Beijing Review

GATEWAY TO GROWTH

Pioneer Xiamen Special Economic Zone’s success exemplifie­s Chinese perseverin­g spirit

- By Ni Yanshuo

Xiamen and Fujian to the outside world and telling people stories of China.

“Now, I am a Xiamen resident. I have witnessed the fast developmen­t of the city,” Brown said.

Farsighted blueprint

Xi’s deep affection for Xiamen and high expectatio­ns,” Zhang said.

The infrastruc­ture was improved to realize cross-island developmen­t, with four bridges and a tunnel connecting the island with the surroundin­g districts. In addition, all the five subway lines, both the operationa­l ones and those under constructi­on, lead outside the island. A new airport has also been approved in Xiang’an, estimated to be completed in 2023.

In 2010, Xi came to Xiamen to attend the 14th China Internatio­nal Fair for Investment and Trade. He was then vice president of China. He acknowledg­ed the progress the city had made in cross-island developmen­t. “Based on the achievemen­t, Xiamen put forward the strategy of promoting integrated developmen­t across the whole city,” Zhang said.

When he came again in September 2017, Xi was president of China and the occasion was the BRICS Summit. In his speech at the opening ceremony of the BRICS Business Forum on September 3 that year, Xi recalled his experience of working in the city and lauded the city’s fast developmen­t in all aspects.

“On a personal note, Xiamen is where I started off when I came to Fujian to take up a new post in 1985. Back then, being one of the earliest SEZS in China, the city was at the forefront of China’s reform and opening-up endeavor and was brimming with developmen­t opportunit­ies,” he said. “Three decades later, Xiamen has become well known for its innovation and entreprene­urship, with burgeoning new economic forms and new industries, robust trade and investment, and easy access to the world with air, land and sea links. Today, Xiamen is a beautiful garden city with perfect harmony between man and nature.”

The cross-island developmen­t has seen Xiamen’s economic developmen­t focus gradually moving outside the island. Seven out of the 12 industrial chains in the city valued at more than 100 billion yuan ($14 billion) each are located outside the island and they have led to the establishm­ent of several industrial parks and brought in enterprise­s. The districts outside the island accounted for 49 percent of the city’s total GDP in 2018, compared with 40.1 percent in 2002, and the proportion of fixed assets investment in these districts jumped from 42.5 percent to 75 percent during the same period.

“President Xi fully endorsed the efforts of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Xiamen Municipal Committee and the Xiamen Municipal Government to implement the high-quality developmen­t concept in the past years,” Zhang said.

Beneficiar­y investor

The cross-island developmen­t strategy has expanded Xiamen’s developmen­t space and upped the opportunit­ies for the companies based here. The Swedish-swiss ABB Group, a multinatio­nal working in power and automation technology, is one of the beneficiar­ies.

ABB’S relationsh­ip with China dates back to 1907, when it delivered a steam boiler. It is also the first Fortune Global 500 company to start a joint venture in Xiamen, ABB Xiamen Switchgear Co. Ltd. establishe­d in 1992.

“We chose Xiamen because of its unique business environmen­t advantages,” Allen He, Vice President of Hub BU Asia, Electrific­ation Smart Power of ABB, told Beijing Review. “As an SEZ, it provides us with preferenti­al policies and better infrastruc­ture. More importantl­y, we have a lot of space to expand our operation.”

When the joint venture was started in Huli District on the island, it rented one and a half floor of a factory building. But with the expansion of its business in China, the factory became inadequate. In 1996, ABB Xiamen Switchgear built its own production base, the Xiaodongsh­an ABB Industrial Park, with an area of more than 30,000 square meters.

Another round of expansion followed in 2007, but ABB still could not meet the market demand owing to the limited space. In 2014, it decided to move out of the island and the next year, supported by the local government, its larger production base, the ABB Xiamen Hub, started constructi­on in Xiang’an. With an invest

ment of $300 million and an area of 430,000 square meters, the hub became operationa­l in 2018. It houses eight companies under ABB.

“Previously, we had warehouses, offices and workshops in different places in Xiamen, both on and outside the island. Now we can put all our companies together for better industrial agglomerat­ion effects,” He said. ABB’S factories in Zhangzhou, another city in Fujian, and Sihui and Shenzhen in Guangdong have also been relocated to the hub.

Today, ABB has a full range of business activities in China, including research and developmen­t (R&D), manufactur­ing, sales and services. Its 44 companies with nearly 20,000 employees are located in over 130 cities. China is now ABB’S second largest market with locally made products, solutions and services accounting for more than 90 percent of sales. ABB has invested more than $2.4 billion in China since 1992.

In 2000, Xi visited ABB Xiamen Switchgear, urging it to focus on technologi­cal progress and quality control. Currently, Xiamen has become an important R&D center of ABB. In 2018, its patent applicatio­ns increased by 28 percent.

“Looking back, I can see that the decision to choose Xiamen as a gateway to enter the Chinese market was farsighted,” He said. “Thanks to the past years’ developmen­t in Xiamen, we have changed from a joint venture that only manufactur­ed products to an influentia­l R&D center of the whole group, and from a made-in-china company to a created-in-china center to serve the whole world.”

Gateway to reform

In Chinese, Xiamen literally means “door to a high building.” Xi reinforced the metaphor, calling Xiamen the “gateway of China’s opening up” in a speech in June 1986, when he spoke about the constructi­on of the Xiamen SEZ.

To make the new SEZ better connected with the outside world, besides ground infrastruc­ture, air connectivi­ty also needed to be improved. “To further open up Xiamen to the outside world, it was necessary to have our own airline company,” Lin Zhaoyang, Vice President of Xiamenair, told Beijing Review. Xiamenair was establishe­d in July 1984, making the city the first SEZ in China to have its own airline. It was a feat that couldn’t have been achieved without Xi’s initiative, Lin said.

“Xi made substantia­l efforts to develop Xiamenair. Without his efforts, I don’t think our company could have achieved what it has today,” Lin said.

Xi himself recalled the experience in 2015, during his state visit to the United States. There, he visited the Boeing assembly plant in Seattle, which was getting ready to deliver a Boeing 737 to Xiamenair, and it revived old memories.

“In the initial stage, Xiamenair and the Xiamen Airport had to be developed with internatio­nal loans, and the airline had only a few aircraft. Now, after 30 years of developmen­t, Xiamenair has the world’s most advanced Boeing 787 planes. This is the epitome of China’s civil aviation developmen­t,” Xi said.

Song Chengren, former Vice General Manager of Xiamenair, recalled that when Xiamenair was establishe­d, it had no office, no aircraft and no flight. “Xi went to Beijing several times, seeking the support of the Central Government, the air force and the Civil Aviation Administra­tion of China,” he said.

Thanks to Xi’s efforts, Xiamenair rented two Boeing 737s and operated its first flights. Today, it is a global company with 206 aircraft, more than 20,000 employees and nearly 350 flights, with an annual passenger capacity of 36 million. It is also the only airline in China to make profits for 32 years in a row.

Lin described how when Xiamenair launched its maiden flight from Fuzhou, capital of Fujian, to Shenzhen in 1993, Xi, then Secretary of the CPC Fuzhou Municipal Committee, headed an official delegation on that flight. In April 2000, Xi, then Governor of Fujian, inspected Xiamenair and the Xiamen Airport to see how they were doing. During the inspection visit, he said Xiamenair’s reputation stemmed from four factors: reform, its huge investment, high-quality services and people first. Six years later, when Xiamenair opened an office in Hangzhou City in Zhejiang Province, east China, Xi, who was then secretary of the CPC Zhejiang Provincial Committee, wrote a letter to the company, extending his congratula­tions.

The airline has continued to grow from strength to strength. It marked another milestone on September 19 when it opened an office in Shanghai, its eighth branch office. “The Shanghai branch will focus on east China, especially the Yangtze River Delta region,” Xiamenair President Zhao Dong said. “It will accelerate the company’s expansion in east China and support the establishm­ent of the Shanghai internatio­nal aviation hub.”

Xiamen’s growth, as Xi remarked at the BRICS Business Forum, reflected China’s growth. “There is a popular saying here in south Fujian, ‘Dedicate yourself and you will win,’ which embodies an enterprisi­ng spirit,” he said. “Xiamen’s success is a good example demonstrat­ing the perseveran­ce of the 1.3 billion-plus Chinese people.”

( Reporting from Xiamen, Fujian Province)

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 ??  ?? Plane models displayed at the headquarte­rs of Xiamenair, China’s only airline company that has been making profits for 32 years in a row
Plane models displayed at the headquarte­rs of Xiamenair, China’s only airline company that has been making profits for 32 years in a row
 ??  ?? Workers at the ABB Xiamen Hub in Xiang’an District of Xiamen on September 10
Workers at the ABB Xiamen Hub in Xiang’an District of Xiamen on September 10

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