History
SASAC was formed in 2003 to consolidate industry-specific bureaucracies and was restructured from the State Economic and Trade Commission. The Hu Jintao administration gave SASAC full ministerial rank. SASAC's mission was to represent the state as a shareholder of SOEs and to develop an SOE reform program as per the policies of the State Council. Its mandate was framed as managing "assets, people, and affairs" but not to intervene in daily SOE operations. In its initial years, SASAC relied mostly on personnel appointments, administrative guidance, and occasional on-site inspections as its methods of oversight. The accelerating growth of SOEs, their organizational complexity, and their increasingly international business outpaced SASAC's capacity to supervise. Acting on the emphasis placed on mixed ownership of SOEs at the Third Plenum of the 18th Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party, in 2014 SASAC began piloting mixed ownership reform at the national level; results were mixed. Beginning in 2014, SASAC began pilot programs for increased commercial decision-making autonomy for selected SOEs. In 2017, the State Council approved a change of SASAC's mission from administering SOEs to channeling state capital into strategic economic sectors.Significance
SASAC oversees China's SOEs in nonfinancial industries deemed strategically important by the State Council, includingCentral SOEs
, SASAC currently oversees 97 centrally owned companies. These central SOEs (''yangqi'') are SOEs that cover industries deemed most vital to the national economy. Companies directly supervised by SASAC are continuously reduced through mergers according to the state-owned enterprise restructuring plan with the number of SASAC companies down from over 150 in 2008. Central SOEs are further categorized based on their size and strategic importance. "Core" enterprises described as "important backbone SOEs" include enterprises such asInstitutions affiliated to SASAC
* Information Center * Technological Research Center for Supervisory Panels Work * Training Center * Economic Research Center * China Economics Publishing House * China Business Executives Academy,Industrial associations
Affiliated industrial associations include: * China Federation of Industrial Economics * China Enterprise Confederation * China Association for Quality * China Packaging Technology Association * China International Cooperation Association for SMEs * China General Chamber of Commerce * China Federation of Logistics and Purchasing * China Coal Industry Association * China Machinery Industry Federation * China Iron and Steel Association * China Petroleum and Chemical Industry Association * China National Light Industry Associations * China National Textile Industry Council * China Building Materials Industry Association * China Nonferrous Metals Industry AssociationLeadership
Directors
See also
* China Beijing Equity Exchange * List of government-owned companies of China * Rostec * State-owned Enterprises Commission, the equivalent in Taiwan (ROC) *References
External links
* {{authority control State Council of China 2003 establishments in China Regulation in China Sovereign wealth funds