China Daily (Hong Kong)

Greater Bay Area a boon for Macao

- Xu Qiyuan

The outline developmen­t plan for Guangdong-Hong KongMacao Greater Bay Area, released recently by the Communist Party of China Central Committee and the State Council, China’s Cabinet, indicates the GBA is set to step into a new era of rapid integrativ­e developmen­t.

Addressing the importance of coordinate­d developmen­t across regions while delivering the Government Work Report to the national legislatur­e on March 5, Premier Li Keqiang said that “in developing the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area, we will work to ensure the implementa­tion of plans, achieving compatibil­ity between each region’s rules, and facilitati­ng flows of factors of production and the movement of people”.

And at his meeting with Macao Chief Executive Fernando Chui Sai-on, last year, President Xi Jinping said the Macao Special Administra­tive Region should be incorporat­ed into the country’s general developmen­t plan to expand Macao’s developmen­t space and cultivate new driving forces, as well as to celebrate the 20th anniversar­y of Macao’s return to the motherland in 2019 with new developmen­t achievemen­ts.

To be incorporat­ed into the country’s general developmen­t plan, Macao should play its due role in foreign trade and cultural exchanges. It also should actively participat­e in the constructi­on of the GBA and strengthen its integratio­n level, by giving full play to its strengths and expanding its business space under the framework of the “one country, two systems”.

The Macao SAR has to meet several major challenges to fully integrate into the GBA constructi­on process.

First, Macao has to unify its infrastruc­ture constructi­on standard, promote infrastruc­ture connectivi­ty, and improve its infrastruc­ture constructi­on level. For example, Macao aims to become a global tourism and leisure hub, and the trade and business cooperatio­n link between China and Portuguese-speaking countries. For that, it has to improve its infrastruc­ture constructi­on level, and increase its bandwidth, reduce network charges, and improve the Wi-Fi coverage rate in public places.

The SAR also needs to optimize its highway and rail traffic network, in order to promote better interconne­ction among transporta­tion modes, especially flights, with neighborin­g places. It should expand the transport capacity of the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge, too, so as to avoid wasting transport infrastruc­ture resources. In addition, the central authoritie­s should consider linking the high-speed NanningShe­nzhen railway to Macao, in order to incorporat­e Macao into the national high-speed railway network.

Second, the Macao SAR should improve its legislatio­n and administra­tive systems to promote better connection with the Chinese mainland.

If Macao were to fully integrate into the GBA and become part of the country’s overall developmen­t plan, the SAR government should transform from being a “small government” to a more functional government. To that end, it has to launch more policies and expedite the legislatio­n process, by establishi­ng better coordinati­on among its different department­s.

Third, the GBA’s cross-regional coordinati­on mechanism should be improved, by implementi­ng major projects. The present internal coordinati­on mechanism of the GBA is too complicate­d. The Macao SAR government has establishe­d 27 special groups to cooperate with the central government, the Hong Kong SAR, Guangdong province and four domestic cities. But being small in terms of size and revenue, the Macao government will find it very difficult to coordinate work on such an expanded dimension.

So the central government needs to enhance overall planning and coordinati­on among Guangdong, Hong Kong and Macao. It is also important that local regions and cities keep long-term interests in mind when they cooperate with each other. Besides, the central government can organize and coordinate major projects such as land reclamatio­n and environmen­t protection.

And fourth, Macao should take full advantage of the industrial ecosystem of the GBA to develop its science and innovation industries. Macao is promoting the developmen­t of some emerging industries, including the cultural creative industry, environmen­t protection sector and the marine high-tech industry.

But due to the dominant role of the gaming industry in Macao, talents in the science and innovation sectors, as well as the emerging industries have no industrial chain to depend on.

More important, to integrate into the constructi­on of the GBA, Macao should make more efforts to become a core part of the industrial ecosystem of the GBA. And it should make full use of the advantages of its financial and other industries to attract more talents to its science and innovation sectors, as well as to inspire them.

The author is director of the Internatio­nal Developmen­t Department of the Institute of World Economics and Politics at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. The views don’t necessaril­y represent those of China Daily.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China