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China is taking the absolute centre stage this week.
Executives of multinationals, representatives from international organizations and foreign institutions, as well as world-renowned scholars have flocked to the country, attending the ongoing Boao Forum for Asia Annual Conference 2024 and the China Development Forum (CDF) 2024 that concluded on Monday, offering insights into China's development and its global impact.
This year's CDF drew more than 110 international guests, including the heads of the World Bank and the IMF, as well as executives of many Fortune 500 companies. Most remarkably, of the more than 80 business executives listed by the CDF, over 30 - or about 40 percent - are from the US. Apple CEO Tim Cook, Cristiano Amon of Qualcomm, Sanjay Mehrotra of Micron Technology, Lisa Su of Advanced Micro Devices, Darren Woods of ExxonMobil and Rajesh Subramaniam of FedEx were all on hand.
New growth drivers present new opportunities
During the past week, from the CDF to the Boao Forum, as well as a special session of the "Invest in China" Summit held by the Ministry of Commerce, a series of back-to-back events underscored China's commitment to expanding high-level opening-up and its willingness to welcome more foreign companies to invest in the country.
At the CDF on Sunday, Chinese Premier Li Qiang told global business executives that China welcomed foreign investment and was taking steps to improve its business environment.
Chinese Commerce Minister Wang Wentao also met with global business leaders including Apple’s Cook, Qualcomm’s Amon and Visa’s Ryan McInerney during the two-day forum.
China is accelerating the development of innovation-led new quality productive forces and has broad prospects in high-tech fields such as artificial intelligence and cloud computing, which means great opportunities for enterprises from all over the world, said the Chinese commerce minister.
The increasing attention China is paying to innovation and sustainable development has provided a world-class business environment for multinational corporations’ growth in the country, which makes AstraZeneca feel confident about the future, the European pharmaceutical giant’s CEO Pascal Soriot said at the CDF.
AstraZeneca inked memorandums of understanding on strategic cooperation with the government of Beijing’s Daxing district and high-quality local companies during the CDF to explore the collaborative business models on vaccines, Soriot noted. The firm recently announced it would build its fifth global strategic center in Shanghai.
As China saw its economy begin the year on a solid note and press ahead with policies to maintain sound development, multinationals are ready to take the pulse of the Chinese market, as well as growth drivers generated from innovation.
China’s gross domestic product growth target of 5 percent is achievable, Roland Busch, president and CEO of German conglomerate Siemens, told reporters during the forum. China is not only Siemens’ largest market in terms of application of industrial technologies but also one of its most innovative frontier markets, he added.
Also, in a closely watched trip to China, Apple’s Tim Cook notably did not mince words when talking about the critical role China plays for the US tech giant.
"I love China and the people," Cook said in Beijing on Sunday when asked whether he enjoyed his trip to China.
Cook said Apple remains committed to long-term development in China and will continue to increase investment in the supply chain, research and development, and sales in the country. He also said he was thrilled to be back in China.
Cook arrived in China on March 20 to visit Apple’s headquarters in Shanghai and meet suppliers before the opening of the company’s second-largest store in the world in the eastern Chinese city.
Lately, the State Council, the country's cabinet, announced 24 specific pro-foreign investment policies, including targeted measures to expand market ac