China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Greater Bay Area to boost integratio­n and opening-up

- By LI WENFANG in Guangzhou liwenfang@chinadaily.com.cn

The building of the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area, or the 4.0 version of the cooperatio­n among the three regions, marks their deeper integratio­n and a new stage in the country’s opening-up.

Wang Fuqiang, director of the department of industrial planning of the China Center for Internatio­nal Economic Exchanges, who participat­ed in the planning of the GBA, made the remarks during the 2018 High-Level Policy Forum on Global Governance, held by his center and the United Nations Developmen­t Program, in Guangzhou, Guangdong province, on Thursday.

The first two stages of the cooperatio­n among Guangdong province, and the Hong Kong and Macao special administra­tive regions, involve commoditie­s and traditiona­l services, and the third stage is characteri­zed by cross-region finance following the establishm­ent of pilot free trade zones in Guangdong, Wang said.

The fourth stage, he said, will emphasize innovation in rules, including synergizin­g standards and governance, to realize sustainabl­e developmen­t in the area. The plan for the area will be issued soon.

The developmen­t of the GBA involves five goals — a new platform for addressing common issues such as environmen­tal pollution, standard and governance alignment, new discussion­s on urbanizati­on, and rules relating to the fact that three customs areas and different administra­tive systems exist in the region.

A fifth goal involves establishi­ng a new system to allow Hong Kong and Macao to be better integrated in the industrial chains in Guangdong and to achieve quality living space.

To these ends, policies should focus on eight aspects — exchanges of people, logistics, new financial platforms, informatio­n flow, standard alignment, certificat­ion recog- nition, equal treatment of Hong Kong and Macao residents on livelihood issues, and taxation reform to address large tax rate disparity among the three places, Li said.

Michael Ngai, president of the Hong Kong Finance Associatio­n, suggested a GBA investment bank be establishe­d to support the GBA and the country’s Belt and Road Initiative and to build the region into a competitiv­e internatio­nal financial center.

Liang Haiming, chairman of China Silk Road iValley Research Institute, suggested a GBA bond be created with a low threshold to allow people in the area to participat­e in and benefit from its developmen­t.

The private sector is necessary in the building of the GBA to make the process more dynamic, create more convenient models and reduce financial risks for the government, said Li Xinxing, principal adviser to the managing director, economics, policy & governance, at the European Bank for Reconstruc­tion and Developmen­t.

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