Off the wire
Lung disease linked to smoking blights lives of 1 mln in England: PHE  • Chinese leaders stress local chronicles compilation  • China launches journalistic ethics supervision nationwide  • Guinea declared free of Ebola after over 2,500 deaths  • 8 Taliban fighters killed in cleanup operations in N. Afghanistan  • China builds over 51 mln square meters of new schools in 2015  • Singapore stocks close 0.45 pct higher  • China's innovation index rises in 2014  • Afghan forces capture 9 armed militants  • Indonesian vice president calls for stern actions against police station attackers  
You are here:   Home

China classifies state firms for targeted reforms

Xinhua, December 29, 2015 Adjust font size:

China on Tuesday unveiled a guideline to divide the state-owned enterprises (SOEs) into strictly commercial entities and those that serve governmental ends, such as power and healthcare suppliers.

The guideline, published by the Ministry of Finance, the National Development and Reform Commission and the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission (SASAC), follows a blueprint issued in September. The blueprint promised to modernize SOEs, improve management of state assets and promote mixed ownership.

"One-size-fit-all reforms are less effective than targeted reforms that are tailored on the basis of SOE classification," a SASAC official told Xinhua.

According to Tuesday's guideline, mixed-ownership is encouraged in both kinds of SOEs to reduce the dominance of state companies and ensure better management.

Public feedback will have a bigger weighting when authorities assess the performance of SOEs that serve social purposes, while commercial SOEs will be mainly assessed by their competitiveness and profitability, according to the guideline.

The authorities also pledged to step back and leave more freedom for managers.

China has about 150,000 SOEs, which hold more than 100 trillion yuan (15.7 trillion U.S dollars) in assets and employ over 30 million people. Many have become ossified by declining profitability due to a lack of competition. Some earned the nickname "zombie enterprises," muddling along with government bailouts. Endi