice-Minister of Finance Jin Liqun said efforts were being
made to optimize the sector's investment climate including
clarifying property rights and improving the legal and
administrative environment.
Brian Zhang, general manager of the US-based Walden International,
said as China boasted abundant human resources and a relatively
good manufacturing industry, its information industry had huge
development potential.
To
date, many heavyweight multinationals specializing in information
technology including Microsoft, Siemens and Philips have revealed
their ambitions for a bigger presence in China by either expanding
their production scale or strengthening marketing and
distribution.
Delegates at the symposium in the southwest China municipality said
they believed the introduction of private capital would accelerate
the sector's development.
Bruno Lanvin, manager of the Information for Development (infoDev)
of the World Bank Group, said, "It is very common in western
countries for private enterprises to invest in the industry of
information and communication technologies."
Given China's central and local governments were ready to make
preferential policies, the process would be much easier and China
would benefit a lot by encouraging private enterprises to do so, he
said.
"The World Bank Group takes a positive attitude to China's
decision. We plan to carry out more projects in China in this
field," he said.
(People's Daily December 12, 2002)
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