Παραδείγματα από το σώμα κειμένου για SASAC
1. Li Rongrong, the head of Sasac, was quoted on the official news service yesterday as saying any ownership transfers of state assets had to take place in "authorised trade centres in public". "Asset liquidation and evaluation, financial audits, and decisions about the manner of any trades must be conducted jointly by the enterprise in question and [Sasac]," Mr Li said.
2. Sasac still retains direct control of 16' large state enterprises, with its regional offices supervising many smaller ones at a city or provincial level.
3. Sasac banned management buyouts in late 2004 after Lang Xianping, a Hong Kong economics professor moonlighting as the host of a Shanghai business television programme, mounted a campaign against them.
4. Li Rongrong, the head of Sasac, which has 16' central government companies under its control, said in a speech last week that Beijing aimed eventually to whittle them down to about 80 to 100, or even lower.
5. The announcement yesterday by the State–owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission (Sasac), which controls China‘s state companies, is the latest refinement of policy on privatisation, an area of increasingly heated debate over the past 18 months.