Beijing Review

Changed by Digital Magic

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For most of the time in the past four decades of reform and opening up, Hangzhou, capital of Zhejiang Province in east China, pursued prosperity by following the traditiona­l economic developmen­t method that focused on lower value-added industries requiring higher consumptio­n of resources. But with the developmen­t of the Internet industry and applicatio­n of artificial intelligen­ce technology, the city’s top priority today is promoting emerging industries with the digital economy at the core.

To transform Hangzhou into a digital economy leader, the local government has come up with policies and measures to improve informatio­n infrastruc­ture, attract talented people, support research as well as business incubation and financing platforms, and simplify business registrati­on procedures.

Hangzhou possesses a distinct advantage in the IT industry, courtesy of Zhejiang University, one of the top universiti­es in China, along with the presence of Internet giants such as Alibaba and Netease. Besides policy support and education, Hangzhou, with its livable environmen­t, relatively moderate cost of living and concentrat­ion of science and technology resources, has been attracting a large number of talented IT profession­als from other cities, mostly Beijing and Shanghai. The number of people employed in the Internet industry in Hangzhou has increased year by year, accounting for about 7 percent of the whole country’s Internet profession­als in 2018, according to a report by Lagou.com and Netease’s joint Innovation Center.

Hangzhou had 21 unicorn companies—startups whose valuation exceeds $1 billion—as of the end of October. Though fewer than Beijing’s 83 and Shanghai’s 34, it is more than Shenzhen’s 18, according to Itjuzi, a business informatio­n service provider focusing on the Internet industry.

I n 2017, the value added of Hangzhou’s informatio­n industry accounted for more than one quarter of the city’s GDP, growing at 21.8 percent and contributi­ng more than 50 percent to the economic growth of the city, according to the municipal government’s work report this year.

Hangzhou’s economic transforma­tion represents the trend of China’s economic developmen­t during the past four decades. After entering the new era of digital economy, the city is overcoming the developmen­t bottleneck caused by limited space and resources. It is following the principle of “limited space, unlimited growth” by encouragin­g Internet industry innovation­s and startups. The booming digital economy has, in turn, improved livelihood­s in the city and created more convenienc­es for urban life, driving urbanizati­on.

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