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    Economy

    Economic reform plan targets state firms, financial sector

    1
    2015-05-20 09:31Xinhua Editor: Gu Liping

    China is giving greater attention to reforms for state firms and the financial sector, with more forceful measures likely to be unveiled this year.

    China's cabinet released an annual economic reform plan for 2015, laying out 39 tasks in eight aspects on Monday.

    The National Development and Reform Commission, the country's top economic planner, formulates the plan every year, which is widely deemed as a mini version of the annual government work report delivered by the premier in March.

    Comparing it with previous plans, analysts said the 2015 document highlighted the significance and urgency of further and quicker reforms in state-owned enterprises (SOE) and the financial sector.

    TO VITALIZE STATE FIRMS

    The 2015 plan listed SOE reforms as the second most important aspect, compared with a fourth place in the 2014 document.

    The plan said the government will make or revise 16 sets of regulations to reinvigorate the public sector: restructuring centrally administered SOEs, lowering market threshold for private investors and overhauling the supervision mechanism to prevent losses of state assets.

    "This is the first time for the government to elaborate on the direction of SOE reforms," said Li Jin, chief researcher with the China Enterprise Research Institute.

    "The plan mentioned SOE restructuring, which deserves much attention," said an anonymous source with a research center under the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission (SASAC), China's non-financial SOE watchdog.

    In April, media reports that China's 112 non-financial SOEs directly administered by the central authority will merge into 40 went viral online .

    The SASAC neither confirmed nor denied the consolidation in a later statement, just saying "the story was written without interviewing or verifying with us".

    Market value of China's SOEs totaled 25.24 trillion yuan (4.1 trillion U.S. dollars) at the end of 2014, accounting for 60.4 percent of the whole market value of China's two stock exchanges.

    The SASAC statement sent the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index down by 1.13 percent following a surge on the consolidation reports. History showed that a piece of news, good or bad, is probably enough to trigger a sharp fluctuation in the stock market.

    "The government has the motive to consolidate the public sector by restructuring SOEs, but there is too much misinformation in the market," said Li, advising stock holders to invest calmly and cautiously.

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