The Economist - UK (2021-11-20)

(Antfer) #1

68 Business TheEconomistNovember20th 2021


formedjoint ventures withstate­owned
companiesby2019,upfrom45,000atthe
turnofthecentury.
The jump inprivate companieswith
stateinvestmentsincethenhasaccounted
fornearlyallofChina’sincreaseinnew
registeredcapital.Publicinvestmentsin
private­sector companies surged from
$9.4bnin 2016 to$125bnin2020,though
lookssettofallthisyear,accordingtodata
fromDealogic,a researchfirm(seechart2).
Thismeansthegrowthofbusinessin
thecountryisinextricablylinkedtothe
state.Thetechindustryhasbeena notable
focus.Regulationhaslonghemmedinthe
sector, as has the occasional bringing
downofa tycoonbyoneortwonotches.
Thisisnowconsideredinsufficienttoen­
sureentrepreneursarekeptinline.
Thusextendingthegovernment’sreach
directlyintomoreprivatecompaniesvia
financialinterestsisemergingasa mecha­
nismtocontrolthem.Government“gold­
enshares”,tiny investmentsthat givea
highdegree of control overcompanies,
havebeenrumouredforyears;onlyrecent­
lyhavetheybeendisclosedinthelikesof
WeiboandByteDance.Itislikelythisfea­
tureofstateinvestmentwillexpand,says
NanaLioftheAsianCorporateGovernance
Association,aninvestorinterestgroup.
Unwittinglytaggingalongfortheride
havebeenglobalinvestorswhohadonce
spentfreelytogaina footholdintheboom­
ingChinesemarket.Americansandothers
areunlikely to becomfortable withthe
newarrangements.Moremightgetsnared:
cac, theultimatepowerbehindthestate
investmentsinstartups,wasrecentlygiv­
entheauthoritytovettheoverseasshare
listingsoflargeChinesetechgroups.
Whatmightthenewregimemeanfor
thefirmsinvolved? ciif’schairman,Wu
Hai,hasproclaimedthefundtobefirmly
partofChina’s“nationalteam”,a catchall
forthemostimportantstate­ownedenter­
prises.TheCommunistPartyhasprovided
generousfinancialandpolicysupportfor
ciif­backedfirms,saysSunXinofKing’s
CollegeLondon.But,headds,theseinvest­

mentsalsotightenregulatoryscrutinyand
haveevenimposedgreaterdirectcontrol
bythePartyovertheirmanagement.
Yetciif’s objectiveswouldfitawkward­
lyina venture­capitalfirm’spitchbook.It
hascommitteditselfnottopursue“exces­
siveprofitability”initsinvestments.That
echoes recent missives by top officials
concerningthe“savagegrowth”and“dis­
orderly expansionofcapital” at China’s
techgroups.Itsareaoffocus—aichips,ro­
botics, quantum computing and block­
chain—dovetailwiththesectorsthegov­
ernment prioritisedin its14thfive­year
plan, one of thestate’s most important
policy documents. Companies have no
doubttakennote.
ByteDancehasclaimedtheciifinvest­
menthaslittleinfluenceoveroperations.
Ifthatistruethenitsomehowfoundit
wiseofitsownvolitiontomirrornewstate
policy.TikTok’sownerhasofficiallylimit­
edworkinghoursto10am­7pmonweek­
days;thechangecomesafterthestatebe­
ratedMrMaandAlibabaforvocallysup­
portinga “996”workschedule,orworking
9am­9pm six daysa week. The firm is
amongthosewhosefoundershavedepart­
edduringthecrackdown.
AsMrXi’smodelforstatecurbingof
techdarlingsbecomesclearer,sotoohave
thepotentialdrawbacks.Oneofthemis
theclumsinessbuiltintosomeofthePar­
ty’s increasingly dogmaticpractices. For
thepasttwodecadeslinksbetweencom­
paniesandlocalgovernmentshavebeen
centralto theChineseeconomicmodel.
Thesepartnershipshavehistoricallybeen
focusedonbusiness,notPartyideology.
More recentlythere have been signs
that local governments are preoccupied
morewithideologicalexercises,saysMr
Hsieh.Theseincludefrequent“studyses­
sions”,wherePartyofficialsgathertoread
and discuss the merits of Xi Jinping
Thought. Forging connections between
stateandprivatecompanieshasbecome
moredifficultandrequiresinformalcon­
nectionswithmoreseniorleaders,hesays.
Another problem isthe level of risk

aversion among the new government­
linkedshareholders.China’smodelwasre­
centlydescribed asa“venturecapitalist
state”by ArthurKroeber,aneconomist.
Themodelmimicsa massivecorporatein­
vestor,takingsmallstakesinvariousearly­
stagecompanies;ciifitselfisstaffedwith
executiveswithtechandstartupinvesting
experience.Yetthestatehasalltheriskap­
petiteofa timidbureaucrat.Private­sector
executives working with government­
linkedfirmshavedescribedofficials’grow­
ingfearofmakingmistakes.Losingpublic
moneyoninvestmentdoesnotappearto
bethebiggestworry,saysNisGrünbergof
theMercatorInstituteforChinaStudies,a
think­tankinBerlin.Rather,therealblun­
derwouldbefailingtocontrolcompanies
thatruncountertoPartyideologies.
ThusanuncomfortableprospectforMr
Xi’sneweraofpartycontroloftheecon­
omy:fearbystate­capitalistsoffallingfoul
ofideologicaldiktatscouldlowerinvest­
mentreturnsandthrottlecorporatedyna­
mism.ciif’s boardappointeetoByteDance
hasnoclearbusinessexperienceonhisré­
sumé,accordingtoMsLi,buta background
incommunistpropaganda.Fordoingbusi­
nessinChinathesedays,aninsider’ssteer
onhownottorunafoulofthePartymay
proveinvaluable.n

Proteanspikes
China,state/privatejointventures

Source:“Specialdealsfromspecialinvestors:the rise of state-
connectedprivateownersinChina”,NBERworking paper, Aug 202

1

Stateownersoperatingjoint
ventureswithprivateowners
Averagenumberofprivateownersa
stateownerhasjointventureswith

14,400 11,400 12,800

2000 2010 201

Commanding the heights
China, state investment in private companies
$bn

Source: Dealogic *To November th

2

120
100
80
60
40
20
0
21*201918172016

RoyalDutchShell

A simple solution


P


ity ben van beurden. The boss of Roy­
al Dutch Shell is an affable man steering
a  Scylla­and­Charybdis  course  between
oil­loving  shareholders  on  one  extreme
and  carbon­hating  ones  on  the  other.  His
latest  task  is  to  convince  investors  that
Shell’s  strategy  of  doubling  down  on  oil
and gas production while bulking up on re­
newables  is  viable,  even  as  Third  Point,  a
hedge  fund,  demands  it  breaks  itself  up.
And for seven years he has run a company
with  one  foot  in  the  Netherlands  and  the
other in Britain—with Brexit in between. 
On  November  15th  Shell  offered  share­
holders some badly needed simplification.
It asked them to vote next month for a pro­
posal  to  ditch  a  dual  Anglo­Dutch  share
structure,  haul  the  headquarters  back  to
Britain, and scrap the Royal Dutch name. It
marks a homecoming of sorts. The original
moniker  dates  back  to  the  19th  century,
when  the  company’s  forebear,  Marcus
Samuel,  dealt  in  sea  shells  along  the
Thames.  But  the  reaction  in  parts  of  the
Netherlands  has  been  apoplectic.  Some

Making the energy shift less taxing
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