Reform guide to SOEs’ management aired
THE State Council, China’s Cabinet, unveiled a guideline for reforming management of the country’s colossal state-owned assets yesterday.
The guideline specifies plans to establish investment firms to manage state-owned capital and restructure state-owned enterprises. It is a supporting document for another State Council guideline on advancing SOE reforms released in September.
China will set up firms in charge of state capital investment and operations either by transferring state equity and budgets to a new company or assigning the tasks to a qualified wholly SOE that already exists, the guideline said.
The investment firms can increase the value of state capital by operating equities, conducting value-based management and handling fund movements. They can also optimize the capital’s layout through investment and financing, industrial support and capital integration.
China will also cut outdated and excessive capacity of SOEs and dispose of inefficient assets. State capital will be removed from some SOEs, while others will be restructured or upgraded innovatively.
The newly distributed state capital will be used in key sectors, major infrastructure projects, strategic industries, key parts of the industrial chain and competitive firms.
In the process of establishing investment firms and restructuring SOEs, the government will transfer some state equity into the hands of social security funds so that proceeds from those equities can be used to make up shortfalls in pension funds, the guideline said.
The document stressed the separation of government administration from corporate management, drawing clear lines between state asset regulators, state capital investment firms and individual SOEs.
Regulators will not intervene in corporate management of SOEs, and a unified network will be created to publicize information about state capital, the fiscal conditions of SOEs and salaries of SOE management staff.
State-owned assets have seen increasing profits and become more competitive in past decades, but problems remain, including lack of efficiency, improper regulation and loss of assets, the document said.
It said the reforms aim to help the state-owned sector adapt to market developments and boost its vitality, influence and risk resistance.
China has about 150,000 SOEs, which hold over 100 trillion yuan (US$15.8 trillion) in assets and employ over 30 million people. But their profits fell 8.2 percent in the first three quarters of this year.
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