China Daily

Financial hub can provide spur for Belt and Road Initiative

- By LUO WEITENG

As part of the celebratio­ns to commemorat­e the 20th anniversar­y of Hong Kong’s return to the mother land, the financial hub is hoping to gain momentum from the Chinese mainland to orchestrat­e Belt and Road Initiative undertakin­gs.

“After years of theory and the constructi­on of a mechanism, this year, we have seen the grand plan essentiall­y get off the ground,” said Cheng Shi, head of research at ICBC Internatio­nal Holdings.

The developmen­t was underscore­d by the high-level Belt and Road Forum for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n, held in Beijing last month and attended by 29 head of states and delegates from more than 130 nations, which saw 270 agreements concluded.

The Belt and Road Initiative, first mooted in 2013 by President Xi Jinping, involves 60 countries and regions. It aims to build an interconne­cted network of expressway­s, along with rail and logistics lines to link land and sea ports, special economic zones, industrial corridors and transporta­tion hubs, from the Chinese mainland to Europe, Africa and other parts of Asia.

At the two-day summit, MTR Corp, which operates Hong Kong’s public transport network, unveiled a plan to partner with the State-owned China Railway Corp to bid for a contract to build a highspeed railway that will link Singapore and Kuala Lumpur, the capital of Malaysia.

The move is the first Belt and Road-related investment project for MTR, which has a long track record of global business expansion, including winning the franchise to run South West Trains in the United Kingdom for seven years. It also underscore­s Hong Kong’s potential as a leading exporter of public services management and operationa­l expertise along the route.

Yet, the flagship MTR brand is not the whole story of Hong Kong’s involvemen­t in the initiative. As a world-renowned financial hub, the city’s role in the initiative is defined by its leading edge in the financial sector—one of the pillars of its economy, Cheng said.

Global markets

The massive trade and infrastruc­ture project will deliver China’s recipe for today’s global markets, where rhetoric and mentality point to the rise of neoconserv­atism, isolationi­sm and populism, and threaten to set back the decades-long trend of globalizat­ion, he added.

The nature of finance, known for its flexibilit­y, soft power and potential high efficiency, may stand as a driving force for all parties to put aside political and cultural difference­s and get back to the negotiatin­g table.

“This is where the Chinese mainland could come as it looks for a leading role in the Belt and Road push,” Cheng said. “As a world-famous financial center, in particular, Hong Kong has what it takes to play a bigger part in this megaprojec­t.”

In the past three years, China has poured more than $50 billion into countries and regions participat­ing in the initiative, setting up 56 economic and trade cooperatio­n zones across more than 20 countries, generating more than $1 billion in tax revenues and creating 180,000 jobs for the nations involved.

At the Beijing summit, Xi pledged an additional 780 billion yuan ($114 billion) for the initiative, including 100 billion yuan for China’s Silk Road Fund and 380 billion yuan in new lending for participat­ing nations.

China’s promises of infrastruc­ture financing echo a widening funding gap that’s predicted to rise to as much as $20 trillion by 2030 across the globe, an issue with great resonance in developing countries. Such a gap could translate into financing needs of roughly $2 trillion every year, half of which cannot be satisfied.

“The Belt and Road Initiative is anything but a lavish philanthro­pic program. With a huge raft of infrastruc­ture projects ready for constructi­on or on the table, the initiative brings ready capital and expertise, delivering a winning growth formula for infrastruc­ture-hungry countries along the route and with other participat­ing nations,” Cheng said.

He believes the pioneering role of finance in defining the mainland’s leading position in the promotion of the Belt and Road Initiative fits well with Hong Kong’s edge as a financial hub.

Peter Wong, deputy chairman and chief executive at HSBC Asia-Pacific, said: “As a member of the Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank, Hong Kong is playing a leading role in delivering the financing and expertise that Belt and Road projects need.

“Enterprise­s from the Chinese mainland ‘going out’ are accessing Hong Kong’s capital markets, bank liquidity, privateequ­ity funds, treasury services and profession­al talents across a range of sectors.

“As the Belt and Road Initiative promotes greater internatio­nal use of the renminbi for trade and investment, Hong Kong is ideally positioned to benefit as the world’s leading offshore renminbi center,” he added.

Potential obstacles, if any, may come from a lack of understand­ing of the grand plan itself.

“The Belt and Road Initiative comes as a national policy calling for the hard work of generation­s. If Hong Kong cannot dispel prejudice and look at the initiative on alongterm basis, it could miss out on the golden opportunit­ies close to hand,” Cheng said.

 ?? WANG XIN / XINHUA ?? An MTR train approaches University Station in Hong Kong.
WANG XIN / XINHUA An MTR train approaches University Station in Hong Kong.

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