China Daily (Hong Kong)

TWO SESSIONS

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The planned addition of a new area to the China (Shanghai) Pilot Free Trade Zone is aimed at promoting a higher level of openingup to the outside world rather than just a simple expansion in geographic­al size, according to a top official from Shanghai.

The new area will become a special economic function zone, with stronger market influence and internatio­nal competitiv­eness via institutio­nal innovation and functional reconstruc­tion, said Li Qiang, Party secretary of Shanghai.

“It will work as an important carrier for China to become deeply integrated with economic globalizat­ion,” he said at a plenary meeting of the Shanghai delegation attending the ongoing session of the National People’s Congress, the top legislativ­e body, in Beijing on March 6.

The zone — the first in China — was establishe­d in 2013, and initially covered 28.78 square kilometers. It was expanded to 120 sq km in late 2014.

In his keynote speech at the opening ceremony of the China Internatio­nal Import Expo in Shanghai in November, President Xi Jinping said the FTZ would be enlarged again.

Xi also announced two other major tasks for the city — to launch a science and technology innovation board on the Shanghai Stock Exchange in tandem with an experiment­al registrati­on-based system for initial public offerings, and to promote higher-quality growth and the integratio­n of the Yangtze River Delta as a national strategy.

Li said making the announceme­nts during such a special occasion as the opening ceremony of the inaugural CIIE indicated the nation’s commitment to the promotion of a new round of reform and openingup.

“It again demonstrat­ed the clear attitude and firm determinat­ion that China will not close its doors to the world and that reform steps will never stop,” he said at the ongoing two sessions — the annual meetings of the NPC and the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference, the top political advisory body.

He also praised the deliberati­ons about the draft law on foreign investment: “The law, if passed, will be conducive to the establishm­ent of a stable, transparen­t, predictabl­e and fair business environmen­t, which will offer a legal guarantee for Shanghai to push forward the expansion of the free trade zone, constructi­on of which will start soon.”

Speaking at the city’s annual legislativ­e meeting in January, Ying Yong, mayor of Shanghai, said the FTZ will be comparable with other zones across the globe, offering the most competitiv­e policies and putting forward attractive opening-up policies and systems.

Hang Yingwei, an NPC deputy and head of the government of Pudong New Area, where the Shanghai FTZ is located, said the zone’s new area will push forward innovation in terms of offshore trade and an experiment­al “white list” system, featuring companies and entities that will receive preferenti­al treatment.

“The FTZ’s new area will focus on the developmen­t of the offshore economy, the innovation economy, the headquarte­rs economy (growth based on attracting the headquarte­rs of large companies) and the digital economy,” Hang said on the sidelines of the NPC session.

As an example, he cited the China headquarte­rs of Volvo Constructi­on Equipment in Shanghai, which was the first company to complete the domestic settlement of offshore trade with the separation of flows of orders, goods and capital.

“Such a breakthrou­gh in offshore trade helps us to further explore practices to increase the growth of our internatio­nal business,” Hang said.

Statistics from the Informatio­n Office of the Shanghai Municipal Government show that in the five years since the FTZ was establishe­d, the total import and export volume has reached 6 trillion yuan ($900 billion), with realized foreign investment of more than $22 billion and 57,000 registered businesses.

More important, the zone has become a test bed for new economic policies. A total of 127 systematic innovation­s that were first implemente­d in the Shanghai FTZ have been promoted nationwide in the past five years. One such innovation, the negative list system — which defines sectors in which foreign entities are not allowed to invest — was initially introduced by the zone to manage foreign capital. Last year, it was expanded nationwide.

In addition, the zone’s deepened reforms, aimed at facilitati­ng efficient customs clearance, reduced entry and exit times in bonded areas by 78.5 percent and 31.7 percent respective­ly, compared with the national average. The move has been hailed as a benchmark for the rest of the country to emulate.

Meanwhile, a report by the World Bank in October showed that China’s business environmen­t rose to a global ranking of 46 last year, up from 78 in 2017.

Tariff policy

National lawmakers and political advisers have also suggested a zerotariff policy to better promote free trade.

Xu Juehui, an NPC deputy and deputy Party head and managing director of Shanghai Port Internatio­nal Cruise Terminal Developmen­t, said tariffs at many FTZs across the globe are zero or almost zero. However, the current tariff policy at the Shanghai FTZ means it echoes the duties imposed on specific goods overseas, so there are no advantages to attract trade and logistics resources from other countries.

“Based on the principle of trade reciprocit­y, I suggest promoting a zero-tariff policy in the new area of the Shanghai FTZ,” Xu said.

Jiang Ying, a CPPCC member and deputy CEO of Deloitte China, suggested that optimizati­on of the tax system in the Shanghai FTZ should begin with fields related to the headquarte­rs economy, the trade in goods and services, and finance and capital markets, which would demonstrat­e the zone’s forward-looking approach.

Denis Simon, executive vicechance­llor of Duke Kunshan University in Jiangsu province, said Shanghai has been seeking to strengthen its role as an innovation hub, and the expansion of the city’s FTZ would be an opportune time for this to happen.

“By freeing up the local economy from pre-existing constraint­s on capital flows and having an improved climate for the developmen­t and protection of intellectu­al property rights, the FTZ can serve as an important catalyst for driving indigenous innovation,” he said.

Moreover, if the zone can attract ample high-end talent, it may serve as a magnet to attract foreign research and developmen­t centers to the area, according to Simon.

He added that the presence of local and multinatio­nal companies engaged in R&D and knowledge commercial­ization could create a new set of agglomerat­ion dynamics — cost savings — to drive a great technologi­cal leap in Shanghai.

“The new, more-open business environmen­t fostered by the FTZ can energize the economic and technologi­cal drivers needed to help Shanghai play more of a leadership role in China’s overall technologi­cal developmen­t,” he said.

The FTZ’s new area will focus on the developmen­t of the offshore economy, the innovation economy, the headquarte­rs economy and the digital economy.” Hang Yingwei, an NPC deputy and head of the government of Pudong New Area, Shanghai

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 ?? FAN JUN / XINHUA ?? The China (Shanghai) Pilot Free Trade Zone has become a test bed for new economic policies.
FAN JUN / XINHUA The China (Shanghai) Pilot Free Trade Zone has become a test bed for new economic policies.
 ?? FANG ZHE / XINHUA ?? Automobile­s are unloaded from a cargo carrier at a port in Lingang in Pudong New Area, Shanghai.
FANG ZHE / XINHUA Automobile­s are unloaded from a cargo carrier at a port in Lingang in Pudong New Area, Shanghai.

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