Multinationals Feel the Pressure in China; The extent to which Chinese authorities have recently focused on commercial corruption is unprecedented.
September 13, 2013 Leave a comment
September 12, 2013, 1:34 p.m. ET
Multinationals Feel the Pressure in China
The extent to which Chinese authorities have recently focused on commercial corruption is unprecedented.
ANGELA MANCINI AND BLISS KHAW
China is in the middle of a major anticorruption drive and foreign companies risk finding themselves in the crosshairs soon—if they’re not there already. The clock is ticking for executives to make sure their firms won’t fall afoul of the crackdown. Although Beijing has talked tough on corruption in the past, this time all indications are that serious action will result. The rhetoric from the top, led by Chinese President Xi Jinping, is backed by an ongoing campaign against commercial corruption by the State Administration of Industry and Commerce (SAIC), an investigation of corporate criminal behavior by the Public Security Bureau (PSB), as well as a crackdown on inflated pricing and market dominance by the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC). On Aug. 28, the Politburo launched a broad five-year anticorruption plan to extend from 2013-17. Read more of this post







