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Opinion | Li Qiang sends clear message to investors: China is open for business

  • Reviewing foreign business leaders’ complaints and removing unreasonable barriers is the right approach and works to their, and China’s, long-term benefit

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Chinese Premier Li Qiang is projected on the screen as he delivers a speech at China Development Forum in Beijing on Sunday in Beijing. Photo: Kyodo

Foreign businesses in China have long complained about the lack of a level playing field and barriers that prevent them from operating unfettered in its vast market.

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Adding to that, tight controls during the pandemic and turbulent trade relations have increased pressure to diversify supply chains and led many foreign firms to doubt their level of commitment to China.

Against this backdrop, the assurances from Premier Li Qiang to foreign business leaders in Beijing is a positive development.

Li told the China Development Forum, which included the CEOs of multinationals including Apple’s Tim Cook and US insurer Chubb’s Evan Greenberg – who incidentally was co-chairman of the forum – that authorities were carefully studying issues raised frequently by businesses, such as market access and public tendering.

One thorny issue that had been on the list of major concerns for foreign businesses in China – cybersecurity checks that hampered cross-border data flows – saw restrictions eased just last Friday.

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It is important that China address concerns from foreign businesses. There was much fanfare when China entered the World Trade Organization in 2001, but for years, discussions about business and trade have regularly devolved into complaints about the country not living up to its WTO commitments.

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