China Daily (Hong Kong)

Go the extra mile in tech push, Hong Kong urged

- By EDITH LU in Hong Kong edithlu@chinadaily­hk.com

Hong Kong should aim higher in its bid to become a technologi­cal hub so as to grasp the opportunit­ies in technologi­cal innovation created by the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area, former secretary for financial services and the treasury Ceajer Chan Ka-keung has urged.

In so doing, he expected the SAR to be more than a capital market.

Chan noted that, for a long time, Hong Kong merely wanted to be a financial center, but if the city looks at the Bay Area as an opportunit­y, greater focus should be laid on building up local technologi­cal companies or even unicorns — startups valued at above $1 billion — as technologi­cal innovation is a major push in the Bay Area.

“With top-notch universiti­es in the city and their strong research ability, especially in biology and medicine, we need to make greater use of these resources and establish our own leadership in some of those areas,” he said.

The former minister, who left the SAR government last year, was invited back to the business school at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology as an adjunct professor. He had been with the university for more than a decade before joining the SAR government.

Chan noted that local universiti­es are unable to play their roles well in the innovation sector due to their lack of research talents.

At the University of Hong Kong, for instance, it had 11,935 postgradua­te students and 7,786 academic staff as of November last year, according to the institutio­n’s management informatio­n unit of the president office.

Compared to Peking University in Beijing, the number of HKU’s academic staff wasn’t far less, but its number of postgradua­te students was only about half that of Peking University.

In view of the talent shortage, Chan suggested that universiti­es in Hong Kong raise their quotas for postgradua­te students in areas like artificial intelligen­ce and medicine.

“If Hong Kong were to advance in technology and innovation, more talents and researcher­s are needed. If we cannot find enough higher-educated talents in the city, why not take them from the Chinese mainland, India, South Korea or elsewhere,” he suggested.

He believed it would be worthwhile as these students should have already completed their four-year undergradu­ate courses and come to Hong Kong for advanced studies with their rich knowledge and experience.

As for the developmen­t plan for the Bay Area, although the nuts and bolts of the project have yet to be unveiled, Chan expected to see the general blueprint and directions for the area.

The developmen­t plan seems ready to be rolled out soon, with both the mega Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge and the Hong Kong section of the Guangzhou-Shenzhen-Hong Kong Express Rail Link now in service.

But, Chan said it would be better to unveil a visionary picture than detailed measures for the time being. “There’s no need for too many details as this would invite some constraint­s,” he added. “These particular measures could emerge part by part as it would take time to formulate and refine them along the way.”

Chan would not speculate on when a final announceme­nt would be made or the reason for the delay.

Not many economic clusters in the world have the economic power the Bay Area has. Hong Kong, Shenzhen and Guangzhou make the Bay Area an important supply chain providing goods and services to the rest of the world. And Hong Kong, of course, is connecting the area to the world.”

Ceajer Chan Ka-keung, former secretary for financial services and the treasury

 ?? EDMOND TANG / CHINA DAILY ?? From left: Wang Zhile, vice-president, China Enterprise Compliance Promotion Alliance; Wang Yizhou, general manager, Corporate Affairs and Compliance Management Office, China Mobile Internatio­nal; Yan Biao, director of Legal Affairs, China Resources Group; and Yang Yi, former deputy director-general, Economic Affairs Department and former head of the Commercial Office at the Liaison Office of the Central People’s Government in the HKSAR, at the keynote luncheon themed “Turning Corporate Compliance into Competitiv­e Advantage”.
EDMOND TANG / CHINA DAILY From left: Wang Zhile, vice-president, China Enterprise Compliance Promotion Alliance; Wang Yizhou, general manager, Corporate Affairs and Compliance Management Office, China Mobile Internatio­nal; Yan Biao, director of Legal Affairs, China Resources Group; and Yang Yi, former deputy director-general, Economic Affairs Department and former head of the Commercial Office at the Liaison Office of the Central People’s Government in the HKSAR, at the keynote luncheon themed “Turning Corporate Compliance into Competitiv­e Advantage”.
 ?? EDMOND TANG / CHINA DAILY ?? From left: Joseph Chan, chairman of the Silk Road Economic Developmen­t Research Center; H.E. Rashid Alimov, secretary-general of the Shanghai Cooperatio­n Organisati­on; Chief Secretary for Administra­tion Matthew Cheung Kin-chung; and Zhou Li, editorial board member of China Daily Group, publisher and editor-in-chief of China Daily Asia Pacific, pose for a group photo at the Belt and Road Conference on Monday.
EDMOND TANG / CHINA DAILY From left: Joseph Chan, chairman of the Silk Road Economic Developmen­t Research Center; H.E. Rashid Alimov, secretary-general of the Shanghai Cooperatio­n Organisati­on; Chief Secretary for Administra­tion Matthew Cheung Kin-chung; and Zhou Li, editorial board member of China Daily Group, publisher and editor-in-chief of China Daily Asia Pacific, pose for a group photo at the Belt and Road Conference on Monday.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China