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The View | Quality counts: why Chinese companies need to scale down to survive the next decade

Joe Ngai says things are not looking great for China’s economy, from the real estate sector to overseas infrastructure projects. Chinese companies must transform, and shift from managing for scale to managing for quality

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Forget the trade war. Chinese companies, including real estate firms, face other challenges like government regulation of borrowing. Photo: AFP

As Chinese companies brace themselves for the impact of the trade war with the US, a less widely publicised, but far more profound, set of challenges is threatening their survival in the next decade.

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Until recently, things were really good for Chinese companies: extraordinary macroeconomic growth, a raft of pro-business government policies and incentives, and the unleashing of decades of pent-up consumer demand among a newly confident middle class fuelled record revenues and profits. Fortune ranks the world’s 500 largest companies by revenue, and 111 Chinese companies made the latest list.

Things are changing, however. While China still has one of the highest GDP growth rates in the world, economic growth has levelled off to just under 7 per cent since 2015.

China’s A-share market and the Hong Kong stock exchange’s H-share market are both down about 25 per cent this year, in a few of the salient indicators of a trend taking shape in the Chinese economy.

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