China Daily

Nanshan highlights role of talent in startups

- XIAOKANG@ GRASSROOTS By PEI PEI in Shenzhen, Guangdong peipei@chinadaily.com.cn

Liu Ruopeng, co- founder of Guangqi Group, which specialize­s in metamateri­als, can’t get enough of Nanshan, a district in Shenzhen, Guangdong province. “This is a place with the most Silicon Valley characteri­stics,” Liu said.

Given the passion and drive of its entreprene­urs, Nanshan, a cluster of prominent high- tech firms, is often compared to Silicon Valley, Liu said.

Nine years ago, Liu and four other partners establishe­d Guangqi Group in Nanshan with a startup capital of 200,000 yuan ($ 29,880).

Since then, the company has grown rapidly and is now known globally. It showcases the quality of entreprene­urship in Nanshan.

The district’s GDP was 610.3 billion yuan in 2019, earning it third place among all counties and districts on the Chinese mainland.

In the first half of this year, innovative developmen­t strategies helped boost Nanshan’s GDP to 304.23 billion yuan, up 2.5 percent year- on- year, despite the impact of COVID- 19 on the larger economy.

Just 40 years ago, when Shenzhen became home to China’s first Special Economic Zone, Nanshan was no more than a barren piece of land covering 187.5 square kilometers. There were hills, paddies and mud flats.

In 1990, its GDP grew to 7.86 billion yuan. More than 4,000 State- level high- tech enterprise­s have achieved success in the district so far.

That attracted even the world’s technology giants such as Airbus and Qualcomm to Nanshan, where they set up research and developmen­t centers.

As of August, 724,064 firms have been incubated in Nanshan. And 90 percent of its listed companies are of high- tech. R& D investment accounts for 5.87 percent of its GDP.

All along, Nanshan made talent key to its rapid and high- quality developmen­t. It is now home to more than 70 percent of top- end profession­als in Shenzhen, including 28 academics from the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the Chinese Academy of Engineerin­g.

The district boasts 397 patents for inventions per 10,000 people, almost four times that of the national average. And its Patent Cooperatio­n Treaty has earned it internatio­nal patent applicatio­ns, which account for almost 13 percent of the country’s total.

Yang Peng is a beneficiar­y of Nanshan’s policies that support talent. He graduated from Peking University in 2019 with a doctoral degree, and started his career at Orbbec, a prominent 3D sensing company, in charge of 3D algorithm R& D.

He lives in an apartment provided by the local government. Other residents in the residentia­l building are also top- end talent and fellow beneficiar­ies. “The apartment is just 10 minutes away from my company. Its rent is only one- third of the market price,” Yang said.

The Nanshan district will disburse more than 500 million yuan toward talent subsidies this year, according to local officials.

“For top- level internatio­nal talent, including teams, our district can offer at least 10 million yuan each year,” said Wang Xiaorong, head of the organizati­on department of the Nanshan district committee of the Communist Party of China.

The Shenzhen Talent Park in Nanshan was completed in 2017. Covering 700,000 square meters, it is the first talent- themed municipal park and a symbol of Nanshan’s emphasis on talent.

To encourage entreprene­urship, the district government introduced reforms to improve its business environmen­t. Administra­tive affairs are resolved in person at one go; its online operations can handle 499 issues at a time.

“The government helps promote the developmen­t of the market- based local economy, with the private sector playing a key role. We do our best to facilitate the developmen­t of hightech industries,” said Liu Shiming, chief of the science and technology innovation bureau of Nanshan.

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