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by Staff Writers Beijing (AFP) Oct 24, 2013
Less than 30 percent of the members of a US business lobby in China say investment conditions are improving in the world's second-largest economy, a survey showed Thursday. Chinese authorities and state-run media have repeatedly targeted foreign firms in recent months, in sectors ranging from pharmaceuticals and baby formula to smartphones and coffee. The survey by the American Chamber of Commerce in China showed that only 28 percent of its members who responded believe the investment environment in the country is improving, well down from 43 percent last year. Conditions were worsening according to 19 percent, while 53 percent said they were unchanged. The group, which lobbies on behalf of more than 1,000 US companies doing business in China, attributed the declining optimism in part to new rules that were adopted in December 2011. They imposed "troubling new limitations" in some areas, the report said, citing prohibitions against foreign investment in the postal, transport and warehousing industries and additional hurdles related to agriculture and chemical production. The lobbying group also lamented what it called an "opaque" investment and licensing approval process that includes "vaguely worded or unpublished rules" putting foreign companies at a disadvantage to their domestic competitors. Foreign direct investment in China reached an all-time high of $116 billion in 2011, but dipped to $111.72 billion in 2012 amid a domestic growth slowdown and uncertainty in the West.
China manufacturing index hits seven-month high: HSBC HSBC's preliminary purchasing managers' index (PMI) for this month hit 50.9, a significant improvement from September's 50.2 and the highest since 51.6 in March. The index tracks manufacturing activity in China's factories and workshops and is a closely watched gauge of the health of the economy. A reading above 50 indicates growth, while anything below signals contraction. The strong performance in October came on the back of "broad-based modest improvements" in the Chinese economy, said Qu Hongbin, a HSBC economist in Hong Kong, in a statement accompanying the data. "This momentum is likely to continue in the coming months, creating favourable conditions for speeding up structural reforms," he said. The October PMI reading may help alleviate market concerns over the sustainability of China's recovery. Growth in July-September hit 7.8 percent year-on-year, snapping two quarters of slowing expansion, according to official data released last week. The jump was mainly a result of government stimulus since late June that featured increased rail and urban fixed-asset investment, tax cuts and looser monetary policy, analysts said. But the country's rising inflation and excess market liquidity are limiting room for further monetary loosening, while skyrocketing local government debt and slowing fiscal revenue growth are restricting the scope for more tax incentives, they said. Bank of America Merrill Lynch economists said the preliminary PMI figure for this month was "better than expected" and positive given the fragile market sentiment. But they maintained that the recovery may lose some momentum in the fourth quarter, with the government's pro-growth policy stance likely to turn neutral. "Excessive fear on financial conditions and policy tightening is definitely not justified," they wrote in a research note. HSBC is slated to announce its final PMI figure for October on November 1.
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