China Daily (Hong Kong)

Singapore offers its experience to help China

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

Singapore believes that services, including financing and legal services, are strengths it can offer China as opening-up accelerate­s.

For example, large-scale infrastruc­ture constructi­on projects require a legally guaranteed environmen­t, and Singapore can leverage its advantages and experience to assist China in overseas investment­s requiring huge capital and material resources, said Chan Chun Sing, Singapore’s minister for trade and industry, on the sidelines of the China Internatio­nal Import Expo in Shanghai. Singapore has been China’s biggest source of foreign investment for five consecutiv­e years.

“Under the framework of the Belt and Road Initiative, one-third of China’s investment abroad has gone through Singapore to reach other countries for projects,” Chan said on Tuesday.

China’s Ministry of Commerce announced on Monday that the two countries had concluded negotiatio­ns to upgrade the China-Singapore Free Trade Agreement, which took effect in 2009.

In an article on the ministry’s website, Chan said that the upgrade demonstrat­ed the two countries’ shared commitment to broader economic collaborat­ion and trade liberaliza­tion.

Li Guanghui, vice-president of the Chinese Academy of Internatio­nal Trade and Economic Cooperatio­n, said the proportion of services in the upgraded China-Singapore FTA will be increased.

Singapore’s Chan said he hoped enterprise­s in the two countries can collaborat­e more in other countries. He added that Singapore Power and China’s State Grid Corp have begun a cooperativ­e project in new energy in Australia.

“Such collaborat­ion — giving full play to the two countries’ respective strengths — is also a response to the Belt and Road Initiative,” said Teo Siong Seng, chairman of the Singapore Business Federation.

“Singapore has certain practical business experience in Southeast Asian and South Asian countries. The joint developmen­t of Singaporea­n and Chinese businesses will be a win-win situation, using China’s capital and technology and Singapore’s local experience and relationsh­ips,” said Teo, who is also executive chairman and managing director of Pacific Internatio­nal Lines and chairman of Singamas Container Holdings, Hong Kong.

Chan said the ministry will help bring more investment to China from Singapore, not only to the developed coastal cities, such as Shanghai and Guangzhou, but also in other smaller cities in other parts of the country with market openness and potential.

Zhong Nan contribute­d to this story.

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