Chinese companies did investment totaling $33 billion in the first three quarters, despite global investment drop under the aion kinah influence of the financial crisis, said Zhang Xiaoqiang, vice chairman of the National Development and Reform Commission, China's top economic planning agency.
The trend represented Chinese firms' willingness to expand international cooperation, at the same time it also helped host economies to create jobs and boost their economic recovery, Zhang told the China Overseas Investment Fair which opened here Tuesday.
China's increasingly voracious aion gold investment in overseas markets is helping the global economy - and especially the economies of developing countries - recover from the financial crisis, according to several speakers at the First China Overseas Investment Fair Tuesday. Chinese officials urged foreign countries to make it easier for that investment to continue to flow by creating a "convenient and fair" environment for Chinese investors.
Statistics from UNCTAD shows that in 2008, investment flowing out of the US declined by 18 percent to $312 billion. Flows from EU nations plunged by 30 percent to $837 billion. But emerging economies, and China in particular, increased overseas investment, Tesfachew told China Daily.



