Chinese enterprise finds Xi Jinping’s control increasingly suffocating

Chinese enterprise finds Xi Jinping’s control increasingly suffocating

Xi Jinping’s grip on Chinese enterprise gets uncomfortably tight

AS THE HEAD office of‍ Northern Heavy Industries (NHI) comes into ⁢view, so‌ does a huge slogan fixed permanently to its‍ roof⁤ in metre-high‍ red Chinese ‍characters, where you might usually ‌see a company name. The 22-character mouthful reads: “Wave High the Great Banner of Xi Jinping Thought in⁢ the New Era of Socialism with Chinese Characteristics.” A billboard-sized image of Mr Xi, China’s⁤ leader, waves⁣ to ‍visitors as they enter the lobby. In‌ a nearby​ factory ⁢NHI’s tunnel-boring machines, used for digging metro ⁢lines, rise four storeys into the ​air.​ The company‍ was founded ‌by the state many decades ago. Today more than ever it embodies‌ an archetypal image of a⁤ state-owned enterprise (SoE).

Except that on paper ⁤NHI is private. A company called Fangda Group, which is listed in Shenzhen and fully privately owned, took a 47% stake in NHI in 2019, in a rare ​instance of a private company bailing out a state one. This ⁣made Fangda by far the ⁤largest single shareholder. The deal should have⁢ privatised NHI.

But in China’s corporate ‌sector nothing is so straightforward. Fangda is not the controlling ‍shareholder. Executives‍ say it does not have one. Some staff in ‌its factories call ⁢it a state firm; some say it is‌ private. When asked about Fangda’s involvement in NHI, a manager says the investment‍ was⁢ a “policy decision”.‌ An ⁣investment​ adviser says⁤ that, ‌for reasons he cannot divulge, investors should ⁢approach Fangda itself as if it had ⁢the backing of the state—even though⁣ the state ⁢does not feature in its shareholder register. Fangda’s website ⁢is covered‌ in Communist ⁣Party imagery such as sickles and hammers. It describes its⁣ corporate mission as “listening to‍ the party and following the party”.

2023-11-26 12:47:55
Link from​ www.economist.com
rnrn

Exit mobile version