Skip to main content

LiuGong discusses manufacturing upgrades with Chinese premier

LiuGong chairman Zeng Guang’an was recently invited to discuss manufacturing upgrades and economic restructuring with Chinese premier Li Keqiang. This came when the Chinese premier Li Keqiang presided over a government meeting on manufacturing upgrades and economic restructuring in Beijing, according to China’s official Xinhua News Agency.
September 1, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
LiuGong’s chairman spoke at a meeting of top government officials in China including the country’s premier - Image courtesy of the Xinhua News Agency

269 LiuGong chairman Zeng Guang’an was recently invited to discuss manufacturing upgrades and economic restructuring with Chinese premier Li Keqiang. This came when the Chinese premier Li Keqiang presided over a government meeting on manufacturing upgrades and economic restructuring in Beijing, according to China’s official Xinhua News Agency. Vice premier Ma Kai, state councillor, secretary general of the state council Yang Jing, state councillor Wang Yong, government officials from related ministries and commissions and executives from more than 60 leading Chinese manufacturers were also present at the meeting.

LiuGong chairman Guang’an was invited as one of three corporate leaders to speak and the conversation lasted nearly 30 minutes. Zeng briefly introduced the Chinese CE industry and the development of LiuGong, and followed with five suggestions on how to transform and upgrade Chinese manufacturing. Those suggestions included improving the companies’ international competitiveness; supporting the technical innovation and intelligent manufacturing; enhancing the management from the industry associations and guiding the orderness of industry competitions; building a sustainable manufacturing workforce including company managers with global insights, world-class R & D teams and artisans; and moderately decreasing manufacturing costs, such as taxes, logistics and financing costs.

"Manufacturing is the foundation of economic development," Li said. "China’s economic transformation and new industrialization rely on a strong manufacturing sector."

“But Chinese manufacturers as a whole are still at the mid- and low-end of international division of labor, they are big but not always strong,” Li said.

The country should briskly push forward its "Made in China 2025" strategy to bring the manufacturing to a new level, with measures to eliminate outdated capacity and techniques and step up shifts of economic engines, Li said.

Manufacturers should foster new advantages of high quality and applicability of their products and wean-off the reliance on cheap costs, which will help more domestic brands become well-known around the globe, according to Li.

Highlighting innovation in management systems, Li asked companies to use Internet and big data technologies to reorganise their research and development, production and business patterns.

"Customised production should be promoted to meet diverse market demand," Li said.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • LiuGong 900E excavators “very key” for company future
    April 16, 2013
    A senior LiuGong figure says the company’s keenly awaited 900E Series excavator is a “very key machine” for its future. Dave Beatenbough, vice president of the Chinese construction equipment manufacturing giant’s research and development arm, said production of the model at LiuGong’s Dressta base in Poland was expected to begin “within three months”.
  • Booming Chinese aggregate demand
    February 22, 2013
    Global demand for construction aggregates is set to increase 5.2% a year until 2015 to 48.3 billion tonnes, according to research by The Freedonia Group in the United States. The same source tips China alone to account for half of all new aggregate demand worldwide in the period 2010-2015. Guy Woodford reports on the growing importance of the Asian aggregates market. China is already the biggest nation for aggregate production and use in the world, and the competition among the giants of aggregate productio
  • David Beatenbough talks about LiuGong’s achievements and its ambitions.
    January 6, 2017
    The year 2012 has been a milestone for Chinese construction equipment manufacturer LiuGong. In January it announced completion of the purchase of Polish company HSW (Huta Stalowa Wola) and its distribution subsidiary Dressta, LiuGong’s first outright acquisition outside its domestic market. HSW produces bulldozers and other crawler machines, while LiuGong is ranked as the largest wheel loader manufacturer in the world, and is also said to be among the world’s fastest growing CE companies.
  • David Beatenbough talks about LiuGong’s achievements and its ambitions.
    April 2, 2012
    The year 2012 has been a milestone for Chinese construction equipment manufacturer LiuGong. In January it announced completion of the purchase of Polish company HSW (Huta Stalowa Wola) and its distribution subsidiary Dressta, LiuGong’s first outright acquisition outside its domestic market. HSW produces bulldozers and other crawler machines, while LiuGong is ranked as the largest wheel loader manufacturer in the world, and is also said to be among the world’s fastest growing CE companies.