China Opens Further to on Foreign Investment to Finance
and Telecom Revive Spending
China will further open its economic borders to investors
from abroad in a move intended to counter sliding confidence in the outlook for
the world’s second-largest economy.
The nation will continue opening its education, finance,
culture and manufacturing sectors to foreign investors, the vice minister of commerce
Wang Shouwen said at a briefing in Beijing on Tuesday.
Measures will focus on boosting investment in inland, western regions, Wang said.
Foreign capital utilized by the country declined by
1.6 percent in July. Fueled China’s economic boom by building factories, shops and
infrastructure in the nation since 1978, some lucrative service sectors such as
finance and telecommunications are largely closed to them.
China also is considering using a nationwide “negative
list” to relax those regulations, which means only industries listed are closed
to investors from overseas. The negative list is now applied only in free-trade
zones, while other areas can limit all sectors that aren’t specifically cleared.
As foreign investment growth in China has slowed, the
nation’s outbound investment has surged. Chinese investment overseas is mainly through
mergers and acquisitions.