Foreign investment flows into China shrink 19.9% in Jan-Feb
FOREIGN investment flows into China shrank 19.9 per cent in January-to-February period from a year earlier to 215.1 billion yuan (S$40.1 billion), data from the commerce ministry showed on Friday (Mar 22), even as the government gears up to woo foreign firms.
China’s Cabinet on Tuesday unveiled new steps to arrest a slowdown in foreign investment, including expanding market access and relaxing some rules.
Overseas firms have turned sour on China since it enacted ultra-strict Covid curbs during the pandemic then suddenly abandoned them in late 2022, with concerns over the business environment, a shaky economic recovery and rising geopolitical tensions with the West weighing on confidence.
A series of prolonged regulatory crackdowns on sectors from technology to education have also rattled domestic and foreign investors, adding to unease over policy transparency in China.
US Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo said last year that American businesses had told her that China was becoming “uninvestible”.
In 2023, foreign direct investment into China shank 8 per cent year on year.
GET BT IN YOUR INBOX DAILY
Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox.
Of the foreign investment in the first two months, 71.44 billion yuan, or a third of the total, went into China’s high-tech industries, including high-tech manufacturing, the ministry said.
Foreign investment in China’s construction sector rose 43.6 per cent year on year, while investment in wholesale and retail industries grew 14.5 per cent, it added. REUTERS
KEYWORDS IN THIS ARTICLE
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
Global
China’s factory activity grows at slower pace in April
Binance and CZ’s fortunes are set to grow, jail or no jail
Samsung says Q1 operating profits soar nearly tenfold on-year
China’s top airlines improve balance sheet in Q1; outlook positive for May Day
China’s BYD shows effects of price war with weaker first-quarter earnings
Red Cross finances ‘stabilised’, new chief says