Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
As of 2017, China has more SOEs than any other country, and the most SOEs among large national companies. [1] [page needed] As of the end of 2019, China's SOEs represented 4.5% of the global economy [2] and the total assets of all China's SOEs, including those operating in the financial sector, reached US$78.08 trillion. [3]
China Silk Corporation 中国中丝集团公司 74 China Forestry Group 中国林业集团公司 75 China National Pharmaceutical Group: 中国医药集团总公司 76 China Poly Group Corporation: 中国保利集团公司 77 China Construction Technology Consulting Corporation 中国建筑设计研究院 78 China Metallurgical Geology Bureau
A state-owned enterprise (SOE) is a business entity created or owned by a national or local government, either through an executive order or legislation.SOEs aim to generate profit for the government, prevent private sector monopolies, provide goods at lower prices, implement government policies, or serve remote areas where private businesses are scarce.
Pages in category "Government-owned companies of China" ... Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; ...
During this period, rural enterprises, often with names "commune and brigade enterprises" and of neglectable size, served as a supplement to those state-owned enterprises (SOE), which mainly focused on heavy industrial sectors, and were established by the people's communes and bridges to support agricultural production and to produce rural ...
The Company Law of the People's Republic of China is a law which was passed by the National People's Congress of the PRC on 29 December 1993 and came into force on 1 July 1994. [1] It has been amended several times since then. The most current version of the law took effect in 2018. [2] The law regulates limited liability and joint stock ...
The "grasping the large and letting the small go" policy (Chinese: 抓大放小; pinyin: Zhuā dà fàng xiǎo) was part of a wave of industrial reforms implemented by the central government of the People's Republic of China in 1996. These reforms included efforts to corporatize state-owned enterprises (SOEs) and to downsize the state sector.
Asset management companies in China came into being in 1998. The founding of commercial Asset management companies (AMC; Chinese : 金融资产管理公司 ) established by the Ministry of Finance tasked with professionally managing third-party assets was a major landmark in the development of China's financial system.