Global Times

Riots don’t distance HK firms

A▶ Ties get closer as entreprene­urs seek new fields for growth in Chinese mainland

- By Xie Jun in Shanghai

Hong Kong businesses are increasing­ly interested in tapping the market in the Chinese mainland, partly pressured by riots in the city that are pushing them to look for markets that are more stable, said a high-level official from Hong Kong at the 2nd China Internatio­nal Import Expo (CIIE).

Jacky Chung, regional director for eastern and central China for the Hong Kong Trade Developmen­t Council (HKTDC), said that the Chinese mainland market is evolving in a way that makes Hong Kong entreprene­urs feel more confident.

“For example, some Hong Kong businesses had concerns over the issue of intellectu­al property rights (IPR) infringeme­nt in the Chinese mainland, but their worries have eased a lot as the mainland has stepped up the protection of IPR in recent years,” Chung told the Global Times at the Hong Kong food section during the CIIE, which is being held in Shanghai from Tuesday to Sunday.

Their need to bank on the mainland market is also increasing as Hong Kong’s overseas trade is being hit by the China-US trade war, he said.

“Hong Kong needs s to explore some new overseas markets such as Europe and Southom east Asia, as orders fro the US have dend creased. The mainland market is important. market is important. We used to export and distribute products to the world, so why not export to the mainland market right now?” Chung said.

According to data from the HKTDC, Hong Kong’s total exports in the first three quarters stood at HK$ ports in the first three billion), down 4.6 percent year-on-year. Its total imports were HK $3.27 trillion in the same period, slumpin $3.27 trillion in the year.

Hong Kong enterprisi­ng interest in the mainland markket is reflected by their active participat­ion in the CIIE.

More than 200 Honng Kong-based enfor terprises have applied fng Kong-based enfor year’s CIIE, up 40 percent compared with last year. They occupy a total exhibition area

of 22,000 square meters, up 60 percent yearon-year.

On Thursday, the Global Times saw that the Hong Kong food company exhibition section at CIIE was crowded with visitors tasting food samples and talking with representa­tives.

Howard Wong, general manager at Hong Kong food company Kampery, said the response from clients from the mainland at the CIIE is even stronger this year. “We really can get in touch with clients that we didn’t manage to contact before, as the expo helps us to contact clients on a national basis, while some past exhibition­s only helped us to get in touch with more ‘local’ clients like in southern China or eastern China,” he told the Global Times, saying that his company hoped to push supply chain cooperatio­n with mainland partners.

According to him, the mainland’s rising consumptio­n power is propelling the company’s business to rise at a fast speed, with the major beverage section seeing sales growth of more than 20 percent almost annually in the past several years.

Hong Kong businesses’ access into the mainland is growing at a time when the city is mired in months of riots.

Chung said the situation is not distancing Hong Kong enterprise­s from mainland markets but rather pulling them closer, as the mainland offers a safer and more stable environmen­t.

But he stressed that despite the social unrest, Hong Kong’s economy is still resilient.

Wong also said that he hoped the social environmen­t in Hong Kong would be more stable. “For businessme­n and/or people working for others, the most important thing is a stable society.

Chinese President Xi Jinping met Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam in Shanghai on Tuesday, and he emphasized that ending violence and chaos and restoring order remains the most important task for Hong Kong at present.

Lam also visited the exhibition zone of Hong Kong companies at the CIIE.

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 ?? Photo: Yang Hui/GT ?? A view of Hong Kong’s exhibition area on Thursday during the 2nd China Internatio­nal Import Expo
Photo: Yang Hui/GT A view of Hong Kong’s exhibition area on Thursday during the 2nd China Internatio­nal Import Expo

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