BEIJING: China’s continued support for the private sector, reiterated by President Xi Jinping, is expected to fuel further growth of tech and emerging industries, while promoting private enterprises to embrace another spring and play a bigger role in the country’s economic transformation, company executives and economists said on Tuesday.
Their comments came after Xi, who is also general secretary of the Communist Party of China Central Committee and chairman of the Central Military Commission, attended a symposium on private enterprises in Beijing and delivered an important speech on Monday.
In his speech, Xi emphasized the role of private enterprises in advancing China’s broader goals in technological innovation, promoting rural vitalization and improving people’s well-being.
Xu Guanju, chairman of Transfar Group, a leading chemicals manufacturer, said in an interview with China Daily on Tuesday that while the breakthroughs made by Chinese artificial intelligence companies made them immensely proud and boosted their confidence in facing future challenges, the encouragement from China’s top leadership was even more inspiring.
“It has greatly motivated us to work together to accelerate the development of new quality productive forces in the future, and embrace the AI era,” said Xu, who attended the symposium on Monday.
The gathering saw a strong presence of companies from technology and emerging sectors, with notable names including Huawei’s Ren Zhengfei, BYD’s Wang Chuanfu, Will Semiconductor’s Yu Renrong, Unitree Robotics’ Wang Xingxing and Xiaomi’s Lei Jun.
Zhang Jun, chief economist at China Galaxy Securities, noted that some of the private enterprises that attended the symposium are not big in terms of business scale or revenue, but have strong growth potential.
“It reaffirmed private enterprises’ past breakthroughs in new quality productive forces, while highlighting the government’s determination to cultivate future industries,” Zhang said.
Observers said the participation of private enterprises from both traditional and emerging sectors showed the continuous emphasis China’s top leadership places on the role of the manufacturing industry in the Chinese economy.
Liu Yonghao, founder of New Hope Group, a leading enterprise in agricultural industrialization, told China Daily on Tuesday that technology not only flourishes in high-end manufacturing and AI sectors, but also drives innovative growth in traditional sectors such as agriculture.
“Inspired by the top leadership’s remarks, our company will capitalize on favorable policies and make efforts to propel further growth amid complex challenges,” said Liu, who also attended the symposium.
Recalling that the previous such symposium on private enterprises, which was presided over by President Xi in 2018, was followed by a three-year bull run in China’s A-share market, Zhang, from China Galaxy Securities, said that Monday’s meeting will “help enhance the confidence of market entities, dispel concerns about uncertainty and play a decisive role in stabilizing the market”.
Xu Hongcai, a renowned economist and deputy head of the financial and economic affairs committee of the National People’s Congress, said that Xi’s remarks “conveyed a clear signal that even with the changing and volatile economic and trade policies of some foreign countries, China remains focused on high-quality economic development as always”.
At Monday’s symposium, Xi said the government’s basic principles and policies concerning the development of the private economy have been incorporated into the system of socialism with Chinese characteristics and will consistently be upheld and fulfilled. “They cannot and will not be changed,” he said.
This was in line with Xi’s remarks at the 2018 symposium, during which he said the country would unswervingly encourage, support and guide the development of the nonpublic sector and support private enterprises to develop toward a broader stage.
The stance was reaffirmed at the 2022 Central Economic Work Conference, which emphasized that promoting the private sector’s growth is a “long-term strategy”, rather than a short-term measure. –The Daily Mail-China Daily news exchange item