China Daily

Mainland, HK enter new phase

- By DUAN TING in Hong Kong tingduan@chinadaily­hk.com

The Chinese mainland will further open nonservice sectors to Hong Kong companies, including ship and aircraft manufactur­ing and resource exploitati­on industries, under the Closer Economic Partnershi­p Arrangemen­t Investment Agreement, which was signed on Wednesday in Hong Kong.

The two jurisdicti­ons also signed the Agreement on Economic and Technical Cooperatio­n, which promotes cooperatio­n under the CEPA framework in Belt and Road regions, free trade zones and the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area.

Paul Chan Mo-po, financial secretary of the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region, said the highlevel investment agreement is a first for the Chinese mainland. It sets a national standard for access, using a negative-list approach, introducin­g most-favored treatment and aiming to provide stability and clarity in the investment environmen­t for Hong Kong and the mainland, as well as to protect investors. A negative list names sectors where investment is prohibited; all others are presumed to be open.

The economic and technical cooperatio­n pact encourages collaborat­ion with regions participat­ing in the Belt and Road Initiative—as well as sub regional economic and trade cooperatio­n — to enhance links between mainland and Hong Kong companies, and to drive overseas mergers and acquisitio­ns.

Vice-Minister of Commerce Gao Yan said the next step will be the implementa­tion and promotion of the two pacts, adding that the latest supplement­ary agreements marked a new phase of cooperatio­n between the mainland and Hong Kong.

The investment agreement will take effect at the start of next year and will further open such sectors as financial market investment products, energy and natural resources and the manufactur­ing of ships and aircraft.

The second agreement — the economic and technical pact — took effect on Wednesday. It enhances cooperatio­n in innovation and technology and aims to foster further capital market access.

Salina Yan, Hong Kong’s director-general of trade and industry, said there is no timeline for implementa­tion of the proposals.

Chan, the Hong Kong financial secretary, said the CEPA reflects the successful implementa­tion of “one country, two systems”, and the newly signed agreement is another milestone of CEPA developmen­t.

CEPA was initially launched in June 2003 under the regulation­s of the World Trade Organizati­on and the Basic Law of Hong Kong. It was created to open the mainland market to Hong Kong. The framework has been in place for 14 years.

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