Why
foreign companies are shutting shop in China
Sony Electronics, Marks & Spencer, Metro, Home
Depot, Best Buy, Revlon, and L’Oreal – some of the big names to have closed
Chinese operations
US-based
Seagate, the world’s biggest maker of hard disk drives, closed its factory in
Suzhou near Shanghai last month with the loss of 2,000 jobs, in a move that has
rekindled fears that China is becoming increasingly hostile towards foreign
firms operating in the country.
In November last year, Japanese electronics
conglomerate Sony sold all its shares in Sony Electronics Huanan, and British
high-street retailer Marks & Spencer announced it was closing all its China
stores amid continuing China losses.
A
passionate speech presented by Chinese president Xi Jinping at the World
Economic Forum meeting in Davos in early January had been hoped to address the
issue, and reassure investors that China’s remained open to foreign investment.
Xi defended globalisation and promised improved market access for
foreign companies, a positive sign seen by many that China is still sticking
firmly to its opening up policies, first rolled out by late leader Deng
Xiaoping in the 1980s.
Yet, Seagate
joined a spate of foreign companies to shutter operations in China in recent
years, for various reasons, but most have attributed the country’s high tax
regime, rising labour costs and fierce competition from domestic companies.
Panasonic, for instance, stopped all its manufacturing of televisions in
the country in 2015 after 37 years of operating in China.
China doesn’t need foreign
companies so badly now in terms of acquiring advanced technology and capital as
in previous years, so of course, the government is likely to gradually phase
out more of these preferential policies for foreign firms
Professor Chong Tai-Leung,
Chinese University of Hong Kong
When it first opened in 1979, the Japanese home electronics corporation
was the country’s first foreign firm, tempted by generous benefits not offered
to its Chinese competitors, including lower taxes and land prices and easier
access to local governments.
But almost four decades down the road, this certainly isn’t the case
anymore.
In November last year, Japanese electronics conglomerate Sony sold all
its shares in Sony Electronics Huanan, a Guangzhou factory that makes consumer
electronics, and British high-street retailer Marks & Spencer announced it
was closing all its China stores amid continuing China losses.
Add to that list Metro
AG, Home Depot, Best
Buy, Revlon and L’Oreal;
and we start to see more than a trend developing.
Once considered Beijing’s most-welcomed guests, bringing with them the
money, management skills, and technical knowledge that the country so badly
needed, foreign companies now appear to have fallen out of favour.
“China doesn’t need foreign companies so badly now in terms of acquiring
advanced technology and capital as in previous years,” said Professor Chong
Tai-Leung from the Chinese University of Hong Kong, “so of course, the
government is likely to gradually phase out more of these preferential policies
for foreign firms.”
Echoing Chong’s comments, Shen Danyang, a spokesperson for China’s
Ministry of Commerce accused some foreign corporates last September of only
wanting to make “quick money”, had become too dependent on preferential
government policies in China, and were starting to feel the pain of what he
called a “deteriorating environment for business” in the country.
But for those who had “insight and courage”, Shen insisted China is
still a good place to invest.
We are seeing more Chinese
companies becoming champions in other countries, and of course that adds a lot
of pressure on foreign corporates
While it’s still open to discussion whether those who have now retreated
from China lacked “insight and courage”, there are certainly some common
factors emerging on why.
Keith Pogson, a senior partner at Ernst & Young who oversees
financial services in Asia, said the major one is quite simply fierce
competition from Chinese rivals.
“We are seeing more Chinese companies becoming champions in other
countries, and of course that adds a lot of pressure on foreign corporates.” he
said, agreeing that the gradual phasing out of preferential policies for
foreign firms was certainly in China’s self-interest.
Chinese TV brands, for example, for the first time overtook their South
Korean rivals last year, ranking first in global sales, with the market share
of TCL – a household name in the domestic home electronics market – increasing
more than 50 per cent in Northern American market in the past year.
With the rise of such home-grown firms, the Chinese authorities have
been leaning towards their own “children”, said Pogson, and this gradual
phasing out of preferential policies for foreign companies is likely to
continue.
Staff at Home Depot's
Zhengzhou store in Henan province demand their salaries after the company
announced it was to close all its stores in China. Photo:
Preferential treatment towards foreign firms goes back to 1994 when they
were included under the country’s general tax regulations.
Until 2007, firms that received foreign investment were subject to 15
per cent income tax while domestic companies paid 33 per cent tax.
But in recent years Beijing has stepped up its efforts to tighten such
policies, with the new Enterprise Income Tax Law and Implementation Rules,
effective since 2008 unifying the rate for domestic and foreign companies at 25
per cent.
Unclear laws and inconsistent interpretation of them have also been
blamed for the flight of some foreign firms.
A survey last year by consulting firm Bain & Company and the
American Chamber of Commerce in China (AmCham-China) highlighted those were the
two top factors hindering foreign firms’ ability to invest and grow in China.
High labour costs and a lack of qualified employees were also among the
top five challenges, the study showed.
An example of the type of regulation that is now hindering foreign progress
is the new cyber security law, approved by parliament last November.
It sparked fears that foreign technology firms would be shut out and
subjected to contentious requirements for security reviews, and for data to be
stored on Chinese servers.
Despite more than 40 international business groups signing a petition to
amend some sections of the law, the final draft approved by the parliament
remained unchanged – a clear indication of Beijing’s determination to toughen
its stance against foreign firms.
A quarter of the AmCham-China’s 532 member firms taking part in the
survey said they had either moved or were planning to move operations out of
China by the end of last year, with almost half moving to parts of “developing
Asia”.
“If more overseas companies want to develop in China at this stage,”
Chong said, “I would suggest they consider second- and third-tier cities.”
(The article has been amended to remove Sharp from the list of companies
closing their China operations)
This article appeared in the
South China Morning Post print edition as:
Foreign firms’ exodus from
china gains pace
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