China Daily (Hong Kong)

Shanghai unveils updated reforms

- By SHI JING in Shanghai shijing@chinadaily.com.cn

On the first working day after the Spring Festival holiday, the municipal government of Shanghai announced an updated reform plan to further enhance the city’s business activity, showing the local regulators’ resolve to improve the business environmen­t in more areas with better results.

Shanghai Party secretary Li Qiang said at a meeting on Monday that the major task for Shanghai this year is to implement the three decisions on the developmen­t of Shanghai that President Xi Jinping elaborated in early November, which refer to the expansion of the China (Shanghai) Pilot Free Trade Zone, the launch of a science and technology innovation board at the Shanghai Stock Exchange and piloting a registrati­on system for listed companies, as well as the integrated developmen­t of the Yangtze River Delta region. All these are important policies to improve the business environmen­t of the city, he said.

In October, the World Bank released the Doing Business 2019 report that measures regulation­s that enhance business activity and those constrain it. China ranked 46th among all the 190 surveyed economies, significan­tly up from the 78th registered a year earlier. Shanghai’s contributi­on was weighed at 55 percent while the rest came from Beijing.

Although much progress was made last year, Li said Shanghai should continue to test the reform plan comprehens­ively to narrow the gap between the leading economies. To be more specific, Shanghai can learn from the successful experience­s regarding New Zealand’s service industry, Singapore’s sci- ence and technology advancemen­t, Denmark’s employment policies and South Korea’s technology innovation.

Meanwhile, Shanghai should also refer to the progress of other Chinese cities such as Beijing and Shenzhen, he said.

“Shanghai’s economic growth cannot simply rely on favorable policies and can by no means come from low-cost competitio­n. In this sense, a better business environmen­t will be the longterm impetus,” he said.

As much concern has been expressed over the economic slowdown and uncertaint­ies, Li said that the improved business environmen­t will help to address these problems and stabilize the city’s economic growth.

“Industry leaders, talents and capital will be attracted to Shanghai as the business environmen­t betters. In this sense, the city’s core competitiv­eness will be enhanced,” he said.

An improved business environmen­t helped Shanghai to attract more foreign investment and even the regional headquarte­rs of multinatio­nal companies last year. As the municipal regulators revised the financing policies for foreign-invested research centers in the second half of 2018, a total of 25 multinatio­nal companies set up their regional headquarte­rs in the city, up 25 percent from a year earlier.

Data from the municipal statistics bureau showed that the number of foreign direct investment contract projects surged 41.7 percent year-on-year to reach 5,597 in 2018. The total value of these contracts amounted to over $46.9 billion, up 16.8 percent year-onyear.

At an internatio­nal think tank forum held in Shanghai in December, Marcin Piatkowski, a senior economist of the World Bank, said that Shanghai is on the right path to improve its business environmen­t and the city is sure to promise better performanc­e in the future.

“We should not only eye the measuremen­ts of the World Bank. The key is to bring substantia­l benefits to companies,” said Li.

Zhou Bo, executive vice-mayor of Shanghai, said half of the current administra­tive approval items will be canceled and the time needed for such approval will also be shortened by half.

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