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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Business
Helen Davidson in Taipei and agencies

Xi Jinping tells Alibaba’s Jack Ma and Chinese tech chiefs to ‘show their talent’

Alibaba’s Jack Ma pictured in 2019.
Jack Ma in 2019. The founder of Alibaba disappeared from public view for months after a 2020 speech in which he was critical of the Chinese government. Photograph: Thibault Camus/AP

China’s president, Xi Jinping, has told businesses to “show their talent” at a meeting of Chinese industry leaders including the Alibaba founder, Jack Ma, as he attempts to halt an economic slump in the world’s second-largest economy.

Xi met Ma, who was at the centre of a crackdown on the tech industry in recent years, as well as the bosses of the electric carmaker BYD, the battery manufacturer CATL, Tencent, Xiaomi, and the founder of Huawei, Ren Zhengfei

The Chinese president was attending a symposium on private enterprises, where he stressed continuity in China’s economic development strategy. He also said its private business had “broad prospects and great promise” to create wealth and opportunity.

China’s governance and the scale of its market give it an inherent advantage in developing new industries, Xi said.

“It is the right time for the majority of private business and entrepreneurs to show their talent,” he was quoted as saying in remarks state media called an “important speech”.

Xi has spearheaded campaigns to increase government control over private industry, particularly in technology, which was considered to be unruly and disruptive as it underwent huge expansion, seemingly unconcerned by the tight state controls around other industries.

But China is now struggling with an economic downturn driven by a housing crisis, stagnant low consumption and high youth unemployment.

The meeting took place at Beijing’s Great Hall of the People, with video on the state broadcaster CCTV on Monday showing Ma standing and applauding as Xi entered a room. Xi, Ren, and BYD’s Wang Chuanfu were filmed giving speeches but no audio or transcripts have been published.

Liang Wenfeng, the founder of DeepSeek, a startup that is threatening to upset the tech world order with its artificial intelligence models, was also present.

The presence of top executives and companies at these high-profile events are typically seen by foreign investors as a sign of the businesses or individuals that are favoured by the government.

The meeting with Ma was closely watched as the billionaire was once the most high-profile target of Chinese regulators, and once disappeared from public view for several months after a speech in 2020 in which he criticised Xi.

Investors on Monday were scouring pictures and footage of the meeting to spot top bosses and trading accordingly.

Executives from two of the Chinese tech industry’s biggest players – ByteDance, the parent company of TikTok, and Baidu, which specialises in search and AI – did not attend, Reuters reported.

Baidu shares fell by more than 8% – the largest loser on the Hang Seng index – after no top executive was spotted. However, reports of Xi’s visit to the symposium, which first emerged on Friday, helped spur gains in Asian markets as it raised hopes of renewed support in China’s private tech sector, which has been targeted by rounds of government crackdowns in the last few years.

The tightly choreographed pro-business rally reflected policymakers’ concern about a slowdown in growth and efforts by the US to limit China’s technological development, analysts said.

Xi’s move to gather business leaders underscores the importance of private-sector innovation for China to gain ground in technology, they said.

“It’s a tacit acknowledgment that the Chinese government needs private-sector firms for its tech rivalry with the US,” said Christopher Beddor, the deputy China research director at Gavekal Dragonomics in Hong Kong. “The government has no choice but to support them if it wants to compete with the US.”

Reuters contributed to this report

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