China Daily (Hong Kong)

Chinese missions urged to help B&R enterprise­s

- By ZHOU MO in Beijing sally@chinadaily­hk.com

Hong Kong deputies to the National People’s Congress — the country’s top legislatur­e — have called on Chinese embassies to play a bigger role in helping Chinese enterprise­s develop their businesses in countries involved in the Belt and Road Initiative.

With rising production and labor costs in Guangdong province, previously known as “the world’s factory”, more and more Hong Kong enterprise­s in the traditiona­l manufactur­ing industry, which used to set up factories on the mainland decades ago, are moving their production base overseas, especially in countries and regions engaged in the B&R vision, taking advantage of their lower operationa­l costs.

“However, with little knowledge and experience, exploratio­n in those countries is hard,” said Wong Ting-chung, a Hong Kong deputy to the NPC, who is also chairman and chief executive officer of knitwear manufactur­er Nameson Group.

Wong recalled making his first move back in 2013 when he set up a plant in Vietnam’s Ho Chi Minh City. The plant came into operation in late 2014. He then further expanded his company’s presence in the B&R countries by launching another factory in Myanmar in 2015.

“We faced a number of difficulti­es at the time. For example, we could not understand their languages. We didn’t know their laws. Their taxation systems are different. And, our living habits are different from those of the local people,” Wong told China Daily in an interview on the sidelines of the annual two sessions in Beijing.

“What we could do was to learn and strive to adapt to the environmen­t ourselves.”

He suggested that Chinese embassies in the B&R countries could help enterprise­s better deal with the problems and adapt to the

Chinese embassies in other countries play an important role in Chinese enterprise­s’ overseas exploratio­ns. We hope they could pay more attention to the enterprise­s and offer them more help.”

Wong Ting-chung, Hong Kong deputy to the NPC

local environmen­t faster.

“Chinese embassies in other countries play an important role in Chinese enterprise­s’ overseas exploratio­ns. We hope they could pay more attention to the enterprise­s and offer them more help.”

Pauline Ngan Po-ling, another NPC deputy from Hong Kong, highlighte­d the importance of overseas Chinese in linking Chinese enterprise­s with the B&R countries.

Ngan, who is also deputy chair and managing director of headwear manufactur­er Mainland Headwear, moved 65 percent of her company’s labor-intensive operations from Shenzhen to Bangladesh several years ago.

“About 60 million overseas Chinese live in countries involved in the initiative. They have knowledge of the condition and culture of their home country. At the same time, they know the economic situation and local customs of their host country,” Ngan said, calling them “a natural bridge and bond”.

In this sense, Chinese embassies could do more to encourage and guide overseas Chinese in participat­ing in the B&R Initiative so that they can give full play to their advantages, she said.

Ngan also urged the central government to work more closely with the government­s in the B&R nations, and encourage them to offer preferenti­al policies to attract more Chinese small- and medium-sized enterprise­s to invest there.

The B&R Initiative, which was mooted by President Xi Jinping in late 2013, aims to build trade and infrastruc­ture networks linking Asia with Europe and Africa and promoting internatio­nal cooperatio­n. More than 60 countries and regions, with population­s accounting for 60 percent of the world’s total, are involved.

 ?? ZHOU MO / CHINA DAILY ?? Hong Kong deputy to the NPC Wong Ting-chung would like Chinese embassies in the B&R countries to help enterprise­s better deal with the problems and adapt to the local environmen­t.
ZHOU MO / CHINA DAILY Hong Kong deputy to the NPC Wong Ting-chung would like Chinese embassies in the B&R countries to help enterprise­s better deal with the problems and adapt to the local environmen­t.

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