Bangkok Post

Empty dreams

China’s creative-economy drive has touched off a boom in building ‘innovation centres’, but where are the innovators to fill them?

- Reuters By Sue-Lin Wong in Shacheng, China

The Chinese government’s call to build an innovation-driven economy from the top down has sparked a rush by local government­s to construct new buildings in the name of supporting creativity.

Innovation centres have been popping up around the country and are set to more than double to nearly 5,000 in the next five years, according to the internet research firm iiMedia. The only problem for local government­s; entreprene­urs are not moving in.

Many centres are in small Chinese cities or towns, not ideal locations for attracting startups. There is no local market for their product, no local ecosystem of suppliers and fellow entreprene­urs and centres generally provide only basic amenities, such as a desk and a telephone. They lack the financial, technical or marketing expertise that many startups need.

Most incubators have occupancy rates of no more than 40%, iiMedia says.

The result: like steel mills, theme parks and housing before them, the country now faces a glut of innovation centres as another top-down policy backfires to leave white-elephant projects and a further buildup of debt.

“The risk of a bubble is extremely large,” said Shi Jiqiang, a partner at Leilai Management, which runs day-to-day operations at a startup base in the city of Tianjin, near Beijing.

“This is both a test for government and for the managers of startup spaces ... there aren’t enough entreprene­urs.”

China’s Ministry of Industry and IT declined to comment and the state planning agency, the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, did not respond to a request for comment.

Beijing argues its developmen­t model that worked so well for infrastruc­ture and real estate, powering the country through the global financial crisis, can build successful, high-tech startups.

With slogans such as “mass entreprene­urship” and “internet plus”, Beijing has called for innovation centres to be built all over the country, hoping to lay the groundwork for the next Jack Ma — who founded the e-commerce giant Alibaba — to emerge.

It has encouraged college students and even migrant workers to try their hand at starting their own businesses to transform China into a high-tech economy less reliant on basic manufactur­ing.

Almost 80% of the capital for the innovation centres springing up around the country is coming from the government or universiti­es, which are state-backed in China, or a combinatio­n of sources, iiMedia said.

“In any sort of market, you want the experts making the decisions, not some technocrat or bureaucrat,” said William Bao Bean, investment partner at the venture capital fund SOSV, which invests in startups. “You don’t tend to see too many successful companies come out of a government-based decision-making process.”

OPEN FOR BUSINESS

The small town of Shacheng in Huailai county i n northern Hebei province answered Beijing’s call for innovation by building two 25-storey adjoining towers — one for office space and the other as an innovation centre.

However, the innovation centre, offering desks and a period of free rent and utilities to potential startups, is empty. The floors are littered with rubbish and dust.

Like other towns in China’s industrial heartland, Shacheng is feeling the brunt of Beijing’s push to reduce massive industrial overcapaci­ty. Glass and cement factories, and coal mines and steel mills have been shut down.

The town offers few signs of the central government’s innovation campaign. Chinese characters hanging on a fence in Shacheng’s economic zone spell out “mass entreprene­urship” but otherwise local people said they had not seen any promotion of the innovation centre and they felt it was not targetted at them anyhow.

Instead, they assumed it was designed to attract students and entreprene­urs from Beijing, four hours away by train.

“I wouldn’t consider becoming an entreprene­ur. You need money to do that. No, for someone like me, I don’t really have many options,” said Liu Haiyang, 30, who runs a shop next to the innovation centre, selling bathroom fittings.

Shacheng’s local authority and the county economic planner declined to comment.

Residents said they hoped their economic fortunes would improve when a high-speed rail link with Beijing, which will cut travel time to the capital down to half an hour, is completed in 2019.

“The incubator is losing money,” said a businessma­n with strong ties to the local government, who spoke on condition of anonymity. “But we’re playing the long game, hoping this push will create companies that pay taxes and add jobs to the local economy.”

Elsewhere, some local government­s have rebranded empty office space as innovation centres. At the new Yujiapu economic zone in Tianjin near Beijing, the government has designated 5.5 square kilometres for 11 incubators with at least four more on the way. The zone’s flagship incubator is only 30% occupied, an administra­tive assistant said.

“All these office buildings have already been built,” said Yang Dehong, a local government official. “We might as well use them, help startups reduce their costs,” she said.

“And ride the wave of this (innovation) policy,” added Pei Lei, another government official.

AGAINST THE ODDS

Venture capitalist­s say startups gravitate to where successful innovation centres are already up and running, or where they can find the right mix of a local market, talent, expertise and fellow entreprene­urs.

That generally means the big cities, such as Zhuhai, Beijing, Guangzhou, Shanghai and Shenzhen — the five cities that top the rankings for startups in China.

“The idea that you can predict location or the idea that every geography happens to have this nascent group just waiting to be given capital to go create the next Alibaba, is just not true,” said Gary Rieschel, founder of Qiming Venture Partners, a China-based venture capital firm.

Other more fundamenta­l factors are holding back an entreprene­urial culture in China, startup experts say.

Even in towns with universiti­es, young Chinese are often pressured by their parents to find a job considered more steady, such as in government or with a private company. Starting your own business is seen as too high-risk.

The Chinese education system, which largely focuses on rote learning, also crimps the developmen­t of creative thinkers, said Bo Yiqun, chief executive of a privately run co-working space in Beijing with 85% occupancy.

“Innovation is related to education,” Bo said. “If education levels don’t rise, we can’t expect innovation to catch up that fast.”

Even if all those factors were in place, government efforts would have more chance of success if officials teamed up with former entreprene­urs or venture capitalist­s with money at stake, Chinaccele­rator’s Bao said.

“Where it’s not worked the world over, as well as in China, is where the government­s themselves are making the investment decisions,” he said.

As with steel mills, theme parks and housing before them, China now faces a glut of innovation centres as another top-down policy backfires to leave white-elephant projects and a further buildup of debt

 ??  ?? The Hongxiang Building, designed as an incubator for high-tech startups, awaits tenants in Shacheng in Hebei province.
The Hongxiang Building, designed as an incubator for high-tech startups, awaits tenants in Shacheng in Hebei province.
 ??  ?? Men stand in front of Tencent Space, a flagship technology incubator in Tianjin, China.
Men stand in front of Tencent Space, a flagship technology incubator in Tianjin, China.

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