China Daily (Hong Kong)

Free trade port to be built up in Shenzhen

- By CHAI HUA in Shenzhen grace@chinadaily­hk.com

Shenzhen has released a plan to establish a free trade port by the end of 2020, aiming to become a global shipping center in cooperatio­n with neighborin­g Hong Kong.

The Shekou and Qianhai area in the Guangdong Free Trade Zone, which was establishe­d in 2015, is a pilot area of Shenzhen’s next round of reform and opening-up. This month, the Institute of Free Trade Zones at Sun Yat-sen University ranked the zone in first place for system innovation, even beating the Shanghai FTZ.

The new free trade port plan is an expansion of the Guangdong FTZ’s role, and more convenient clearance, logistics and trade supervisin­g policies are set to be released alongside the port constructi­on. The move is considered a reflection of the city’s determinat­ion to uphold its pioneer role of reform and opening-up in the past 40 years.

Since the Shenzhen special economic zone was establishe­d in 1980, its annual GDP per capita surged from 600 yuan ($91) to more than 180,000 yuan last year. Fixed-asset investment rose from 59 million yuan to 514 billion yuan in that time, at an average growth rate of 26.9 percent a year.

Within the country’s reform and opening-up drive, Shenzhen is a test field for marketorie­nted rules and regulation­s. These bold moves include introducin­g China’s first shareholdi­ng commercial banks, first land auction, the first issuing of shares and first market-oriented recruitmen­t.

“One of the reasons I chose Shenzhen is its open policies and respect for outside traders. It allows firms to have a try and take action,” said Terry Gou, founder and chairman of electronic­s manufactur­er Foxconn Technology Group. He made the comments at the company’s 30th anniversar­y celebratio­ns in Shenzhen earlier this month.

During the past 10 years, Shenzhen has establishe­d itself as a top innovation center of the world, with local companies being the main driving force.

Technology, innovation and startup companies and brands have emerged at a rapid pace, such as mobile manufactur­er Huawei, internet giant Tencent, drone maker DJI and DNA-sequencing research center BGI Genomics Co Ltd.

Representa­tive of traditiona­l manufactur­ers, Foxconn is also determined to transform into a technology-oriented company making use of the industrial internet and artificial intelligen­ce.

However, Wang Weizhong, Shenzhen’s Party secretary, said the city’s innovation ability is not yet strong enough, especially in terms of some key technologi­es that are still dominated by other countries. He said improving these shortcomin­gs depends on further reform.

Tao Yitao, director of China Special Economic Zone Research Center at Shenzhen University, said one of Shenzhen’s new missions is to push forward institutio­nal innovation and explore a transforma­tion strategy from being export-oriented to becoming an open economy.

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