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State-owned enterprises
ChinaPolitics

China set to pick new head for state-owned enterprise regulator amid growing calls for reform

  • Shake-up at the top of State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission comes as US trade war increases pressure to overhaul sector

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Xiao Yaqing, the outgoing chairman of the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission. Photo: Simon Song
He Huifengin Guangdong

The regulator for China’s state-owned enterprises is to get a new leader amid growing calls for reform from both home and abroad.

China has sought to slim down its state sector with the aim of creating a smaller number of “world-class” firms capable of competing internationally, but analysts say the effort to create more flexible management and ownership structures has put the long-term future of the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission (Sasac) in doubt.

Xiao Yaqing, Sasac’s outgoing chief, has been appointed head of the country’s market regulation administration, state media reported on Saturday.

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He will succeed Zhang Mao, who is retiring at the age of 65.

Beijing has yet to announce Xiao’s successor.

Chinese news outlet Caixin reported that Sasac’s Communist Party committee chief Hao Peng is now in charge of the agency’s operations.

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