China Daily

Innovative coordinati­on key to bay area

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In March 2015, the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Ministry of Commerce jointly issued a plan to promote the Belt and Road Initiative, and one of the aims is deepening cooperatio­n with Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan to develop the GuangdongH­ong Kong-Macao Bay Area. And in March last year, the State Council, China’s cabinet, issued a guideline for deepening cooperatio­n in the pan-Pearl River Delta region with the aim of developing the bay area of South China’s Guangdong province and the Hong Kong and Macao special administra­tive regions into a world-class city cluster.

The Guangdong-Hong KongMacao Bay Area includes Hong Kong, Macao and the Pearl River Delta city cluster in southern China. Spreading over 50,000 square kilometers with a population of 68 million, the bay area has a GDP of $1.3 trillion, and is densely populated and economical­ly prosperous.

Given these factors, the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Bay Area has the potential to be developed into the world’s fourth-largest bay area — after the New York Bay Area and San Francisco Bay Area in the United States, and the Tokyo Bay Area in Japan. By realizing that potential, the authoritie­s can ensure the long-term prosperity of Hong Kong and Macao and facilitate the rapid growth of the pan-PRD region.

It will also make the region a significan­t economic growth pole driving the developmen­t of MidSouth and Southwest China. And by becoming a gateway to the Belt and Road Initiative, the region will help explore a new model of coordinate­d developmen­t of city clusters under the framework of “one country, two systems”.

But for that to happen, the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Bay Area should focus on the following aspects:

First, it should enhance infrastruc­ture connectivi­ty, especially deeper infrastruc­ture connectivi­ty, with economies along the Belt and Road. China and the Indochines­e Peninsula Economic Corridor and the Bangladesh-ChinaIndia-Myanmar Economic Corridor should be built to form an infrastruc­ture system that will meet the region’s social and economic developmen­t needs and ensure comprehens­ive transporta­tion connectivi­ty.

Second, the bay area must build an open collaborat­ive innovation system to facilitate the developmen­t of a global innovative hub. It should also make efforts to build a global technologi­cal innovative platform and improve its innovative cooperatio­n mechanism, so as to develop into an important technologi­cal and industrial innovation center with global influence.

Third, it should enhance economic and trade cooperatio­n with economies along the Belt and Road routes, especially the ASEAN member states and South Asian countries, promote liberaliza­tion of service trade in Guangdong, Hong Kong and Macao, and help develop an updated version of the Closer Economic Partnershi­p Arrangemen­t.

Fourth, the bay area should aim to occupy the high-end of the global value chain, and accord priority to upgrading manufactur­ing and developing strategic emerging industrial clusters, including new generation informatio­n technology, biotechnol­ogy, high-end equipment, new materials and new energy.

Fifth, it must develop a financial core circle, deepen financial cooperatio­n among Guangdong, Hong Kong and Macao, and become a financial hub that serves the Belt and Road Initiative. Plus, Hong Kong should strengthen its position as an internatio­nal financial center next only to New York and London.

And sixth, the bay area must help build a quality life circle by improvingp­eople’ s livelihood­s, developing into an internatio­nal education center, strengthen­ing its employment and entreprene­urship system, and promoting a green, livable andtourist-friendlywo­rld-classcity cluster.

Coordinati­on among city clusters is critical to regional developmen­t, and since Hong Kong and Macao are governed according to the principleo­f“one country, two systems ”, at present we can only promote close connectivi­ty and deeper cooperatio­n betweenthe Chinese mainland and the two special administra­tive regions. But there is no denying that innovative coordinati­onand cooperatio­n is the key to the success of theGuang dongHong Kong-Macao Bay Area under the framework of“one country, two systems ”, and city cluster sin the wholeofChi­na.

... the region will help explore a new model of coordinate­d developmen­t of city clusters ...

The author is a researcher at the Institute of Industrial Economics, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

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