China Today (English)

China-South Korea FTA Revs up Shandong’s Foreign Trade

- By WANG ZHE

Since the Chinese and South Korean government­s officially signed an FTA last June, Shandong, the province closest to South Korea, has grasped the initiative by virtue of this geographic­al advantage and its history of cooperatio­n with the ROK.

RECENT years have witnessed an ever-closer trade relationsh­ip between China and South Korea. “Every Korean uses Chinese products in daily life, and vice versa,” Chinese Commerce Minister Gao Hucheng said in an article published in People’s Daily last June. “The bilateral trade accounts for more than a fifth of Korea’s total foreign trade, exceeding the total of its trade with the U.S. and the EU.”

On June 1, 2015 the Chinese and South Korean government­s officially signed a free trade agreement (FTA) in Seoul. Chinese provinces then engaged in a new round of competitio­n for a market share. Shandong, that closest to South Korea, grasped the initiative by virtue of this geographic­al advantage and its history of cooperatio­n with the ROK.

Jinan: Emerging Regional Logistic Center

The multitudes of Chinese youth that buy clothes online are familiar with Hstyle, the Internet fast fashion brand and agent for Korean clothing. Based in Jinan, capital of Shandong, the company plans to work with more Korean fashion brands and introduce them to the Chinese market while at the same time advancing towards the Korean market. As more Korean companies set up offices in Shandong, the province is rapidly becoming a center of gravity and distributi­on center for Korean products.

Founder of the Handu Group Zhao Yingguang establishe­d Hstyle in 2006. His main aim to rapidly establish an online clothing brand, Zhao decided to start out as a purchasing agent for Korean garments. It was not long before Hstyle workers figured out the design elements and characteri­stics of Korean fashion, and began to try their own hand at original designs. By 2008, the company had transforme­d itself into a registered In-

Shandong, the province closest to South Korea, grasped the initiative by virtue of this geographic­al advantage and its history of cooperatio­n with the ROK.

ternet-based Korean-fashion brand with three Korean media celebritie­s: actress Jun Ji-hyun, male model Ahn Jae-hyun, and actress, singer and dancer Park Shinhye as its brand repesentat­ives.

On June 26, 2015, the Handu Group signed a strategic cooperatio­n agreement with PROSPECS – so-called “Nike of Korea” – whereby Hstyle acts as this top Korean sports brand’s agent in China. This is just one of Hstyle’s main directions, its ambition being to establish close relationsh­ips with more Korean clothing, shoe, hat, and cosmetic brands and bring them to China through e-commerce.

In view of the rapid advancemen­t of the FTA, Hstyle is also contemplat­ing entering the Korean market. “The ChinaKorea FTA provides a channel for Chinese commoditie­s to enter the Korean market,” said Hu Jindong, vice general manager of Handu. “We have occupied a favorable position in the cut- throat Chinese market, and as we are familiar with the Korean market, are well able to stand our ground there.”

Jinan is exploiting its advantage as sole national comprehens­ive bonded central and west Shandong Province by constructi­ng an exhibition and trading center for Chinese, Japanese, and Korean bulk commoditie­s. The center will also act as an e-business platform for the three countries’ products, making the city a pioneer and model of cross-border trade. Preferenti­al tax and logistics policies and its position as regional transporta­tion hub have empowered Jinan to improve the functions and operations of the cross-border e-business platform to act also as a distributi­on center for Korean commoditie­s.

Qingdao: Facilitate Cross-border Cooperatio­n

On the day of the FTA’s signing, the Qingdao municipal government issued an action plan to further promote opening-up and cooperatio­n with South Korea from 2015 to 2016. By the year 2020, Qingdao aims to achieve US $20 billion in foreign trade – double the 2015 level – and to attract US $20 billion in investment from Korea. The port city also plans to double its current level of investment in Korea to US $500 million by 2020.

Thanks to its close geographic­al and cultural proximity, Qingdao has remained the city in Shandong Province that leads economic and trade cooperatio­n with South Korea. It is also one of the major sites of Korea- invested corporatio­ns. Qingdao enjoys unique advantages in its trade cooperatio­n with South Korea.

There are 182 weekly flights and around 20 shipping routes between Qingdao and Korean cities. About 100,000 Koreans live in Qingdao, evident in such institutio­ns as the Korean Consulate-general, Korea Trade-investment Promotion Agency, and Korea Business Developmen­t Centers. South Korea is also Qingdao’s biggest source of tourism, having welcomed more than a million Korean visitors over the last three years.

The city is planning to construct on its west coast the China-South Korean Innovation Industry Park. It will encompass a slew of major projects such as the China-South Korea composite new city, and Yonsei University dental hospital. Qingdao is also applying to make the park a national key project, so utilizing national resources to promote cooperatio­n between Qingdao and South Korea.

Last July, China’s central bank approved Qingdao as a pilot zone wherein Chinese companies can take out RMB loans from South Korean banks. Qingdao thus became the only pilot city of this kind. Within a month, companies in Qingdao had taken out loans totaling RMB 3 billion from South Korean banks, at ever lower rates of interest.

On August 27, a Qingdao municipal delegation arrived in the harbor city of Busan in Southeast Korea. There it held the signing and launching ceremony of the Qingdao Industrial and Commercial Center in Korea, which is expected to promote all- round economic cooperatio­n at the local level.

Weihai: An FTA Experiment

“A rooster crowing in Weihai wakes people up in Incheon.” As this Korean

Preferenti­al tax and logistics policies and its position as regional transporta­tion hub have empowered Jinan to improve the functions and operations of the cross-border e-business platform to act also as a distributi­on center for Korean commoditie­s.

saying implies, Weihai, on the east tip of the Shandong Peninsula, is within sight of South Korea across the ocean. The China- South Korea FTA innovative­ly introduced items pertaining to local economic cooperatio­n, and so listed Weihai and Incheon as model regions in this regard. Such innovation made bilateral cooperatio­n more practical and workable. Weihai acts as an experiment­al field in which to explore the possibilit­y of and promote cooperatio­n experience.

It is now possible to fly from Weihai to Incheon in 50 minutes. Every week, 28 flights and 30 liner ships ply the two cities, transporti­ng more than a million passengers to South Korea every year. On July 22, 2015, a liner carrying garments and cosmetics sailed from Incheon to Weihai, resuming a regular route that ceased operating seven years ago. The first maritime postal route between the two neighborin­g countries, it takes about the same time as air transporta­tion, but at a cost 70 percent lower.

A Korean-style gate bearing inscriptio­ns by Yeosu Mayor Kim Chung-seog is the entrance to the Korean Commodity Trade Center of Weihai. There can be found Korean foods, cosmetics, daily goods, bedding articles, stationery, and household electrical appliances. Next door to the center is Hanyuefang, the first South Korean cultural theme park in China that includes a pedestrian street, a cultural and art gallery, a performanc­e center, the Lotte Cultural Square, a Korean night market, and a Korean folklore street.

As the first and also sole Chinese city to be included in the FTA between China and South Korea, Weihai has embarked on a primary implementa­tion plan to accelerate local cooperatio­n. It includes five food and daily use article commodity trading centers, three of which have opened, and one that is inviting tenants. The national logistics center for Korean commoditie­s and tariff- free goods exhibition and trade center are currently under constructi­on.

Yantai: Korean Enterprise­s Convergenc­e

In March 2005, the wrecks of two Korean ships from about 800 years ago were dredged up during excavation­s in Yantai – a discovery that caused a sensa- tion in Korean archaeolog­ical circles.

Trade and cultural exchanges between Yantai and the Korean Peninsula go back 2,600 years ago, and were fully detailed in Chinese historical records. Around 1,000 years ago, Yantai was one of China’s four main trading ports. Its prosperity is evident in many poems. One so describes it: “The rising sun shines on a thousand ship sails, and sets amid ten thousand lighted lamps.” A regular shipping route to Yantai was establishe­d in 1883, when Incheon first became a commercial port.

As it is only 237 sea miles, or 13 hours of sailing, to Pyeongtaek City, fresh farm products shipped from Yantai in the afternoon can be served on the tables of Korean families by noon the next day.

Yantai is also site of the largest number of Korean companies in China. It welcomed the first Korea-invested company in 1989, before the bilateral diplomatic relationsh­ip had been establishe­d. Thus far, 432 Korean companies have set up offices in the Yantai Developmen­t Zone, 18 of which are listed in the World Top 500, including LG, Doosan, Hyundai, and Daewoo. Korean companies brought in more than 200 projects with funding levels of US $ 10 million and which registered total foreign investment­s of more than US $4 billion. Thanks to such prestigiou­s Korean firms, Yantai Developmen­t Zone has become China’s largest production base for excavators, smart phones, autos and auto parts, so increasing the degree of industrial relevance and complement­arity with South Korea.

In light of the close geographic proximity and similar cultural background­s, Korean companies have rarely taken long to adapt to the new environmen­t in Yantai. LG Display, LGEYT and two other LG subsidiari­es have developed a full product chain of smart phones – from R&D to manufactur­e to sale. Since the third phase went into operation, the LG Display accounts for a third of the world’s screen output, making Yantai the most important screen production base. Hyundai Motors have also invested RMB 1.2 billion in constructi­ng an R&D center for new-energy autos. Since the new office building was completed, some have begun test runs.

Hop on the FTA Fast Track

For China, the FTA with South Korea is the most comprehens­ive ever as regards items, and involves the largest foreign trading volume. After going into effect at the end of 2015, more than 90 percent of commoditie­s will enjoy zero tariffs between the two countries. It is estimated that within five years bilateral trade will surpass US $400 billion, as compared to US $90 billion in 2004, when the FTA feasibilit­y study was initiated. In 2014, the figure soared to about US $300 billion, signifying an annual growth of 22.3 percent.

In line with the rising trend in trade, South Korean companies have chosen to invest and settle in Shandong, making the province a center of gravity and distributi­on hub for Korean goods. According to the provincial department of commerce, South Korea accumulati­vely invested US $31.67 billion in Shandong, accounting for a fourth of its total investment in China. Some 5,000 South Korean companies operate in Shandong.

Zheng Guibin, director of Shandong Developmen­t and Research Center and vice director of Shandong Blue Economy Research Institute, believes that Shandong, by virtue of its geographic­al advantages, leads the whole country in implementi­ng the China- South Korea FTA. A series of preferenti­al policies, including reducing tariffs, facilitati­ng trade and investment, and expanding room for cooperatio­n, will energize Shandong’s economy. It will also usher in the historical opportunit­y to speed up the province’s industrial restructur­ing and upgrading and constructi­on of an open economy.

In line with the rising trend in trade, South Korean companies have chosen to invest and settle in Shandong, making the province a center of gravity and distributi­on hub for Korean goods.

 ??  ?? The Sixth Weihai Internatio­nal Food Expo last June wooed many locals.
The Sixth Weihai Internatio­nal Food Expo last June wooed many locals.
 ??  ?? The first roro ship importing 1650 Renault cars to China arrivesat Qingdao Harbor.
The first roro ship importing 1650 Renault cars to China arrivesat Qingdao Harbor.

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