Hopefully we can convince the good cadres to stop the bad cadres and then
this problem can be solved.....Steve

South China Morning Post

Friday, February 4 6:44 AM SGT

State-owned firms left behind as dependence on US grows

The imports and exports of foreign-invested joint ventures in the mainland 
exceeded those of state companies last year for the first time, while the 
country's dependence on the United States as an export market increased.

Figures released yesterday showed imports and exports of joint ventures 
reached US$174.5 billion, an increase of 10.7 per cent over 1998 and 
accounting for 48.4 per cent of the national total, up from 39 per cent in 
1995.

Exports were $88.63 billion, up 9.5 per cent from 1998 and accounting for 
45.5 per cent of the national total. The net increase of $7.69 billion 
during the year accounted for 70 per cent of the growth for exports as a 
whole. Their imports were $85.88 billion, an increase of 11.9 per cent.

The figures indicate the increasing importance of joint ventures to the 
mainland's export drive. They also show that foreign-invested firms are 
better able to compete in the global market than state-owned companies.

Many joint ventures were set up to produce exports, with companies 
relocating plants from Hong Kong, Japan, Taiwan, South Korea and other 
countries to take advantage of the mainland's cheap land and labour.

Last year was a good trade year for the mainland. It posted its 
third-biggest surplus on record, with growth in major markets, despite the 
effects of the Asian financial crisis and the fact that it did not devalue 
its currency, like many of its Asian competitors.

It recorded a trade surplus of $29.2 billion, on exports of $194.93 
billion, up 6.1 per cent on 1998, and imports of $165.71 billion, up 18.2 
per cent.

The mainland's reliance on the US as an export market continued to grow. 
Exports last year were $41.94 billion, an increase of 10.5 per cent, and 
accounting for 21.5 per cent of total exports, up from 18.5 per cent in 1993.

Its trade surplus with the US was $22.4 billion, with imports rising 15.7 
per cent to $19.53 billion. US figures show a substantially higher surplus 
because they include mainland goods shipped through other places, 
principally Hong Kong.

The US was the mainland's second-biggest trading partner, after Japan and 
ahead of the European Union. Trade with Japan was $66.16 billion, an 
increase of 14.2 per cent over 1998, with the US at $61.42 billion, up 12 
per cent, and with the EU $55.7 billion, up 13.9 per cent.

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