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June 27, 2017

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Home » Opinion » Chinese Views

Candor best response to controversial US reports

A famous Chinese entrepreneur’s rebuttal of a recent report by The New York Times has drawn a lot of attention across the Pacific in the past few days, reviving a long-lingering question: what makes US mainstream media’s reports about Chinese companies so controversial?

Cao Dewang, founder and president of Fuyao Glass, the world’s largest auto glass manufacturer, dismissed the NYT report about his factory in Dayton, the US state of Ohio, as inaccurate and unbalanced. During interviews with the Chinese media, Cao said that local government believes Fuyao’s investment in Dayton has brought tremendous positive changes to the local community, calling the NYT report “a false one.”

The Dayton factory, which started operation in October 2016, currently employs some 2,000 American workers. In a report published earlier this month, the NYT claimed that “at Fuyao, a major culture clash is playing out on the factory floor, with some workers questioning the company’s commitment to operating under American supervision and American norms.” The report also questioned Fuyao’s labor and safety standards.

“The New York Times didn’t visit or interview any current employees at Fuyao’s Dayton factory. Instead, it only talked with a few former employees and union activists, who are biased to a certain degree,” said Cao, adding that Fuyao’s factory in Dayton has been strictly observing US laws and regulations.

Fuyao is the second major Chinese company with US investment and operations that has refuted US mainstream media reports so far this month.

ICBC Financial Services, the US brokerage unit of the Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd. (ICBC), is in strict compliance with local regulatory policies and risk-management rules, said ICBC USA in a statement issued shortly after a Bloomberg News report alleged the company was “profiting from the murky world of shadow banking.”

The Bloomberg story claimed that ICBC Financial Services had roughly US$260 in assets for each dollar of capital at the end of 2016, over 10 times the leverage used by J.P. Morgan’s securities unit. It added that the bank has exploited “loopholes in post-crisis (the 2008 financial crisis) rules” to emerge as a major US dealer in government debt repos, which could pose a threat to financial stability.

But in its statement, which later was also published by Bloomberg, ICBC USA clarified that its brokerage unit’s leverage ratio, as calculated under requirements laid out by the US Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, has been below 20 times over the past four years, which is “completely” in compliance with regulatory requirements.

Not a surprise

Commenting on these two controversial incidents, Li Ji, associate professor of law at Rutgers University Newark, told Xinhua: “Such things are no surprise to me, as US media view investigation and exposure of negative stories as their top responsibility and also a lifeline.”

“However, quality journalism in the US media has been undermined in recent years due to intense competition pressure. Today’s NYT reports are not as good and solid as they were in terms of down-to-earth investigation and balanced writing,” Li added.

Some experts believe that Chinese companies, which have been expanding their footprints in the United States, also have quite a few lessons to learn from such incidents. “I have no doubt on Cao Dewang’s investment and management capabilities, but he has to learn to reach out to the local media, and try not to be dragged into domestic politics in the United States,” said Wang Wen, executive dean of the Chongyang Institute for Financial Studies affiliated to Renmin University of China, who is now in New York for a dialogue on China’s Belt and Road Initiative.

“When in Rome do as the Romans do,” said Li Ji. “It’s better for Chinese companies to have capable local consultants do their job of publicity and crisis control. The most important point is to respond quickly and make your voice heard loud and clear.”

The authors are Xinhua writers. Shanghai Daily condensed the article.




 

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