China's western provinces
are becoming the focus of multinational firms' global strategies,
bringing with them investment in business and
infrastructure.
Business people at the sixth China Western Region
International Economic Cooperation Fair in Xi'an, Shaanxi Province, have been hearing of the
benefits to be gained from the competitive land and labor costs in
western China.
Since the launching of the government's western
development strategy in 2000, it has only registered about three
percent of the nation's actual foreign investment, most of which is
channeled to eastern regions.
Professor Bai Wenxiu, of the Xi'an-based Northwest
University economics department, said, "Infrastructure like
transport in the west is still quite under-developed. For example,
a shipment from Xi'an to Shanghai costs the same in time and money
as transport from Shanghai to the United States."
The National Development Bank has earmarked 3 billion
yuan (US$387 million) in loans for the infrastructure, including
the construction of economic development zones in the cities of
Xi'an, Xining and Chengdu.
Meanwhile, Germany's Fraport, the operator of
Frankfurt Airport, has paid 490 million yuan (US$63.46 million) to
obtain a 24.5-percent stake in the Xianyang International Airport,
in Shaanxi, offering opportunities to upgrade and expand the
facility.
Yan Xuan, vice president of Oracle's Beijing company,
said Oracle would set up a design branch in Xi'an -- its fifth
China branch -- in the first half of this year, hoping to find
opportunities in the development of western China.
Yan said the company would probably employ hundreds of
people, but the exact number was not yet known.
"Xi'an, home to the world famous terracotta warriors,
is not only a tourist stop, but also a portal to business
opportunities in the west," he added.
Other west-looking multinationals include Idaho-based
Micron Technology, a major semiconductor firm, which established a
manufacturing facility in Xi'an in March. Two days later, Applied
Materials Inc., a major US nanotechnology manufacturer, also opened
a new technology support center in the city.
Western regions were becoming increasingly competitive
over the east where land and labor costs had soared in recent
years, said Shi Ying, deputy director of the Shaanxi Academy of
Social Sciences.
Yasuo Noshiro, president of Fujitsu (Xi'an) System
Engineering Co., Ltd, said its profits have increased several-fold
in the five years since it set up in the city.
Japan's Cosmo Oil Co. Ltd.
was also entering the western market, supplying energy saving and
clean coal technologies to Shaanxi-based mines, chairman Keiichiro
Okabe said.
(Xinhua News Agency April 13, 2007)
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