A bullet train runs in Qionghai city, South China's Hainan province, Jan 18, 2018. [Photo/Xinhua]
Deleveraging of State-owned firms high on agenda, top regulator says
China will take further measures to support private investment as the country tries to stabilize growth while encouraging deleveraging, especially within State-owned enterprises, according to the nation's top economic regulator.
Analysts said China may also continue to cut taxes for enterprises to boost private investment while further lowering corporate debt and borrowing levels to control financial risks in the coming months.
Measures include easing market access for private investors, eliminating unreasonable restrictions for private investors entering certain industries, encouraging financial institutions to provide better credit terms, strengthening protection of property rights and recommending investment in projects with stable profit prospects to private enterprises, Yan Pengcheng, spokesman of the National Development and Reform Commission, said on Thursday.
The government will simplify regulatory procedures and support investment through promoting public-private partnership programs, he said.
In the January-July period, private investment rose 8.8 percent year-on-year, 1.9 percentage points higher from the growth registered a year ago.
"China's private investment has picked up after a slew of measures have taken effect," said Han Zhifeng, deputy head of the NDRC's investment department.
A worker works in a textile enterprise in Haizhou district of Lianyungang city, East China's Jiangsu province, Jan 18, 2018. [Photo/Xinhua]
Private investment contributes around 60 percent of China's GDP and accounts for more than 80 percent of total investment in the manufacturing sector, the commission said.
"Private investment is expected to remain stable as local governments are expected to roll out more measures to encourage private investment through promoting projects with preferential policies and appealing returns," he said.
Some preferential measures to boost the private sector have been rolled out at local levels. The Development and Reform Bureau of Henan province has recommended a total of 11 infrastructure projects valued at 15.66 billion yuan ($2.30 billion) to private enterprises.
Li Chao, an analyst at Huatai Securities, said he expected more tax cuts to be rolled out in the coming months, and he was upbeat about the continuing rebound of private investment growth in industries related to the internet and consumption.
China has taken measures to boost the private sector as it strengthens efforts to cut leverage levels to further reduce risks to the economy, especially the heavily indebted State sector.
"We expect top policymakers to make greater-than-expected efforts to promote the deleveraging campaign," Zhou Yue, an analyst at Soochow Securities, said in a report.
The government plans to issue a new guideline this month to better facilitate State-owned enterprises to further cut leverage levels, according to people familiar with the matter.