Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), having
greatly contributed to China's fast economic development,
also brings economic losses to the country, according to
an article of the China Business newspaper.
Currently about 500 billion US dollars
of FDI stay in China, equivalent to 40 percent of China's
gross domestic product (GDP), reported the newspaper. The
article said that too much dependence on FDI will lead to
enormous opportunity cost of the country.
China enjoys a high rate of residents savings
deposits, and if all the deposits can be smoothly and efficiently
turned into investment, the country would not need so much
FDI, said the newspaper.
By the end of 2004, the savings deposits of urban and rural
population totaled more than 11.95 trillion yuan (approximately
1.44 trillion dollars), an increase of 1.59 trillion yuan
(192.6 billion dollars) from 2003, according to figures
from the National Bureau of Statistics.
Those profits brought by FDI will be eventually
sent to foreign countries, so if FDI can be replaced by
domestic residents savings, such losses will be avoided,
said the newspaper. The article estimated that the present
FDI's annual profit in China is about 50 billion US dollars.
FDI may cause deficit both in current account
and capital account due to huge amount of profit sent abroad
by foreign-funded companies, according to the article.
Since FDI will only be put to places with
higher profits, much more FDI will flow to coastal areas
and industrial sectors, which will exacerbate the imbalance
of China's economic structure, the article said.
.Source: Xinhua