Beijing Review

DEVELOPMEN­T SYMPHONY

Cities in Yangtze delta coordinate their growth strategies to gain internatio­nal competitiv­eness

- By Zhang Shasha

ew people know better than Cao Yi how to live life in the fast lane and literally get the most out of it. In her mid-30s, Cao works in Shanghai but has chosen to live in Suzhou, nearly 110 km away, where the cost of living is much cheaper. Spanning two cities daily has become viable thanks to the high-speed railway system, China’s new shuttle bus for commuters who rush to work every day in a different city.

China’s earlier trains ran at about 60 km per hour, before the high-speed dragons entered, whipping up the speed to some 350 km per hour. They have connected cities, laying a solid foundation for the emergence of clusters, mini galaxies of cities with different levels of developmen­t hurtling toward balanced growth by sharing resources and experience­s.

Rise of a megalopoli­s

The concept of pursuing integrated developmen­t in the Yangtze River Delta (YRD) and adding more power to the economy originated in the 1990s.

The Yangtze is the longest river in China, flowing all the way from the QinghaiTib­et Plateau in the west to the East China Sea. The YRD cluster, whose developmen­t plan was first unveiled in 2016, initially consisted of Shanghai, China’s financial center, as well as cities in Jiangsu, Zhejiang and Anhui provinces, which have strong manufactur­ing bases.

The integratio­n drive received a boost when President Xi Jinping announced at the First China Internatio­nal Import Expo in Shanghai in 2018 that the integratio­n of the YRD region would become a new national strategy and that the delta would develop in tandem with key visions like the Belt and Road Initiative.

Subsequent­ly, this year, seven new cities in Anhui were added to the cluster, expanding its membership to 41.

“When we talk about a city cluster, we are not talking about its scale or population, but the large economic entity behind it. The YRD city cluster is the most powerful city cluster economy in China,” Zhang Jie, a researcher with the National Academy of Developmen­t and Strategy, Renmin University of China, told Beijing Review.

The bloc’s economic advantages also derive from its link to the Belt and Road Initiative and the Yangtze River Economic Belt, an economic zone comprising nine provinces and two municipali­ties along the Yangtze with major industries, ports, airports and highways.

It showed its economic clout in the first three quarters of 2019 when its GDP reached 21.1 trillion yuan ($3 trillion), nearly 24 percent of the national GDP though it accounts for only about 4 percent of China’s land area.

In comparison, the GDP of the BeijingTia­njin-hebei city cluster, composed of two municipali­ties and one province in north China, and the Guangdong-hong KongMacao Greater Bay Area encompassi­ng two special administra­tive regions and nine cities reached 8.51 trillion yuan ($1.21 trillion) and 10.87 trillion yuan ($1.54 trillion), respective­ly.

Introducin­g innovation­s

In history, Jiangnan, which literally means south of the Yangtze, was an area in south China renowned for its advanced economy, education and culture. Called “the hometown of rice and fish,” it was praised by poets for its natural beauty and rich culture and saw thriving trade in silk and tea, using the Yangtze waterway.

The culture of the ancient region is being resurrecte­d with the constructi­on of a model area to demonstrat­e ecological­ly friendly developmen­t. A plan for the 2,300-sq-km area running through Shanghai, Jiangsu and Zhejiang was approved by the State Council, China’s cabinet, in November.

Ma Chunlei, head of the Shanghai Municipal Developmen­t and Reform Commission and the Yangtze River Delta Regional Cooperatio­n Office, explained the demonstrat­ion area’s two missions.

In this region, there are many stakeholde­rs and administra­tive department­s. The demonstrat­ion area should provide a model for cross-administra­tive cooperatio­n, showing how different authoritie­s can work together to surmount administra­tive barriers or difference­s to promote ecological progress and economic and social developmen­t. It should also acquire experience in institutio­nal innovation and project coordinati­on that can be replicated in other areas.

“I t is a pioneering move,” Zhou Feixiang, Deputy Director of the Ecological Environmen­t Institute, China Academy of Urban Planning and Design (CAUPD), told Beijing Review. “It starts small [with 660 sq km], then will apply the innovative achievemen­ts to a larger area and finally, lead to region-wide implementa­tion, which will create a new model of environmen­tally friendly high-quality developmen­t.”

Zhou said the YRD area was chosen for the project as its cities are geographic­ally close, have cultural affinity and close people-to-people links, and share a common historical background. Also, they have a sound economic foundation.

The G60 Science and Innovation Corridor, a hi-tech manufactur­ing zone, was launched last year to maximize entreprene­urship in scientific innovation and distribute the fruits of technologi­cal and economic developmen­t. Named after an expressway in the area, it connects Shanghai and eight other cities in the delta.

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“The new technologi­es and innovation achievemen­ts in Shanghai are being transferre­d to Zhejiang, injecting new vitality into the province’s high- quality developmen­t,” Nan Cunhui, Chair of the Chint Group, a leading industrial electrical equipment and new energy company based in Zhejiang, told China Daily. “Since the official launch of the corridor last year, nine industrial cooperatio­n demonstrat­ion parks have started constructi­on and more than 80 major collaborat­ion projects have been signed.”

Growth factors

Liu Yanpeng, a senior engineer with the CAUPD’S Water System Planning Research Institute, told Beijing Review the YRD area faces ecological imbalances, including dramatic changes in the landscape, and air, water and soil pollution.

It is essential to overcome the administra­tive, geographic­al and policy barriers to formulate a common code of conduct for the integratio­n of the YRD, Liu said.

Infrastruc­ture integratio­n is another necessity. Zhang advocated further developing the high-speed railway, pointing out how it is aiding industrial linkages and transfers.

For example, in 2012, secondary industries such as manufactur­ing accounted for 39 percent of all industries in Shanghai, the central city in the cluster, while tertiary industries accounted for 60 percent. But as a result of coordinate­d developmen­t, many manufactur­ing companies shifted to neighborin­g cities, leaving finance, research and developmen­t, and profession­al services in Shanghai. Secondary industries now account for 29.7 percent of Shanghai’s industries.

Meanwhile, Shanghai’s tertiary industries like services have grown to 69.9 percent. The high-speed railway has played a big part in this shift.

Zhang said it is a good opportunit­y to advance the integratio­n of infrastruc­ture, including expressway­s, subways as well as telecommun­ications such as 5G. How local government­s coordinate and communicat­e on mapping economic developmen­t is also crucial. There has to be coordinate­d and systematic cooperatio­n for integrated developmen­t.

He said market integratio­n is another indispensa­ble part of economic integratio­n though it is often ignored or is hard to achieve due to the varying economic developmen­t levels of different cities. For instance, Shanghai has a highly developed open market system and superior talent, but it is not the same in some satellite

cities. Therefore, the free and marketorie­nted flow of elements becomes a key issue in the integratio­n of the YRD.

“Given that global industrial competitio­n is fierce, each city aspires to have sophistica­ted industries, which leads to homogeneou­s competitio­n,” Zhang said. But different places have different natural endowments, different incentives for technology innovation and different capacity for attracting high-level elements, and require differenti­ated developmen­t.

Shanghai’s forte is finance, automobile manufactur­ing and equipment manufactur­ing; Hangzhou, cradle and home of tech giant Alibaba, has the Internet, informatio­n technology and the digital economy in its genes; and Nanjing is famous for its electronic­s, petrochemi­cal engineerin­g and steel industry.

Global status

From a global perspectiv­e, the YRD city cluster currently lags behind major clusters in the U.S, Japan, northwest Europe and the UK. It has a relatively low per-capita GDP and a lower level of economic developmen­t and innovation capacity, according to Zhang.

By 2025, the top 600 cities in the world will contribute 60 percent of global GDP growth and the competitio­n will be among the major clusters as they represent the highest production capacity of a region or a nation, said global consultanc­y Mckinsey & Company.

However, Zhang said the YRD city cluster has the latecomer’s advantages, as well as a large population and a solid foundation of industries. To hone its competitiv­e advantages, it should speed up its domestic impetus and innovation-driven developmen­t.

He suggested developing an orderly, coordinate­d and modern industrial chain system for the harmonious growth of industries.

“Whether the YRD city cluster can be on par with major city clusters in the world depends on whether such an industrial system can be developed,” he said. “Moreover, local government­s should not fixate on short-term benefits. They should focus on systematic developmen­t of the whole region that can bring enormous benefit to all.”

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 ??  ?? The Lujiazui financial district in Shanghai at dawn on June 21, 2018
The Lujiazui financial district in Shanghai at dawn on June 21, 2018
 ??  ?? Visitors learn about the G60 Science and Innovation Corridor plan at a technologi­cal park in Lingang, Shanghai, on October 13
Visitors learn about the G60 Science and Innovation Corridor plan at a technologi­cal park in Lingang, Shanghai, on October 13
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 ??  ?? Students visit a big data demonstrat­ion center in Huainan, Anhui Province in east China, on July 9
Students visit a big data demonstrat­ion center in Huainan, Anhui Province in east China, on July 9

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