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China’s door to open wider, Premier Li tells foreign companies

Zhao Yinan
Updated: Sep 16,2014 9:38 AM     China Daily

Premier Li Keqiang greets foreign representatives during the China Quality Conference at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, Sept 15, 2014.[Photo/Feng Yongbin / China Daily]

Premier Li Keqiang assured Western companies on Sept 15 that China welcomes overseas firms competing in China’s market under the principle of fairness.

His comments come as a string of antitrust investigations has prompted speculation that China no longer welcomes Western investors.

“China’s door will only open wider. We are committed to taking our opening-up policy to a higher level and we advocate trade liberalization,” Li said at the China Quality Conference, attended by dozens of foreign corporate leaders and foreign experts on quality management.

The premier told overseas investors that China welcomes foreign companies competing in its market and mutually benefiting in collaboration with Chinese counterparts.

“We hope your collaboration will not only be in research, production and sales, but also in quality management. Through working with Western counterparts, Chinese manufacturers can also improve the quality of their products,” Li said.

It is the second time in less than a week that Li has emphasized the consistency of China’s opening-up policy. On Sept 10, at the World Economic Forum in Tianjin, he dismissed the concerns of foreign corporate leaders that China’s antimonopoly probes are targeting foreign companies and reassured them that China’s door will never be closed.

China’s antitrust authorities have conducted probes since July. Most major global automakers, including General Motors, BMW, the Audi division of FAW-Volkswagen, Daimler’s Mercedes-Benz, Tata Motors’ Jaguar Land Rover, Fiat Chrysler, Toyota and Honda, have been the subject of the probes.

Twelve Japanese auto suppliers were fined a total of 1.24 billion yuan ($202 million) by the National Development and Reform Commission for manipulating prices.

The European Union Chamber of Commerce in China said in August that although the antitrust law is “beneficial for developing a healthy market economy in China”, the chamber had a number of concerns about the recent moves.

In his speech on Sept 15, Li also promised to continue expanding imports and to give more foreign companies access to China’s service industry.

China’s imports in August continued to contract and stood at $159 billion, a year-on-year decline of 2.4 percent, compared with a 1.6 percent drop in July and a market expectation of a 3 percent rise.

For the first eight months, imports rose by 0.6 percent to $1.28 trillion, while exports gained by 3.8 percent.