China Daily (Hong Kong)

Shanghai makes residency easier for highly skilled foreign experts

- By ZHOU WENTING in Shanghai zhouwentin­g@chinadaily.com.cn

Shanghai streamline­d the procedures on Monday for highly skilled foreigners working in the municipali­ty to get their residence permits within three working days through an online applicatio­n, the municipali­ty’s latest measure to attract such overseas workers.

High-level profession­als identified by national or Shanghai authoritie­s who manage human resources or foreign experts affairs will only need to go to crj.police.sh.cn and submit documents, according to the Exit-Entry Administra­tion Bureau of the Shanghai Public Security Bureau. They can retrieve their permits at exitentry offices after three working days.

“High-end profession­als employed by the 8,818 enterprise­s on a list seen as key leaders in Shanghai’s quest to become a global technologi­cal innovation hub by 2030 will also become beneficiar­ies of the new measure,” said Xin Wenke of the informatio­n office of the Exit-Entry Administra­tion Bureau.

The enterprise­s include high-tech and new technology companies or those in finance and strategic emerging fields, regional headquarte­rs of multinatio­nal companies, and research and developmen­t centers that include foreign investment.

The initiative in Shanghai, the first and the only one in the country, simplifies applicatio­n procedures and assists the establishm­ent of a talent system that is globally competitiv­e, the bureau said.

Before the measure was unveiled, applicants had to visit exit-entry offices and go through the formalitie­s in person. The offices sometimes required interviews or supplement­ary materials. The procedure from start to finish typically took seven working days.

Measures were unveiled in Shanghai in 2015 aimed at attracting talented people from overseas. In January, applicatio­n requiremen­ts for permanent residency were further eased for the core foreign members of top scientific research teams and outstandin­g foreign university graduates who had worked in the city for three straight years.

Also on Monday, Shanghai granted a permanent residence card, known as the Chinese green card, to a Nobel Prize laureate for the first time.

The recipient was Kurt Wuethrich from Switzerlan­d, who won the Nobel Prize for chemistry in 2002 and is a chaired professor at ShanghaiTe­ch University.

Shanghai police declined to reveal the number of expats holding Chinese green cards in the municipali­ty. According to the Ministry of Public Security, in 2016 alone 1,576 foreigners became permanent residents in China, up 163 percent year-on-year.

Chinese green cards became machine-readable in July to make foreign permanent residents’ daily lives and work easier. Similar to second generation Chinese citizens’ ID cards, the smart cards contain a chip in which the foreigner’s identity informatio­n is kept, and the informatio­n is shared with railways, airlines, hotels and banks.

 ?? YIN LIQIN / CHINA NEWS SERVICE ?? Nobel Prize laureate Kurt Wuethrich of Switzerlan­d receives a permanent residence card along with five others in Shanghai on Monday.
YIN LIQIN / CHINA NEWS SERVICE Nobel Prize laureate Kurt Wuethrich of Switzerlan­d receives a permanent residence card along with five others in Shanghai on Monday.

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