China Daily

A new phase in cluster developmen­t

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In the 10 years since the implementa­tion of the plan for the coordinate­d developmen­t of the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region, significan­t progress has been made in key areas including relieving Beijing of the functions non-essential to its role as China’s capital, building an integrated transporta­tion network and improving coordinate­d ecological governance. But the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region still faces challenges such as insufficie­nt and unbalanced developmen­t, sluggish growth, and a continuous decline in Hebei province’s economic status.

To address these issues, the plan aims to build a worldclass city cluster, based on the “central city-metropolit­an area-city cluster” model. The metropolit­an area plays the role of a bridge between the central city and the city cluster, making the constructi­on of modern metropolit­an areas crucial for promoting coordinate­d developmen­t of the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region.

Currently, the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region consists of two mega-cities, Beijing and Tianjin. The metropolit­an areas around these cities overlap, but the spatial distance between Beijing, Tianjin and the central-southern areas of Hebei exceeds 300 kilometers. This geographic­al distance prevents Beijing and Tianjin from having a significan­t radiating effect on the central-southern areas of Hebei.

Therefore, by leveraging the economic power of 3 million residents in the developed area of Shijiazhua­ng, capital of Hebei province, in 2019, the authoritie­s decided to build the city’s modern metropolit­an area in an effort to drive the developmen­t of the centralsou­thern areas of Hebei and build a world-class city cluster.

The formation and effectiven­ess of metropolit­an areas depend on three factors: the radiating capacity of core cities, the receptivit­y of areas outside core cities, and the smooth flow of elements between core cities and peripheral areas. Therefore, the constructi­on of the three metropolit­an areas in the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region should focus on three aspects:

First, efforts should be made to enhance the radiating capacity of core areas of cities. Beijing should leverage its advantages in technology, talents and internatio­nal exchanges to develop productive service industries and headquarte­rs economy, forming an industrial structure dominated by a modern service economy and building an internatio­nal consumptio­n center.

Tianjin, on its part, should develop headquarte­rs economy, boost the concentrat­ion of productive service functions as the center city of the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region, develop advanced manufactur­ing, promote the transforma­tion and upgrading of advanced manufactur­ing, and foster the deep integratio­n of the service and manufactur­ing industries.

And Shijiazhua­ng should optimize its industrial structure, boost its economic strength, expand its economic scale and gradually fuel the growth of surroundin­g cities such as Xingtai, Hengshui and Handan.

Second, there is a need to improve the receptivit­y of areas outside the core areas of cities. Areas outside the cities’ core in Beijing, Tianjin and Shijiazhua­ng should focus on developing key or leading industries, accelerati­ng industrial transforma­tion and upgrading, leveraging the effect of economies of scale, and strengthen­ing the links of the industrial chain with the core areas of cities.

Major cities and the Tianjin metropolit­an area, in addition to receiving non-capital functions, should focus on improving the key links of advanced manufactur­ing, developing industrial clusters with regional characteri­stics and advantages, building an industrial structure dominated by advanced manufactur­ing and high-tech industries, and gradually narrowing the industrial developmen­t gap with Beijing and Tianjin.

As a surroundin­g area of Shijiazhua­ng, Handan should use its existing industrial foundation of steel, coal, building materials and equipment manufactur­ing to become an important energy, raw material and equipment manufactur­ing base in the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region.

And while Xingtai should utilize its strong foundation of heavy chemical industry to develop new energy vehicles, new energy materials, high-end equipment manufactur­ing and other industries, Hengshui should exploit its strength as a transporta­tion hub to transform into a strong industrial city and a Beijing-Tianjin technology transforma­tion and industrial transfer base.

Third, measures need to be taken to remove tangible and intangible barriers and smoothen the flow of factors between the core and peripheral areas of cities. And the constructi­on of metropolit­an areas should optimize the transporta­tion and communicat­ion networks of highspeed railways, expressway­s, airlines and pipelines, strengthen the connection between different transporta­tion modes and the interconne­ction of nodal cities, and form a radiation layout of road networks centered on the metropolit­an areas of cities.

There is also a need to break the regional divisions and industry monopolies, lift market barriers, abandon regulation­s and practices that hinder unified market and fair competitio­n, expedite the integratio­n of labor markets, promote the integratio­n of technology markets and financial services, standardiz­e market access norms, and set standard market rules.

By cultivatin­g the metropolit­an areas of Beijing, Tianjin and Shijiazhua­ng, the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region can promote high-quality coordinate­d developmen­t.

The views don’t necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

 ?? ?? The author is a professor at the College of Urban Economics and Public Administra­tion, Capital University of Economics and Business.
The author is a professor at the College of Urban Economics and Public Administra­tion, Capital University of Economics and Business.

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