China’s
state-owned enterprises, better known as SEOs, are dinosaurs. We mean dinosaurs
of the Jurassic-world variety. They’re not companies, but rather spoon-fed
entities, coddled by the government, much like a spoiled child sheltered from
the ugliness of the world.
Observers
view them like children on soccer teams who receive trophies to boost their
self esteem, not for winning, but for just showing up, even though they have
nothing to be proud of. In short, SEOs have outlived their usefulness.
China needs to open the doors to entrepreneurs, especially those running
small and mid-sized firms. People who are willing to risk failure in order to
succeed. In short, China needs more people who do more than just show up.
If you needed further proof of this, a recent report shows that
government reforms to consolidate SEOs have yet to show any results as SEO
continue to face headwinds amid a slowing economy.
For the first three quarters of the year, about 21% of the country’s
listed SOEs, including their subsidiaries, posted losses. The worst 10
companies, alone, lost about 13.5 billion yuan ($2.1 billion), the Beijing Youth
Daily reported on Thursday.
This comes despite measures by the government over the past few years to
overhaul the State sector by instituting new measures, such as encouraging
private investment and mixed ownership, in a bid to scrap off overcapacity and
piling stock.
A lack of profit incentives, combined with inefficient cost controls,
has led the SEO sector to become bogged by overcapacity and slow to upgrade its
industrial sector.
Steel, coal, shipping and non-ferrous smelting are worst-hit industries,
with steel and non-ferrous smelting companies making up 30% of the total and
coal firms comprising 20%, said the newspaper.
Sinopec Oilfield Service, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Sinopec Group,
fell the most posting a loss of 2.06 billion yuan for the nine months ended
Sept. 30, followed by the 1.78 billion yuan loss by Chinese steel firm SGIS
Songshan.
In February, the sector’s profits plunged
21.5% year over year o about 256 billion yuan, in what was the biggest
year-on-year decline since 2009, according to an earlier report. By Asia Unhedged
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