Latest News:  

English>>Business

State-owned cultural enterprises post increasing profits

(Xinhua)

08:37, January 04, 2013

BEIJING, Jan. 3 (Xinhua) -- Profits of China's state-owned cultural enterprises hit 84.99 billion yuan (13.52 billion U.S. dollars) in 2011, up 21.7 percent year on year, official figures have shown.

For the first time, the Ministry of Finance (MOF) unveiled figures relating to the country's state-owned cultural enterprises in a "white paper"-like report.

The MOF figures showed that there were 10,365 state-owned cultural enterprises by the end of 2011, with total assets of nearly 1.6 trillion yuan, up 18.7 percent compared with 2010.

We recommend:

A Stable 2012, a Promising 2013

BJ-GZ highspeed rail eases travel rush tension

More Chinese cities see home price rise

Santa is coming and China takes a lot more notice

Tourists enjoy sunshine in Sanya

China to remain largest gold producer: association

Email|Print|Comments(Editor:黄蓓蓓、梁军)

Related Reading

Leave your comment0 comments

  1. Name

  

Selections for you


  1. Navy protects ships from pirates

  2. Weekly review of military photos

  3. Afghan refugees' daily life in Iran

  4. Black-headed gulls come to Kunming

  5. Beijing witnesses 7th snowfall this winter

  6. Top 10 economic events in 2012

  7. Recipe:chicken with sizzling stuff

  8. Early Apple computer and tablet designs

Most Popular

Opinions

  1. Why ‘Chinese style road crossing’ occurs
  2. Time to abandon obsession with theme parks
  3. No grand glory, but plenty to cheer about
  4. Optimism over China's economy surfaces
  5. Internet gaming: 'A winning gamble'
  6. People have right to know what chickens eat
  7. Catchwords in memory in 2012
  8. Why the young Chinese get physically weaker
  9. Why Discover China is popular in the West
  10. The laughter sounds too harsh

What’s happening in China

Black-headed gulls come to Kunming for winter

  1. New measures drafted against online video piracy
  2. Charities' 'full scores' on transparency mocked
  3. Court rejects village official's labor camp appeal
  4. Outdoor restroom collapse kills 2 students
  5. First subway to cross Yangtze opens