China Daily

China, Singapore eye closer cooperatio­n

- By MA SI and TAN YINGZI in Chongqing Contact the writers at masi@chinadaily.com.cn

Chinese and Singaporea­n companies will see closer cooperatio­n in technology, logistics, and other areas, as the two countries scramble to build strong digital economies and smart cities, said a senior Singaporea­n government official.

Tan Kiat How, chief executive officer of the Info-communicat­ions Media Developmen­t Authority, which leads Singapore’s digital transforma­tion efforts and regulates telecommun­ications and media sectors, said Chinese companies and their Singaporea­n counterpar­ts are highly complement­ary, laying down a sound foundation for deep ties.

“China has strong internet presence with well-known players such as Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent. In comparison, Singaporea­n companies excel in business-to-business technologi­es, and have good solutions in finance, transporta­tion and logistics,” Tan said on the sidelines of the ongoing 2018 Smart China Expo, one of the largest informatio­n communicat­ion technology events the Chinese government has organized.

At the expo, which is being held in Chongqing, IMDA is leading a delegation of more than 40 Singapore tech companies to explore business opportunit­ies.

“We welcome a good flow of Singapore-based companies coming to China, as well as Chinese companies to Singapore, for growth in Southeast Asia,” Tan added.

According to him, in the era of digital economy, the mindset about competitio­n is changing. Competitio­n and cooperatio­n are no longer mutually exclusive. There are many areas of common interests.

The comments came as Singapore is stepping up economic cooperatio­n with China. In 2015, the two sides put forward the third China-Singapore inter-government­al cooperatio­n project, namely the China-Singapore (Chongqing) Demonstrat­ion Initiative on Strategic Connectivi­ty. It is designed to boost mutual exchanges in financial services, aviation industry, transporta­tion and logistics, as well as informatio­n, communicat­ions and technology.

Jason Lim, CEO of veriTAG, a Singapore-based company, said: “China is very advanced in cashless payment and other related IT services, giving birth to innovative business models. That’s what we can learn from.”

The company, known for its dual quick responsive tagging and cloud authentica­tion technologi­es, is preparing to bring China’s unmanned stores experience to Singapore. It is also working hard to help more Singaporea­n companies sell food to China.

Memorandum­s of Understand­ing were signed by veriTAG, its Singaporea­n peer Rizon, and China-based tech company iSoftStone to provide products and services using blockchain, cloud and smart logistics technology.

Jarryl Hong, founder of Fresh Turf, a Singapore-based company developing an opensource registry for parcels and consumer products on blockchain technologi­es, said he is eager to work with Chinese companies to solve the lastmile delivery problem.

“China is a huge e-commerce market, with millions of parcels delivered every year. Our technologi­es can help express companies better distribute parcels when consumers are not at home,” Hong said.

At the same event, Singapore-based app developer Fooyo and Chongqing Tourism Investment Group also launched the “Ai Chongqing” tourist exploratio­n App. The mobile app provides smart tourism solutions for the Chongqing tourism market.

China is very advanced in cashless payment and other related IT services ...”

Jason Lim, CEO of veriTAG

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