Shanghai Daily

Business climate warms amid deregulati­on

- Huang Yixuan

PART of Shanghai’s goal to become a global center of commerce rests on improving the city’s business environmen­t.

“Shanghai must stay at the forefront and strive to build the city into a powerhouse in the new round of comprehens­ive opening-up in China,” said city Party Secretary Li Qiang. “It should be a bridgehead to serve the Belt and Road Initiative, an Asian-Pacific hub to allocate global resources and a strategic support for China’s developmen­t on the world stage.”

The city has attached great importance this year to the release and implementa­tion of 100 new policies to attract foreign investment. The measures cover the areas of finance, advanced industries, intellectu­al property, import support platforms and the business environmen­t.

For example, imported cancer drugs not currently registered in China can now be trialed in Shanghai before registrati­on applicatio­n. Also, restrictio­ns on foreign investment in the aviation industry are being lifted, cooperatio­n with other nations in the field is being encouraged, and collaborat­ion on talent, technology and management is being enhanced.

More than 90 percent of the 100 measures are expected to be implemente­d by the end of the year, according to Zhou Bo, Shanghai’s executive vice mayor.

Also of note, the long-awaited Shanghai-London Stock Connect is expected to go live this year — a momentous step in China’s further opening of its financial markets to foreign investors.

Trial guidelines for the stock link were published by the China Securities Regulatory Commission on October 12, allowing stocks listed on the Shanghai and London exchanges to be cross-traded through the issue of depositary receipts.

Shanghai is also working to make the business environmen­t more convenient, governed by law and a greater internatio­nal presence.

According to the Doing Business 2018 report of the World Bank, China ranked the 78th in ease of doing business, up 18 notches since 2013. Shanghai and Beijing are the two sample cities in the report.

When meeting the World Bank data-collection team for the report in May, Shanghai Mayor Ying Yong said that the business environmen­t is an important “soft power” for competitiv­eness, and he noted that the Chinese government has always valued efforts to build a good business environmen­t.

“In 2018, we will push forward supply-side reforms and focus on streamlini­ng administra­tion and lightening the burden on companies to improve the business environmen­t and vitalize the market in Shanghai,” said Ma Chunlei, director of the Shanghai Developmen­t and Reform Commission.

The target is to help businesses reduce their cost burden by 50 billion yuan (US$7.23 billion) this year. To that end, Shanghai has implemente­d measures to help cut taxes, lower the ceiling of imposed government funds, lessen charges, reduce the costs of labor, energy, financing, and institutio­nal transactio­ns, and encourage regional pilot programs.

The city has also cut fees for city road repairs, land use for foreign-funded companies, registrati­on for drugs and medical equipment, and testing charges for special equipment.

“The government’s fiscal and tax reforms and other policies and measures vigorously promote the sustained and healthy developmen­t of Shanghai’s economy and society,” the Shanghai Finance Bureau said. “These include cutting, canceling or

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