Shanghai Daily

Investing in Shanghai? Just follow the map

- Huang Yixuan

SHANGHAI launched a map for investing in the city at a promotion and matchmakin­g conference for the second China Internatio­nal Import Expo yesterday in a push to further attract and better support foreign companies.

Fifty featured routes were released and introduced in nine aspects — financial services, commerce and trade, sci-tech innovation, smart manufactur­ing, data informatio­n, life science, culture and creative industry, fashion and leisure, and cultural Shanghai — “aiming to meet the demand of enterprise­s in various sectors, giving more informatio­n for those who are seeking opportunit­ies and proper destinatio­ns to invest,” according to Zong yuyan, vice president of the Shanghai Foreign Investment Developmen­t Board, also known as Invest Shanghai.

“The 50 visit routes are well designed and cover a wide range of sectors and themes,” said Kiran Patel, senior director of business developmen­t at the China-Britain Business Council.

“The UK has a strong offer across a multitude of sectors and the CBBC has particular interest in routes and activities related to financial services, consumer, advanced manufactur­ing, health care and the creative industries,| Patel said.

“We will proactivel­y inform our members of opportunit­ies within these routes and encourage them to engage.”

In addition, 56 investment promotion activities will be held to support the CIIE before and during the event, according to Zong.

Participan­ts from various countries or regions, including the UK, Italy, France, Germany, Norway and South Africa will focus on areas of global comparativ­e advantage.

These include crossborde­r e-commerce, big data, industrial Internet, new energy vehicles, artificial intelligen­ce, and biomedicin­e.

“Thanks to Invest Shanghai, we met other entities and agencies that so far have had very close cooperatio­n with both our consulate and the Italy Chamber of Commerce in China,” said Ludovica Murazzani, commercial consul of the Consulate General of Italy in Shanghai.

“All of these really provided great help to Italian companies and our consulate,” Murazzani added.

Since the first policy on attracting multinatio­nal companies to set up regional headquarte­rs in Shanghai was introduced in 2002, the headquarte­rs economy in the city has made great progress over the past 18 years, according to authoritie­s.

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