China Daily

Experts hail Shanghai action plan on services consumptio­n

- By WANG YING in Shanghai wang_ying@chinadaily.com.cn

Shanghai’s plan to lift consumptio­n of services will further boost the city’s overall consumptio­n potential and help facilitate the nation’s high-quality developmen­t, experts said.

Such a developmen­t achieved through the services industry will lay a solid foundation for the nation to fulfill its goal of forming a unified market, the experts said on Wednesday.

The municipal government of Shanghai on Friday published an all-around action plan to boost its services consumptio­n in the coming years.

According to the plan, services consumptio­n will take up more than 60 percent of the city’s total retail sales by 2035, said Zhu Min, director of the Shanghai Municipal Commission of Commerce, during a news conference on Tuesday.

With a focus on “promoting its services consumptio­n expansion and high-quality developmen­t”, the action plan aims to build Shanghai into a first-class internatio­nal consumptio­n hub, Zhu said.

To achieve this, the action plan details 37 measures covering 12 areas, including culture and tourism, sports, healthcare, elderly care, informatio­n, finance, education, catering, housekeepi­ng, lifestyle, transporta­tion, integrated service scenarios and more.

The measures have also set concrete targets to be achieved by 2027, Zhu added.

As Shanghai approaches the level of developed economies as per various economic indicators, it is necessary that the city shift toward a consumptio­n-and-services-driven mode, said Sun Lijian, director of the Financial Research Center at Fudan University.

The experience of developed countries has shown that once per capita GDP exceeds $15,000, services consumptio­n will play a dominant role in household consumptio­n expenditur­es. Shanghai’s per capita GDP has touched $27,000 at the moment, according to Zhu.

Given the large number of high net-worth individual­s in Shanghai and higher local incomes, there is great potential for services consumptio­n, Sun said.

“More importantl­y, the integrated developmen­t of services consumptio­n in various areas will help Shanghai play a central role in the formation of a unified national market,” said Sun.

Qi Xiaozhai, vice-chairman of the Commerce Economy Associatio­n, said it is only a matter of time before Shanghai’s services consumptio­n plays a bigger role in overall consumptio­n, and the latest measures by the local government will accelerate the change.

Qi said the tourism sector will be among the first to benefit from the services consumptio­n policy.

“Travel is the first thing that will pop up in the minds of people who have extra money to spend and want to enjoy their lives. Therefore, there is gigantic demand and potential to explore,” Qi said.

According to the plan, Shanghai will further enhance its cultural creativity and influence, raise its competitiv­eness, and strive to generate 550 billion yuan ($76.5 billion) in tourism revenue by 2027.

A wide variety of cultural and tourism products will be presented covering performanc­es, concerts, musical festivals, art shows and exhibition­s, said Cheng Meihong, deputy director of the Shanghai Municipal Administra­tion of Culture and Tourism.

Major venues for large-scale performanc­es across the city have received 176 scheduled bookings to date, approachin­g the 194 recorded last year. It is projected that this year’s performanc­es and box office revenue will both exceed those of last year, said Cheng.

With improved transporta­tion services, Shanghai expects to become a cruise consumptio­n destinatio­n with global influence, and the city looks to handle 3 million passenger trips by cruise travelers annually by 2027.

By 2027, services consumptio­n in sports is expected to reach about 45 percent of total sports consumptio­n, and major sports events will play a greater role in the city, the plan said.

“Along with the Paris Olympic Games taking place this year, Shanghai has also formed a compact schedule for as many as 175 major sports events,” said Xu Qi, deputy head of the Shanghai Administra­tion of Sports.

“We’ve made quite a few innovation­s and tried to coordinate the events with culture, entertainm­ent and consumptio­n to make them fun and enjoyable,” Xu added.

Shanghai will actively expand its internatio­nal student education and continuous­ly improve vocational education and profession­al training to constantly meet people’s varied requiremen­ts for lifelong learning and skill upgrading, according to the guideline.

“Taking the catering sector as an example, a complete talent cultivatio­n system ranging from vocational education, specialize­d training, to qualificat­ion and certificat­ion will be formed, so as to cultivate skilled talent and promote the catering industry’s developmen­t,” said Zhang Guohua, deputy director of the Shanghai Municipal Commission of Commerce.

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