As global firms recalibrate their approach in Asia due to shifting global politics and slower global growth, the importance of China cannot be underestimated. While the growth of China’s economy is transitioning away from high-speed expansion, its large size and changes through structural reforms offer attractive opportunities for those who choose appropriate entry modes.
As companies look towards 2026 and beyond, success in China will depend not only on targeting the right growth sectors, but also on navigating regulatory complexity, entity structuring, and an evolving talent landscape. This article looks at key growth sectors, from advanced manufacturing and new energy to consumer and services-led industries, reflecting the types of businesses actively expanding and operating across Asia today. It also outlines how organisations can position themselves for sustainable expansion by addressing compliance, operational and workforce considerations early in their Asia expansion journey.
1. Advanced manufacturing and Industrial Technology
China continues to move up the value chain, focusing on automation technology, robotics, semiconductors, and precision engineering. Foreign firms with unique technology or knowledge can continue to serve as attractive investment partners in these areas, especially when aligned with local supply-chain upgrading initiatives. Successful participation in these sectors often requires careful structuring, licensing and compliance planning to ensure operations can scale effectively.
2. New Energy & Sustainability
China is a leading country in the development of Electric Vehicles (EVs), batteries, solar, and wind. Policy support, infrastructure investment, and domestic demand in these sectors continue to propel them toward success – creating opportunities in manufacturing, component supply, engineering services and carbon-related advisory work. Given the regulatory and reporting requirements attached to many sustainability-related activities, early regulatory and tax planning can help businesses enter these sectors with greater certainty.
3. Healthcare, Lifesciences & MedTech
An aging population and increasing healthcare expectations in China drive demand for medical devices, pharmaceuticals, biotechnology, and digital healthcare. Although the regulations imposed may be challenging, companies that localise can tap into one of the biggest healthcare markets worldwide. Companies that succeed in this space typically do so by pairing market opportunity with strong governance, compliance and operational controls from the start.
4. Consumers & Services-Led Growth
Consumption in China is evolving rather than disappearing. There is an increase in the value of premium, experiential and service-based consumption and services such as wellness, education, professional services and online platforms. However, understanding local consumption patterns and how regulatory frameworks operate is crucial for success. Clear operating structures and compliant employment models are often key enablers for sustainable growth in these consumer-facing sectors.
Compliance Realities: Why Execution Matters More Than Entry
Although China is gradually opening selective sectors to foreign investment, complying with the regulations in these sectors is not easy. Some common difficulties in complying with regulations for foreign invested enterprises include:
While these challenges can appear daunting, they are manageable with the right governance structures, local expertise and coordinated compliance approach in place.
Decisions early in the structuring process, such as entity type, registered capital, governance framework and functional scope, can have major long-term tax, operational, and repatriation implications. Many corporations find themselves running risks because such decisions are made with insufficient knowledge of local compliance requirements.
This makes entry point selection a core principle. Typically, entry structures would include:
Apart from incorporation, other factors that a business needs to take into consideration, which have a direct impact on scalability include banking structure, capital, licensing and inter-company arrangements. A coordinated approach across tax, legal and finance functions can significantly reduce friction as operations expand.
For many companies, the question is no longer whether there is opportunity in China, but rather how China can be part of an Asia expansion strategy. As operating conditions become more complex, companies are increasingly selective about where they deploy capital, build teams, and establish long-term platforms.
China remains unique for its industrial ecosystems and innovation breadth, though these advantages now come with higher execution demands. Regulatory expectations are more nuanced, cost structures are evolving, and talent management requires greater localisation. As a result, China is increasingly approached not as a first entry point into Asia, but as a deliberate strategic market - one that rewards preparation, sector focus and disciplined governance.
In some cases, this could mean entering China in tandem with the rest of Asia. For others, it may involve staggered expansion such as establishing regional coordination, governance and control structures elsewhere before committing operationally to China. In both cases, the role China plays is becoming more intentional and more tightly linked to a company’s risk appetite, operating model and long-term growth objectives.
A better understanding of China in this context, rather than as a standalone market, is imperative for companies that are assessing where and how to establish their presence in Asia.
Executing with Confidence: How RSM Stone Forest Supports Sustainable Expansion into China
Expanding into China requires more than market ambition; it demands disciplined execution. By integrating your regulatory, tax, payroll, and talent strategies from the start, you can transform these interconnected challenges from a source of risk into a foundation for sustainable, scalable growth.
We can support China expansion through three core pillars:
Whether you are entering China for the first time or repositioning an existing presence, RSM Stone Forest provides the structure and insight needed to navigate complexity with confidence.
https://amro-asia.org/chinas-economic-recovery-transitioning-to-high-quality-growth
https://www.bloomberg.com/professional/insights/regional-analysis/china-consumption-2026-outlook