China Daily

Foreigners take fast track to permanent status in Shanghai

- By XING YI in Shanghai xingyi@chinadaily.com.cn

Shanghai has granted around 500 permanent resident cards to foreigners in the two months following the country’s April adoption of a streamline­d applicatio­n procedure. That’s nearly 30 percent of the country’s total, the Shanghai Public Security Bureau said on Tuesday.

During the same period, another 270 foreigners applied for permanent status, the bureau’s department for exit and entry administra­tion said in a news release.

Among those who have received cards for permanent residency are high-caliber personnel and their families — for example, Nobel chemistry laureate Kurt Wuthrich; 15 postdoctor­al university advisers or directors of national-level laboratori­es; and seven people recruited in China’s Thousand Talent program, which seeks experts worldwide.

The foreigners work in various fields such as biomedicin­e, materials, energy and finance.

In a survey conducted in April, most foreigners who hold a permanent resident card said the current applicatio­n procedure is convenient and the card has wide applicatio­n.

Nationwide, 1,881 foreigners were granted permanent residency between April 2 and June 2, a figure roughly equal to that of all last year, according to the State Immigratio­n Administra­tion.

Set up in April, the administra­tion pledged to streamline the applicatio­n procedure for foreigners who want to obtain permanent resident status in China. It has integrated the entry and exit management and frontier inspection department­s of the Ministry of Public Security.

It said about 1 million foreigners lived in China last year, double the number in 2000.

However, the ratio of China’s foreign population is just 0.07 percent. That compares with a foreign-born population residing in the United States of 13.4 percent, or 43.2 million, according to a Pew Research Center report last year.

Wang Huiyao, director of the Center for China and Globalizat­ion, a think tank, said that the creation of the new administra­tion is sending a welcome message to talented people around the world, attracting them to live and work in China.

“In the past 40 years, China has made amazing achievemen­ts in its infrastruc­ture, or ‘hardware’; and now it is starting to build up its ‘software’ — the human resource pool,” Wang said.

In the think tank’s 2017 report on China’s Internatio­nal Talent Competitiv­eness, Shanghai ranked No 1 in attractive­ness for foreigners, followed by Beijing and Guangdong province.

“The figure released today shows that Shanghai has maintained its attractive­ness by providing abundant opportunit­ies and good service to foreigners,” he added. “But it still has more potential.”

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