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China's foreign direct investment up 16% in Jan-Oct
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Nov 16, 2011


Foreign direct investment in China rose nearly 16 percent in the first 10 months of the year, driven by Asian investors, official data showed Wednesday, as Western countries battled economic woes.

China took a total of $95.01 billion in foreign direct investment in the January to October period, up 15.86 percent from the same period last year but slower than the 16.6 percent growth rate in the first three quarters.

Investment reached $8.33 billion in October, up 8.75 percent year-on-year, commerce ministry spokesman Shen Danyang told reporters.

The figure was lower than the $9.05 billion invested in September.

Investment from Asian countries continued to rise "by large margins" to $81.9 billion in the January to October period, with Japan leading the growth with a year-on-year increase of 65.5 percent, he said.

In stark contrast, US investment slumped 18.13 percent to $2.6 billion, while European Union investment increased just 1.05 percent to $5.5 billion.

Shen attributed the fall in US investment to the country's economic downturn, adding China remained one of the most appealing markets in the world for foreign investors.

He dismissed reports that a large number of US companies were leaving China, but admitted some sectors in the country may face difficulties attracting US funds due to Washington's call for domestic firms to return home.

"China's high value-added sectors are under some pressure attracting foreign investment given the uncertain US economic outlook and its policies to encourage firms to go home and rebuild the manufacturing industry," Shen said.

Given the downturn in the United States and Europe -- key buyers of Chinese goods -- Shen said he expected exports to suffer in the coming months due to weak demand, rising trade protectionism and surging costs within China.

The country's trade surplus -- a constant bugbear for the United States -- is expected to be around $150 billion this year, down $30 billion from last year, he said.

But Beijing will keep its export policies "basically stable" while "actively expanding" imports to further promote a balance of trade, he added.

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French minister seeks China investment in Paris project
Hong Kong (AFP) Nov 16, 2011 - French Urban Affairs Minister Maurice Leroy courted Chinese investors in Hong Kong on Wednesday as he promoted the huge Greater Paris urban renewal project at a property industry conference.

In a keynote speech to an audience of investors, architects and officials at the MIPIM Asia conference, Leroy said the French government was committed to the biggest redevelopment project Paris has seen in 150 years.

The 10-year scheme includes a 20-billion-euro ($27 billion) 150-kilometre (93-mile) driverless subway around the French capital, and the construction of 70,000 new homes a year, he said.

Leroy, who is overseeing the 34-billion-euro project, compared the French government's clarity of purpose with China's vast urban development projects, which have transformed cities such as Shanghai over the past decade.

"Greater Paris is an economic ambition backed by political will at the highest level of the state," he said, referring to a 2010 law and the support of President Nicolas Sarkozy.

"Whatever happens in the French political environment, it will not be in doubt."

He said that despite the economic crisis gripping Europe, investors could have confidence that the Paris renewal project had all the legal and financial support of the state.

Ten teams of foreign and French architects are already working in parallel to "create a shared vision of the city of tomorrow," Leroy added.

The project also envisages the redevelopment of the Seine river, which runs under Paris's famous bridges, as a major transport link to the Channel port of Le Havre.

Work on the new transport system is expected to begin next year.



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'Made in Japan' brand at crossroads
Tokyo (AFP) Nov 16, 2011
The "Made in Japan" brand is at a crossroads as more firms face a tough choice over whether or not to move production overseas to escape the impact of the relentless rise of the yen, say analysts. According to the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry, some 46 percent of large manufacturers it surveyed in August said they would move production bases abroad if the yen stays around 76 yen ... read more


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