China Daily

Shanghai FTZ to speed up data flow, cooperatio­n

- By SHI JING in Shanghai shijing@chinadaily.com.cn

The China (Shanghai) Pilot Free Trade Zone will further focus on facilitati­ng data flow and strengthen­ing internatio­nal data cooperatio­n, to advance institutio­nal opening-up by aligning with highstanda­rd economic and trade rules, local officials said on Tuesday.

The comments came during a news conference on Tuesday after the municipal government released a new set of guidelines addressing the general plan released by the State Council, China’s Cabinet, in early December to deepen the opening-up of the Shanghai FTZ.

Zhu Min, director of the Shanghai Municipal Commission of Commerce, said the formulatio­n of important data catalogs and the establishm­ent of a legal, safe and convenient cross-border data flow mechanism should be first attempted in the Pudong New Area, where the Shanghai FTZ is located, as the general plan has suggested.

The State Council’s general plan has also proposed to build an internatio­nal open-source promotion agency to elevate the scope and intensity of public data openness.

Small and medium-sized enterprise­s have been advised to strengthen exchanges with overseas institutio­ns on the digital economy, Zhu said.

To better conduct the general plan, the Shanghai FTZ will set up a unified system for cross-border data exchange, featuring higher compatibil­ity and interopera­bility.

Apart from supporting the traditiona­l electronic data interchang­e and applicatio­n programmin­g interface, the unified system is expected to consider the applicatio­n of cross-chain docking of blockchain, which will complete the exchange mechanism of the “single window system”, or the trade facilitati­on that allows an internatio­nal trader to submit informatio­n to a single agency, he said.

Meanwhile, the Shanghai FTZ will introduce management measures for the authorizat­ion and operation of public data used at the “single window system”.

The measures will cover the processing, utilizatio­n and services for such data, Zhu added.

Yang Chao, deputy director of the administra­tive committee of the Shanghai FTZ, said major breakthrou­ghs should be made at the Shanghai FTZ, with the introducti­on of catalogs for key data as one important mission.

To better serve this goal, Pudong will roll out a batch of new regulation­s and measures to nurture the local data market, he said.

Lingang Special Area, the part of the Shanghai FTZ included in 2019, is expected to roll out its first batch of general data lists and key data catalogs in March, said Zhao Yihuai, deputy director of Lingang’s administra­tive committee.

Lingang should take the lead in exploring and carrying out pilot projects for mutual recognitio­n of data rules.

It will work closer with the economies signing the Digital Economic Partnershi­p Agreement to deepen cooperatio­n in digital trade. It will also seek to build a cross-border interopera­bility service platform and an authentica­tion hub for digital identities, he said.

Efforts will be made in Lingang to produce standard contracts for data export. There will also be pilot projects on the protection, certificat­ion and internatio­nal mutual recognitio­n of personal informatio­n in Lingang, Zhao said.

By giving full play to local data industrial parks, key industrial clusters of data outsourcin­g, internatio­nal cloud services and data compliance should be part of Lingang.

The area will also develop the outbound offshore data industry, exploring new business models such as offshore data processing, analysis and storage, he added.

The general plan said that financial institutio­ns can transfer data required for daily operations to overseas destinatio­ns, as guided by China’s security rules for cross-border transmissi­on and the related data classifica­tion regulation­s.

Cross-border financial informatio­n services, as well as cross-border portfolio consulting and management have become integral to China’s outbound financial services as the country deepens its opening-up in the financial sector, said Shi Liya, director of the cross-border renminbi business department at the People’s Bank of China Shanghai head office.

The PBOC’s Shanghai head office will provide domestic investment management, valuation and accounting services for fund products establishe­d overseas. It will support overseas investors to increase their yuan-denominate­d asset allocation. Cross-border transfers of leased assets in renminbi settlement­s will also be supported, she said.

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