Chinese Economics Thread

ahojunk

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(Xinhua) Updated: 2016-07-31 08:10


BEIJING - The restructuring plan for two major steel companies will be a touchstone for China's state-owned enterprise (SOE) reform.

Last month, Wuhan Iron and Steel and Shanghai-based Baosteel said they were planning for "strategic restructuring." If completed, the new behemoth will be the largest steel producer in China with annual output reaching at least 60 million tonnes a year.

The plan was announced as China's steel industry has suffered heavy losses due to overcapacity amid sagging global demand.

In 2015, more than half of China's steel companies reported losses totaling 64.53 billion yuan (9.78 billion U.S. dollars), the China Iron and Steel Association estimated.

Wuhan Iron and Steel reported a loss of 7.52 billion yuan. Baosteel's profits shrank by more than 80 percent from a year ago to its lowest level in 18 years.

Ma Guoqiang, Board chairman of Wuhan Iron and Steel, said restructuring is a must if China wants to cut excess steel capacity, improve efficiency and create globally competitive firms.

The steel sector was once a profit engine for China's economy as the infrastructure investment boom bolstered demand for commodities such as steel and cement.

As the economy cools, the production glut has been exacerbated.

Li Jin, deputy head of the China Enterprise Reform and Development Society, observed the restructuring will cut excess capacity of the two steel companies, and encourage them to use their complementary advantages to improve overall competitiveness.

The restructuring plan also marks a key part of the country's SOE reform, as the government has identified it as an essential step in the structural transformation of China's economy.

Over the last three decades, SOEs have underpinned China's emergence as a global manufacturing powerhouse and came to dominate key strategic sectors.

However, the traditional single-sided markets are now being disrupted by new technology firms and private companies, which has underlined the weaknesses of SOEs, such as inefficiency and high operational costs.

Chinese authorities unveiled a new chapter of SOE reform early this year, putting the focus of reform on mega-mergers of state groups in order to boost competitiveness through economies of scale.

After approval by the State Council, China International Travel Service Group Corporation is now a wholly owned subsidiary of the China National Travel Service (HK) Group Corporation.

The country has seen a mega-merger between its two largest train makers, CNR Corp. Ltd. and CSR Corp. Ltd. The government has also approved a merger between China Metallurgical Group and China Minmetals Corporation, both of which are Fortune 500 companies, and created the world's fourth-largest container shipper through the merger of China Ocean Shipping Group and China Shipping (Group) Company.

However, mega-mergers do not necessarily lead to good restructuring, Ma Guoqiang said, adding that realignment without true restructuring would not sort out the overcapacity problem.

Li Jin observed the size, complexity, and organizational culture of SOEs will also complicate implementation of reform.
 

ahho

Junior Member
Migrant worker coming home to start business
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With better access to technology (internet and smartphone is a huge one) and second and third tier cities booming across China, a lot of migrant worker with skills an knowledge (even local workers) are starting their own business. They are catching up fast.

What the coastal cities (like Guanzhou and Shenzhen) advantage they still have is the most up to date technologies, port and existing infrastructure that is still unmatched by lesser developed region. Also, the cost of operation in third tier and second tier near coastal cities are still quite cheap
 

ahojunk

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(Xinhua)Updated: 2016-08-01 08:00

BEIJING - Chinese online-to-offline (O2O) giant Meituan & Dazhongdianping has announced it will set up a college to train e-commerce personnel.

The college, named Internet Plus University (IPU), is the first of its kind in the e-commerce sector to focus on developing business models, technology and skills to promote China's "Internet Plus" strategy.

It will integrate the company's training departments to establish several schools to train internal staff and business partners on upgrading e-commerce, the company announced Saturday evening.

E-commerce platforms should not only focus on marketing and transactions, but also expand to other upstream services, according to Wang Xing, CEO of the company, noting that the essence of China's "Internet Plus" strategy is improving efficiency and reducing costs across all sectors by integrating the Internet with more industries.

Formed by the merger of group-buying platform meituan.com and review service dazhongdianping.com in October 2015, Meituan & Dazhongdianping offers a range of O2O services, from food delivery to movie tickets.

The company has established partnerships with about 4.32 million vendors. Including their separate pre-merger customer counts, the company boasted about 220 million active customers in the last 12 months, with about 180 million using its mobile app to order services, according to an early statement.

China's online retail volume reached 2.24 trillion yuan ($335.3 billion) in the first half of 2016, up 28.2 percent year on year, data of the National Bureau of Statistics showed.
 

ahojunk

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Xinhua, August 1, 2016

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A bullet train runs on a viaduct in Bishan County, southwest China's Chongqing Municipality on Dec. 26, 2015. [Photo/Xinhua]

There have been more than 5 billion passenger trips on China's world-renowned bullet trains in eight years, according to new data from the national rail operator.

Since its debut in 2008, China's high-speed railway has seen an average annual growth of over 30 percent in passenger trips, the China Railway Corporation said on Thursday, the day after China announced plans to double its length of HSR by 2025.

In 2015 alone, over 1.1 billion trips were made on bullet trains in China, representing more than 45 percent of the country's total railway passenger delivery.

For a nation as large and populous as China, the HSR is charged with overcoming the "bottleneck" in the development of the railway, which is vital for mass transportation, said transportation expert Gu Zhongyuan.

Some 4,200 bullet trains operate on the HSR every day, facilitating over 4 million passenger trips, according to an employee with the official train ticketing website 12306.com.

One of the countless people to benefit is Wang Liya, a mother of two who lives in Guiyang, southwest China's Guizhou province, which used to be a 21-hour train trip away from her husband and the children's father's workplace of Guangzhou in south China's Guangdong province.

"It's now much more convenient to visit their dad," said Wang of a high-speed train service launched in late 2014 that cut the journey down to only four hours, enabling far more frequent family reunions.

There are many other reasons behind the stellar growth in passenger trips besides the speed, including accessibility, safety and punctuality, all of which have enabled the CRC to find more and more customers worldwide.

China's 19,000 km of high-speed track represents 60 percent of the world's total. It is part of a domestic network of more than 120,000 km of track, which now connect almost all the provincial capital cities and cities with over 500,000 residents.

"China is the world's largest HSR builder and operator, the best all-rounder in technical know-how and the most experienced manager," said Sun Zhang, a professor at Shanghai's Tongji University.

In July, the National Development and Reform Commission said that China would aim to have 38,000 km of HSR by 2025.

By 2020, one-fifth of the country's 150,000-km railway network will be HSR, connecting over 80 percent of major cities nationwide, said the NDRC.

The race to build is being done with no compromise in terms of safety. China's rail network, on which the world's largest fleet of bullet trains operates, has the world's best safety record, according to data compiled by the International Union of Railways and the European Railway Agency.

Besides, Chinese high-speed trains score high in punctuality - 98.8 percent for departure and 95.4 percent for arrival at the final destination in 2015.

"Bullet trains are enabling the Chinese people to significantly expand their circle of life and travel, which is changing their lifestyle," said Shi Peihua, a professor at Beijing Jiaotong University.

The construction and operation of high-speed railways is also driving industries including metallurgy, machinery and electricity.

"The high-speed railway is a powerful engine propelling China's economic and social development," Sun said.
 

ahojunk

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China Daily, August 2, 2016

State-owned Qingdao West Coast Development Group Co Ltd has bought Media Chinese International Ltd's subsidiary, the owner of Ming Pao Weekly in Hong Kong, for HK$498 million (US$64.2 million), in the latest step by mainland companies into the overseas media market.

Media Chinese International said on Monday in a statement that its subsidiary, One Media Group Ltd, sold 73.01 percent of its shares and media business including its Hong Kong publication, Ming Pao Weekly, and related digital business to Qingdao West Coast Holdings (International).

The company is the investment arm of Qingdao West Coast Development Group, set up in 2012 by the Qingdao government, with registered capital of 10 billion yuan.

It is in charge of the development and construction work of West Coast New Area, Qingdao's economic and technological development zone.

Shares of Media Chinese International, which resumed trading on Monday afternoon in Hong Kong, rose 14.05 percent to HK$1.38 at the close.

Media Chinese International, a leading Chinese language media platform, has five well-established Chinese language newspapers, including Ming Pao Daily News, one of the most influential and credible newspapers in Hong Kong.

Founded in November 1968 by Ming Pao Daily News, Ming Pao Weekly is a lifestyle and entertainment magazine targeted at middle-class readers in Hong Kong. It contents cover entertainment news, film, tourism, fashion trends and culture.

Ming Pao Weekly is also One Media Group's main turnover contributing business for the Hong Kong segment.

It's not the first time a mainland company has purchased a Hong Kong media group.

Last December, internet giant Alibaba Group Holding Ltd spent HK$2.06 billion to acquire the media assets of SCMP Group, including the South China Morning Post.

Hong Kong-based analysts said it is probably another step in Alibaba's quest to build a media empire.

"It is a trend for mainland companies to invest in the Hong Kong media industry," said Victor Fung Keung, principal lecturer at the Communication School of Hong Kong Baptist University.

"In the next 10 years, 80 percent of local media will be supported by capital from the mainland," he said.

"It is a win-win deal," he explained, saying that mainland companies can learn how to operate offshore media, preparing them for the further acquisition of media companies in other places.
 

ahojunk

Senior Member
Both Uber and Didi are killing one another in China. So far, neither Uber nor Didi have seen profits from their investments.

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by Ben Frederick@mp_benfred, Yesterday, 9:56 AM

Ride-sharing app Uber has reportedly merged its China business with Didi Chixung, Uber’s main rival in China. The merger will result in the creation of a $35 billion company, and Uber will receive a $1 billion investment.

Uber China investors will receive a 20% stake of the new company.

“As an entrepreneur, I’ve learned that being successful is about listening to your head, as well as following your heart,” Travis Kalanick, CEO of Uber, wrote in a blog post reported byBloomberg.

“Uber and Didi Chuxing are investing billions of dollars in China, and both companies have yet to turn a profit there. Getting to profitability is the only way to build a sustainable business that can best serve Chinese riders, drivers and cities over the long term.”

Uber has sunk more than $2 billion in China to little effect, and neither it nor Didi have seen profits from their investments in the country. China has only recently passed a law legalizing ride-sharing businesses, which it previously suppressed. will allow for expansion of the businesses.

The U.S.-based company is reportedly planning to spend $500 million on a global mapping project, which will wean its dependence on Google Maps. This will also make it more accurate in countries where there is a high volume of passengers, but less accurate maps.

Uber appears to be consolidating its resources as it makes vertical moves toward driverless cars and proprietary mapping tech.
 

ahojunk

Senior Member
Good news for tourism, and hopefully it helps those in the rural regions.
There are lots of beautiful places in the rural and less developed areas of China.

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2016-08-02 07:51:16 | CRIENGLISH.com | Web Editor: Huang Yue

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A Tibetan village in the Zhagana region in Diebu County of Gannan Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture in Gansu Province. Zhagana is a mountainous region on the northeastern rim of the Tibetan Plateau, with an average altitude of 3,500 meters. The region has a unique cultural and natural landscape featuring Tibetan-style villages, primitive forests and mountains formed during the quatenary glaciation. [Photo: China.org.cn]


New figures show China's tourism industry raked in 2.25 trillion yuan, or close to 350-billion US dollars in revenue in revenue through the first half of this year.

This is up nearly 12.5-percent year-on-year.

National Tourism Administration stats show domestic tourists made 2.24 billion trips in the first half, an increase of 10.5 percent.

Inbound and outbound trips also increased by over 4-percent to around 127 million.

China's tourism industry accounted for close to 11-percent of China's overall GDP last year.

It also created over 10-percent of the new jobs across the country.

Tourism industry officials expect government spending on the sector to triple by 2020.

Government spending increased by over 40-percent last year to around 1-trillion yuan.
 

Hendrik_2000

Lieutenant General
Tourism is great way to revitalize China long neglected inland province and alleviate poverty.

I hope they restore old walled city like Pingyao
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made by NHK

Here China can learn from Japan yep I said it . When one travel through Japanese countryside, you can see how modern is the country side, as well as advance agriculture and tourism.

It is ironic that so called Japanese culture and architecture is based on Chinese culture. But due to long peace under Tokugawa and constant war in mainland China, seem like the Japanese preserve their "Japanese culture" better than China.

I can think of wooden temple and palace that so common in Tang China but don't exist anymore in China.
 

ahojunk

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2016-08-02 14:48 | Ecns.cn |Editor: Mo Hong'e

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A high-speed railway line in China. (Photo/Ceweekly.cn)

(ECNS) -- The expanded high-speed train network in China has started to make a profit in the populated east, but services running through the vast central and western regions are still far from breaking even.

In 2015,six high-speed rail lines made a profit, with the Beijing-Shanghai route topping the list at a net profit of 6.58 billion yuan ($990 million), said China Economic Weekly on Tuesday, citing a report from the national railway authority.

The six profitable lines all connect mega cities in populated areas with strong economies such as Beijing, Tianjin, Shanghai, Hangzhou, Ningbo, Shenzhen and Guangzhou. Except for the Beijing-Tianjin high speed railway, the other five lines have managed to turn from deficit to profit within five years of operations.

The report showed the Beijing-Shanghai high-speed train that began working in 2011 almost broke even in 2014 due to its large passenger volume. Daily numbers reached 290,000, generating revenues of 30 billion yuan from ticket sales that year.

Two other high-speed trains, both in Yangtze River Delta, also managed to make a profit last year. The Shanghai-Ningbo rail had a net profit of 641 million yuan while the Ningbo-Hangzhou rail line earned 101 million yuan.

But in contrast to profitable railways in the east, high-speed connections in central and western regions fell far short of profitability. Many experts said performance is closely related to the population and economic strength of cities they serve.

The report said many high-speed rail lines connecting major cities in the central and western regions continue to lose money, and some are far from breaking even.

The Zhengzhou-Xi'an high-speed rail has run at a loss since it began operating in 2010, when passenger numbers failed to reach half of capacity. In 2012, the line had a loss of 1.4 billion yuan.

By the end of 2015, China's high-speed railway network had extended rapidly, with the total track reaching 19,000 kilometers, 60 percent of the world's total for high-speed rail.

China has even more ambitious plans, saying by 2020, the total track would grow to 30,000 kilometers and reach 38,000 kilometers by 2025.
 
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