((new)): Li Rongrong
If you follow Chinese economic policy, you know that managing the nation’s massive State-owned Enterprises (SOEs) is often compared to “turning an aircraft carrier in a bathtub.” The bureaucracy is thick, the political stakes are high, and the workforce is enormous.
He wasn't a revolutionary. He was a fixer. And in the complex, high-stakes world of Chinese state capital, that might be the highest praise. li rongrong
The Quiet Reformer: How Li Rongrong Changed the DNA of China’s State Giants If you follow Chinese economic policy, you know
For three critical years—from 2016 to 2019— was the man holding the wheel. And in the complex, high-stakes world of Chinese
Western analysts often ask, “Can China reform its SOEs?” Li Rongrong proved the answer is not black or white. It’s a perpetual grey zone—and he navigated it better than most. What are your thoughts on China’s SOE reforms? Do you think the “market-oriented” approach can survive political pressures? Let me know in the comments.
While Western headlines focused on trade wars and tariffs, Li was quietly doing something arguably more difficult: forcing China’s corporate leviathans to become profitable, lean, and globally competitive. Li Rongrong isn’t a flashy academic or a financier. He is a classic “company man” who rose through the industrial ranks. Before taking the helm at SASAC, he spent decades in the auto industry (Dongfeng Motor) and later served as the Mayor of Wuhan and Vice Minister of Industry.

