China Daily

Foreigners have easier FTZ residency access

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SHANGHAI — The latest benefit of the Shanghai Free Trade Zone is to its non-Chinese residents, who can apply for permanent residence in China simply with a letter of recommenda­tion from the FTZ authoritie­s.

According to the social security bureau of the Shanghai Pudong New Area, the new policy will take effect later in April and apply to the applicants and their spouses and minor children.

The move was made following 10 rules related to China’s entry and exit policy announced by the Ministry of Public Security, which authorizes the Shanghai Zhangjiang National Innovation Demonstrat­ion Zone and Shanghai FTZ to recommend high-level foreign staff for permanent residence permits, so-called Chinese “green cards”.

Those with permanent residence status enjoy the same rights as Chinese citizens in areas such as investment, housing purchases and schooling.

The reform is to support Shanghai’s ambition of becoming a world science and technology innovation hub.

Those who qualify for the fast track applicatio­n include well-known award winners or high-level finalists, such as Nobel laureates, recipients of the Chinese government Friendship Award and other worldclass, national and municipal awards; people in charge of Shanghai FTZ-based national laboratori­es, engineerin­g laboratori­es, foreign investment R&D institutio­ns; and top-level talents from innovation and startup enterprise­s.

A Chinese green card is one of the hardest to obtain, with no more than 7,000 issued since 2004, when the policy was introduced. The applicatio­n process is complicate­d; the new policy will make it easier.

In 2016, 1,576 foreigners became permanent Chinese residents, an increase of 163 percent from a year earlier, according to the Ministry of Public Security.

China has made huge progress in easing its residence and entry policies for foreigners since September 2015, which has helped attract more top-tier workers from overseas as well as boosted internatio­nal exchanges and the economy, according to a ministry statement.

Shanghai saw six times more permanent residence applicatio­ns from foreigners and their families in 2016 from 2015. The number of such applicatio­ns in Beijing last year increased 426 percent.

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