In the wake of China's surging
economic development, a growing number of foreign retail giants
have increased their investment in China's commercial sector.
Statistics shows, 70 percent of the
top 50 retailers in the world have set up footholds in China. Wal
Mart has opened 19 chain shops with a goal of 100 shops in China.
Carrefour opened four newshops in Jinan, capital of east China's
Shandong Province, and other Chinese cities. METRO has set up 18
shops in various parts of China.
Nearly 80 percent of supermarkets,
the main channel of retail sales in China, are dominated by foreign
retail companies. Some large cities, where domestic retail shops
face fierce competition from their overseas partners, foreign
retailers have maintained in the forefront in terms of sale
value.
Ji Xiangqi, chairman of the
Shandong Provincial Commercial Group, attributed the thriving
growth of overseas retailers to the contradiction between growing
domestic demand and the status of small scale, sparse distribution
and poor quality offered by domestic commercial departments.
Statistics showed that the ratio of
the commercial sector in China's GDP is no more than 10 percent.
The sales volume of Shanghai-based Bailian Group, China's leading
retail seller, was 3.1 billion yuan (373 million US dollars) in
2003, equivalent to the sales value of only nine days of Wal
Mart.
"Competition
is good," says Li Jiangning, an economist in Shandong Province.
"The competition impels us to reorganize the retail firms, expand
the scale and improve management," he added.
(Xinhua
News Agency July 8, 2004)