Investors hail Foreign Investment Law

2019-03-25
China Daily/Xinhua

BEIJING — China’s new Foreign Investment Law will take effect on Jan 1, 2020.

An overwhelming majority of nearly 3,000 lawmakers or deputies voted in favor of the new law on March 15.

Foreign investors welcomed the new law, and said they believe it will further improve the country’s business environment.

The draft law was submitted to China’s national legislative session for a third reading during its annual sitting this month. It was deliberated by lawmakers and discussed by political advisers over several days.

The law aims to improve the transparency of foreign investment policies and ensures that foreign-invested enterprises participate in market competition on an equal basis.

Stephan Kothrade, president of Asia-Pacific operations of German chemicals giant BASF, said the company welcomes the law, with the belief that it will help effectively address issues foreign investors face in China.

“Foreign companies in China think the law will create a level playing field where everyone can participate,” said Harley Seyedin, president of the American Chamber of Commerce in South China.

With unified provisions for the entry, promotion, protection, and management of foreign investment, it is “a new and fundamental law” for China’s foreign investment and an innovative improvement of China’s foreign investment legal system.

The new law stresses more investment promotion and protection than the three previous laws, a positive signal for foreign firms in China, said Ma Zheng, vice-president of the China subsidiary of the agricultural commodities trader Cargill.

Ma believes the new law would provide stronger legal guarantees for foreign investors and companies to safeguard their interests. “It’s going to make China’s business environment more open, equitable and transparent for foreign firms,” he said.

By the end of 2018, about 960,000 foreign-invested enterprises had been set up in China, with the accumulated foreign direct investment exceeding $2.1 trillion.

China advanced to a global ranking of 46 in terms of ease of doing business last year, up from 78 in 2017, according to a World Bank Group report released last year.

“This shows the constant improvement in our business environment, and greater progress might be made this year,” said He Lifeng, head of the National Development and Reform Commission.

The new law will boost foreign investors’ confidence in China since their rights and interests will be legally protected, said Cai Hua, a national legislator and director of Wisely Law Office in Tianjin.

“A country with a relatively complete legal system will be an ideal destination for foreign investment,” Cai said.

“It will give more people confidence in China,” said Adam Dunnett, secretary-general of the EU Chamber of Commerce in China. “If you’re a foreign investor, and you’re going to read a law about China, probably the first one you’re going to read is the Foreign Investment Law.”

Related Stories

Download
State Council App