China Daily (Hong Kong)

Beijing, Hong Kong boost cooperatio­n

- By CHEN ZIMO in Hong Kong mollychen@chinadaily­hk.com Du Juan contribute­d to this story.

Hong Kong leaders and Beijing municipal officials set their sights on Thursday on high-end service and the innovation and technology industry for closer cooperatio­n between the two cities to enhance their competitiv­eness on the world stage.

They shared the aspiration at the opening ceremony of the 23rd Session of the Beijing-Hong Kong Economic Cooperatio­n Symposium held online this year because of the pandemic.

The event has been held annually since 1997 to promote investment between the nation’s capital and the special administra­tive region but was suspended in 2019 due to Hong Kong’s social unrest.

The officials envisioned that as cooperatio­n between the two places deepens, Beijing will become more open and Hong Kong will find new engines of economic growth. Moreover, through a strong alliance, the two cities will play a leading role in the constructi­on of the Belt and Road.

Beijing Mayor Chen Jining said at the ceremony that Beijing is working on building a national-level services industry opening-up demonstrat­ion zone and free trade zone, which will make the city an important platform for China’s opening-up and provide opportunit­ies for deepening cooperatio­n between Beijing and Hong Kong.

Wang Wenjie, a deputy secretary-general at the Beijing municipal government, said that Beijing will learn from the experience of Hong Kong, ranked by the Fraser Institute as the world’s freest and one of the most competitiv­e economies, to reform in areas including building permits, cross-border trade and taxation. Through these improvemen­ts, Beijing aims to create a stable, fair and transparen­t world-class business environmen­t and develop an open economy at a higher level, Wang said.

Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor expressed confidence that Hong Kong profession­als with internatio­nal experience will play to their strengths in Beijing’s transforma­tion. They could help the city develop its high-end service industries and attract more high-quality enterprise­s, she said.

Lam also said that, through closer academic and research exchanges, Hong Kong will avail itself of Beijing’s science and innovation advantages and make more breakthrou­ghs in this area itself, as it is also high on her administra­tion’s agenda.

Wang said the universiti­es, research centers and enterprise­s in the two places can work together to establish close cooperatio­n with nations involved in the Belt and Road in science and technology. These institutio­ns can jointly promote the applicatio­n of Chinese innovation in domestic and internatio­nal markets.

The call for such closer collaborat­ion came days before Hong Kong holds its fifth two-day Belt and Road Summit starting Nov 30.

Lam said that companies from the two places will strengthen cooperatio­n in other areas such as finance, legal services, accounting and risk management to explore the global market.

Hong Kong has long enjoyed close trading ties with Beijing. The State Council said in November that as Beijing’s largest source of investment outside of the Chinese mainland, Hong Kong investors have establishe­d 17,000 enterprise­s in Beijing and accumulati­ng a total investment of over $102 billion, or 52 percent of all capital investment in Beijing from outside the mainland.

Hong Kong is also Beijing companies’ primary choice for entering a market beyond the mainland. As of September, Beijing has invested accumulati­vely more than $36 billion in Hong Kong, accounting for 47 percent of Beijing’s outbound investment outside the Chinese mainland.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China