Business
        

Economy

US companies in China profitable: Survey

Updated: 2011-03-23 09:12

By Michael Forsythe (China Daily)

Twitter Facebook Myspace Yahoo! Linkedin Mixx

US companies in China profitable: Survey

The logo of US software giant Microsoft at a technology exhibition in Beijing. The American Chamber of Commerce in China said some 85 percent of surveyed US companies reported increased revenue from their China operations last year. [Photo / China Daily] 

BEIJING - More US businesses in China said they were profitable last year even as they are still worried about the prospects of local market access, the American Chamber of Commerce in China (Amcham) said on Tuesday.

Seventy-eight percent of member companies surveyed by Amcham said their China operations in 2010 were very profitable or profitable, the highest proportion in survey results dating back to 2002, the Beijing-based chamber said in its annual business-climate survey.

At the same time, the country's rapid economic growth makes it an increasingly important market for companies such as General Motors Co and General Electric Co.

Some US companies, however, said the Chinese government is making it increasingly difficult to do business in the world's second-biggest economy.

Related readings:
US companies in China profitable: Survey China welcomes foreign investment
US companies in China profitable: Survey Foreign capital drives growth
US companies in China profitable: Survey China no less attractive for foreign investors
US companies in China profitable: Survey 
China's opening-up spurs global growth: minister

"There are two themes to the data," Amcham China Chairman Ted Dean said in Beijing. "American companies are doing well, and American companies are concerned in some cases about the current regulatory environment and in others the trend line for the regulatory environment."

Eighty-three percent of Amcham China member companies plan to increase investment in the country this year, according to the survey, which used responses from 434 member companies out of a total of about 1,100 members.

Some 85 percent of respondents reported increased revenue from their China operations last year. Sixty-three percent reported improved operating margins, compared with 44 percent who said the same of their 2009 results.

Seventy-one percent of the respondents said China's business licensing process discriminates against foreign companies, according to the survey. More respondents - 31 percent - named bureaucracy as one of their top five challenges, up from 23 percent in 2010.

Yao Jian, a spokesman for China's Commerce Ministry, told reporters on Tuesday in response to the Amcham survey that China will give equal treatment to foreign companies and further promote opening of the domestic market.

Bloomberg News

 

Specials

'Super moon'

The "Super Moon" arrives at its closest point to the Earth in 2011.

Radiation test

The probability of being exposed to a life-threatening level of radiation is quite slim.

Panic buying of salt

Worried Chinese shoppers stripped stores of salt on radiation fears.

Water & Luck
Self-made aircraft
Venetian Carnival