China Daily

Guangdong offers support to SARs’ youths

Guangdong cities offering new business and study support for talents from Hong Kong and Macao

- By LI WENFANG in Guangzhou liwenfang@chinadaily.com.cn

Anumber of cities in Guangdong province have rolled out preferenti­al policies to further attract young people from the Hong Kong and Macao special administra­tive regions.

In the 14th Five-Year Plan (202125) of the province’s capital Guangzhou, for example, authoritie­s pledge to optimize policies to facilitate study, employment, business startups and living standards for residents from the two regions. The plan also promises to continue building bases for innovation and entreprene­urship for young people from the SARs.

Shenzhen has vowed to optimize its services for Hong Kong and Macao residents in innovation and business startups and aims to offer the same living entitlemen­ts as locals.

In Zhuhai, the local government plans to explore ways to give the same treatment to residents from neighborin­g Macao as locals and make it easier for young people from the SAR to study, work and live in the city. It will also explore “green cards” for talented people from Hong Kong and Macao.

The new support for young people from the SARs came as the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area marked the second anniversar­y of its outline developmen­t plan.

Previous policies on issues such as processing of cross-border business license applicatio­ns, tax subsidies, residence permits and cross-border office buildings have lowered the costs for young people from Hong Kong and Macao of starting businesses, said Zhang Guangnan, a professor of the Institute of Guangdong, Hong Kong and Macao Developmen­t Studies at Sun Yat-sen University.

Other policies have helped address issues such as insufficie­nt resources and unbalanced opportunit­ies for starting businesses, as well as solutions to different cross-border corporate cultures. However, he added that additional efforts were needed to tackle these issues.

More government agencies and organizati­ons in Guangdong, including educationa­l authoritie­s, universiti­es, and the Hong Kong and Macao affairs offices, have joined in the efforts and widened the policy rollouts.

The central government and the government­s of Guangdong, Hong Kong and Macao, as well as city government­s in Guangdong, have all issued policies including those on taxation, financial support and housing.

Que Guangling, an official with Guangzhou’s United Front Work Department, said this month the city had offered 1 billion yuan ($153.8 million) to support Hong Kong and Macao youths start businesses.

A project guideline to encourage innovative and entreprene­urial endeavors by Hong Kong and Macao people, which offers up to 4.5 million yuan for a single project, is also in place.

Forty-four innovation and business startup bases for people from the SARs are operating in Guangzhou, accommodat­ing 349 projects, including those in the fields of high-technology, e-commerce, biopharmac­euticals and animation.

The projects have resulted in 1,401 product patents and drawn investment financing of more than 1 billion yuan.

A total of 17,310 local social security cards have been issued to people from Hong Kong and Macao.

Zhang said all policies are cooperativ­e and competitiv­e, with local advantages taken into account, such as special economic zones, free trade zones, the business environmen­t and industrial and cultural features.

The corporate sector is also offering internship­s and job opportunit­ies to young people from the SARs.

Public service platforms have sprung up in cities such as Guangzhou, Shenzhen and Zhuhai, which are run by Hong Kong and Macao people, government agencies and enterprise­s.

The participat­ion of enterprise­s indicates that more policies are being turned into concrete results, with businesses eyeing projects for investment, Zhang said.

Institutio­ns offering support to young people from Hong Kong and Macao are paying greater attention to how many are being served by the policies, whether they have better knowledge of the Bay Area and whether their education makes them proficient enough to apply their skills in practical terms.

Zhang said both the government and corporate sides are looking more at the realizatio­n of projects, be they commercial ones or profession­al services.

An increase in turning policies into concrete results is also attributab­le to closer coordinati­on between various government agencies.

Meanwhile, integratio­n in the Bay Area has been advancing, facilitati­ng complement­ary developmen­t and increasing career paths for young people from Hong Kong and Macao.

SAR people excel in manufactur­ing and commercial services, which have wider applicatio­n on the mainland, especially in Guangdong’s highly developed manufactur­ing sector and also under the country’s dual-circulatio­n strategy.

Liang Haiming, chairman of the China Silk Road iValley Research Institute, said the efforts to support the SARs’ young people and grasp “huge opportunit­ies” had arisen from the building up of the Bay Area.

He suggested the policies be honed to offer support to those with fewer financial resources and job skills.

 ?? SHI YU / CHINA DAILY ??
SHI YU / CHINA DAILY

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