16 january 2013
BEIJING — State-owned enterprise currently submit 5 to 15 percent of state equity income tothe government, senior economic officials said Thursday.
SOEs operating in the natural resources sector hand over 15 percent of state equity income,while other SOEs give 10 percent, with the exception of the 5 percent paid by military-industrialand high-tech SOEs, senior officials from the Ministry of Finance and the State-Owned AssetsSupervision and Administration Commission said at the bi-monthly session of the StandingCommittee of the National People’s Congress.
Tobacco companies submit 20 percent of state equity income to the government, they added.
The government will further improve the budget system for State-owned enterprises and themanagement of state assets, the officials said.
On Thursday afternoon, lawmakers held panel discussions on a report on State-ownedenterprise reforms delivered on Wednesday by Wang Yong, SASAC’s director.
SASAC will encourage State-owned companies to publish social responsibility reports and invitethe public to supervise their exercise of social duties, the officials said.
SASAC will urge companies to exercise their social duties in daily operations and incorporatethem into company strategies. It will also set up an evaluation system for their performance inthis area, they said.
According to Wang’s report, State-owned enterprises, excluding financial institutions, reportedrevenues of 39.25 trillion yuan, accounting for 35 percent of total industrial and businessrevenues, as well as profits of 2.58 trillion yuan, accounting for 43 percent of the total, in 2011.
China has endeavored to reform its bulky State-owned enterprises since it introduced itsmarket economy in the late 1970s.
So far, more than 90 percent of State-owned enterprises have become corporations and someof them have been restructured to become shareholding companies, according to Wang’sreport.
However, several flagship State-owned enterprises have been slow to transform intocorporations.
The government will push these enterprises to speed up restructuring and improve corporategovernance, SASAC officials said at the panel discussion.
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