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Customers elbow their way through the crowd to enter Shanghai No 1 Department Store. [Provided to China Daily] |
McGregor says the immense power of China's State-owned enterprises can make life very difficult for anyone wanting to do business in the country.
"State-owned enterprises are very powerful. They have access to capital and they have the relationships here that bring them a lot of business opportunities. I think even some Chinese private entrepreneurs have concerns about the recent emphasis on State industry," he said.
McGregor, a former journalist, came to Taiwan as bureau chief of the Wall Street Journal in the island in 1987.
He moved to Beijing in a similar role three years later before becoming chief executive officer of Dow Jones' businesses interests in the mainland.
It highlighted the major business opportunities in the country as well as outlining some of the pitfalls.
"If you come here and try and do the big bang of building a huge business overnight, it fails 100 percent of the time," he said.
"The way to do business in China is to come in small, learn your way around, decide if you need a partner and hire very capable local staff and then do it step by step. You can't come in here with too little patience."
McGregor says that in a number of ways doing business in China has become easier in recent years because business practices have become more established and there is a better legal framework.
"There are more rules and laws, which have made a lot of things more transparent. There is more normalization of business here. It is a much more mature business environment," he said.
He believes one of the problems for a lot of foreign companies is whether their intellectual property rights will be protected, particularly in the area of technology.
He cites China's indigenous innovation policy, which has a clause to allow re-innovation of foreign technology.
"You are not going to get innovation by trying to force foreign companies to reveal more about their own technology. I think that will set innovation back here," he said.
"If you look at Silicon Valley you have got thousands and thousands of very talented Chinese engineers. If you want to get them back here, you need to protect IPR, so they know they can return and invent something and build a company up around it."
McGregor sees there is risk of further commercial clashes between China and the United States. He said if the American market is to remain open to Chinese exports then the Chinese have to allow free and fair competition to US companies wanting to enter China.
"China needs to be confident enough in its own companies to have a market here where there is fair competition. It is the only way Chinese companies will be able to go global, if they can win in markets that are fair at home," he said.