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In the original post in this series, Getting Money Out of China: It’s Complicated, I wrote about how incredibly frequently Western companies have been seeking the help of my firm’s China lawyers in an (often desperate) effort to get money out of China so they can get funds due to them on all sorts of deals. On our China Law Blog Facebook Page, I linked over to the original post and described it as “In which we begin to answer THE question everybody is asking.”
That has turned out to be no exaggeration. That post has already had nearly 8,000 views and over the weekend, I alone received four reporter queries and nearly a dozen e-mails from people asking for help to get money out of China. I assume that were I to survey my firm’s China attorneys they would report something similar. But as I noted in part 2 of this series, most of the requests deal with purchasing single family homes in the United States and “slapping together 3-5 single family homes and calling it a fund is not likely to make a difference with the Chinese government allowing money to leave!”
In part 2, I discussed how the Chinese government seems to apply a three part test in determining whether to allow funds to leave China to go to a Western company. Based on the many deals on which our China attorneys have worked, and the reports we get from our clients and their bankers and financiers, and from China consultants and bankers and financiers with whom we regularly share information, we see legitimacy and benefit to China and deal structure as the three key elements. In part 2, I looked at legitimacy. In this post, I will examine the “benefit to China” element.
There is no doubt in my mind that a key element to money leaving China is simply whether the Chinese government wants the money to leave for its intended purpose or not. Nothing scientific here and it is more art than science, but based on my experience and my conversations and my gut feelings, I would rank the likelihood of the Chinese government approving your deal in roughly the following ways.
Determining whether money can come in on a specific deal — even when it is legitimate and the contract is good — is more art than science and nobody can get it right every time. For this reason, our advise is always to assume that getting the money will be difficult and act accordingly. We give this advice even for our lowest risk clients: the product sellers. See Payment Terms When Selling TO China: Possession Is Ten-Tenths Of The Law. This means setting up your deal to reduce your risk of not getting paid and to reduce your risk if you fail to get paid.
What are you seeing out there?
We will be discussing the practical aspects of Chinese law and how it impacts business there. We will be telling you what works and what does not and what you as a businessperson can do to use the law to your advantage. Our aim is to assist businesses already in China or planning to go into China, not to break new ground in legal theory or policy.