China Daily (Hong Kong)

Shanghai aims for top tech city status

- By WANG YING in Shanghai wang_ying@chinadaily.com.cn

Being the nation’s most desirable city for scientists around the world, Shanghai will continue to sharpen its technologi­cal innovation ability as it builds a scientific and technologi­cal innovation center with global influence, its top official said.

“A global technologi­cal innovation center should have the facilities and elements that cities elsewhere do not have,” said Li Qiang, Shanghai’s Party chief, in his keynote speech at the opening ceremony of the Pujiang Innovation Forum on Tuesday.

According to Li, efforts will be made to ensure that the city is equipped with allaround elements for technologi­cal innovation including fundamenta­l research and developmen­t, top talent, an innovative environmen­t, open and supportive policies and state-of-art infrastruc­ture and facilities.

According to a survey published on Monday, Shanghai is regarded by many as the ideal Chinese city for global scientists.

On the list of 22 global innovative cities, Shanghai was ranked No 16, the nation’s highest ranking, followed by Chinese cities of Beijing, Hong Kong, Shenzhen and Hangzhou.

The top five destinatio­ns for attracting scientists are Boston, San Francisco, London, New York and Berlin, in that order.

Technology and talent are crucial to a nation’s competitiv­eness, and technologi­cal innovation is key to China’s high-quality economic growth, said Wang Zhigang, head of the Ministry of Science and Technology.

Wang suggested China focus on fundamenta­l research, enhance efficiency in turning innovation into practice, and create an ecosystem for technologi­cal innovation.

The research, which was jointly carried out by the Shanghai Institute for Science of Science and academic publishing company Springer Nature, interviewe­d 654 scientists around the world to understand their concerns about where to live, work and start their own business.

By analyzing various global cities’ attractive­ness to global high-end technologi­cal innovation talent, the survey looks to provide an insight for Shanghai into better attracting talent.

A majority of the scientists interviewe­d take a positive view toward Shanghai’s outlook for becoming a global innovation city, with 24 percent of them believing the city will become a Top 5 city in the coming decade, another 41 percent predicting Shanghai’s ranking for global innovation city will rise to between six and 10 in the coming 10 years and 32 percent thinking Shanghai will have an improved ranking but have little chance to be listed as a Top 10 city.

Despite the improved ranking of Shanghai and China as a whole in global innovation, an incomplete institutio­nal innovation incentive mechanism, insufficie­nt number of high end workers, incapacity for original innovation in fundamenta­l research and core technology and comparativ­ely low efficiency in innovation are urgently in need of reform, said Wang Yiming, vice-president of the Developmen­t Research Center of the State Council.

“This year is the 40th anniversar­y of China’s opening-up, and the best celebratio­n would be further opening-up.”

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