Shanghai Daily

Shanghai keen to boost imports

- Ke Jiayun

SHANGHAI is keen to import more high-tech equipment and consumer products as it strives to improve its financing and trading infrastruc­ture amid new rounds of reforms and opening-up in the country.

Authoritie­s said they will also support the import of livelihood-related products such as daily consumer goods, medicines and elderly care facilities.

“Technology can help in upgrading industries and support supply-side structural reform,” said Shen Weihua, deputy director of the Shanghai Commerce Commission.

“Imported products can help in meeting the local demand for high-quality consumer goods, medicines, health care products, cosmetics and food,” he said.

Shen said Shanghai will lower tariffs on such products and support the companies that import them, even going as far as to help them find good foreign suppliers.

“We will work with the government­s in the Yangtze River Delta and social service institutio­ns to ensure that the goods quickly reach the retail channels.”

Shanghai’s imports rose to more than 1.7 trillion yuan (US$250 billion) in the first half of this year, up 9.7 percent from the same period of last year, figures released by the commission showed.

The imports grew at a fasterthan-expected pace last year — a six-year high. In the first half of 2018, Shanghai’s import volume was as much a 26.5 percent of the nation’s.

With the China Internatio­nal Import Expo in November, Shanghai will optimize the imported commoditie­s and market layout, set up profession­al import trade service platforms and ensure high efficiency and convenienc­e for trading.

“We will build world-class facilities here, starting from ports. We will promote and expand the intelligen­t logistics, smart functions and automation at Yangshan Deep-Water Port for swift transit and transfer of containers to all corners of China and the world,” Shen said.

The “single-window” function will be improved and extended nationwide. All administra­tive examinatio­n and approval, certificat­e applicatio­n and clearance services of vessels will be completed through a single-window system.

Shen said better financial products and services should be made available to the importers, and more domestic trading companies and manufactur­ers should be included into the city’s supply chain.

There are also plans to set up a hub for specialty products such as medicines like anti-tumor drugs, and medical equipment, he said.

Shanghai will encourage transnatio­nal corporatio­ns to set up sales centers and trade headquarte­rs in the city. The imports of auto parts and cars will also be accelerate­d.

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