Government departments, chambers of commerce and private
entrepreneurs should fully implement the favorable policies that
the Communist Party of China has offered at its latest national
congress.
That was the consensus reached by private entrepreneurs taking part
in the ninth national congress of the All-China Federation of
Industry and Commerce, also known as China's general chamber of
commerce.
All private entrepreneurs -- including those from the Hong Kong and
Macao special administrative regions and Taiwan Province -- felt
upbeat about the stance of the Party on the promotion of the
private sector.
Annie Wu, chairman of the executive committee of World Trade
Centers Association (Hong Kong), said she preferred to cooperate
with private entrepreneurs because most of them act in a
straight-forward manner and are serious about what they are
doing.
Wu
has invested a total of US$100 million in the mainland since she
established the country's first joint venture in 1980. She said the
national strategy of developing the vast western hinterland will
bring more opportunities to the private sector with small and
medium-sized enterprises prospering.
"I
believe that private entrepreneurs, now they have been reassured of
a promising future, will seek to expand their business further and
this is certainly good for the national economy," said Johnny Lin,
chairman of the Taiwan Merchant Association in Shenzhen, South
China's Guangdong Province.
But the government should make corporation registration and
taxation procedures more concise and easier to understand, said
Zhang Wenzhong, chairman of Beijing-based Wu Mart Group, a
supermarket chain.
(China Daily November 26, 2002)
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