Global Times

Exploring new boundaries for Hainan FTP

▶ Builders blaze a trail with innovation, institutio­nal reform

- By Chu Daye

Looking at the lush rainforest that stretches out along the shore line, Tan Wenhua, a veteran venture capitalist from Beijing, said he had big plans for the Hainan pilot free trade port ( FTP).

China too has big plan for its southern island province. Hainan will be transforme­d into an island- wide FTP over three stages in 2025, 2035 and 2050 with the FTP becoming an independen­t customs regime by 2025. The Hainan FTP will gain “global influence” and play an important role in China’s continued opening- up and expansion of foreign trade.

Business people from across China are exploring new boundaries for the Hainan FTP, with many saying that innovative approaches and institutio­nal reforms are needed in order to turn the tropical island into a paradise for free trade.

For Tan, a tech investor who arrived in Hainan last year to grasp the opportunit­y presented by the FTP, the job of turning Hainan into a world- class FTP needs innovation.

“People come here could see coconut trees, rainforest and the sea. Then they will find there is nothing more to be seen here,” Tan said.

Despite the rollout of more than 150 supportive policies over the past four years, experts have claimed that for Hainan to become a world- class FTP comparable to Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region, Singapore or

Dubai remains , simply copying the experience of these free ports won’t be enough.

The island’s weak agricultur­e and industrial developmen­t, as well as its COVID- hit tourism sector mean it could not win a convention­al competitio­n of “attracting investment, setting up industries” with at least more than a dozen provinces on the mainland determined to do exactly the same thing, even with its policy advantages which include offering zero- tariffs for a wide range of imports.

To Tan, Hainan’s free trade fortune lies in neither the much- trumpeted tax- free shopping nor convention­al tourism, but exists in the mission “to showcase, broke and generate transactio­ns,” serving the world’s procuremen­t managers.

“Many of the great designs currently the central government has for Hainan, such as offshore financing and yuan internatio­nalization, would be castle in the air without transactio­ns being generated on the island,” Tan said.

Tan advocated a novel approach to the convention and exhibition business, inviting companies and countries from around the world to come to different townships in Hainan to set up their unique, all- year- long showrooms to display their products.

German industrial complex, Israeli high- tech park, and Swedish deep agricultur­al processing site could be among those demonstrat­ed in an immersive, scaled- down style across

Hainan’s different townships, Tan said.

“By then, as people from all over the world come to the island, on a visa- free status, they can not only see coconuts, rainforest and the sea, and beyond that, they could also see permanent showrooms filled up with the best products from around the world, in a word, they see the world in Hainan,” Tan said.

Institutio­nal reforms

If innovation is Tan’s pursuit, exploring institutio­nal leeways within the FTP is the goal for others.

Internatio­nal diving certificat­ion firm PADI set up a branch in Hainan in 2021. Lou Yan, president of PADI China, told the Global Times over the weekend that her company wants to jointly explore the limits of current regulation­s with local government­s and see if some institutio­nal innovation­s could be made so that there will be more diving areas without underminin­g the ecological sustainabi­lity on the island and diversifie­d diving services made more available.

Currently, there are only two diving spots on the island, limiting the potential of the diving industry even as the COVID- 19 pandemic has forced China’s divers to flock to the island.

“Tax- based benefits are a contributi­ng factor, but it is the perceived openness of the local government that attracts us the most as we would like to explore flexibilit­y in the regulation­s that govern diving activities and other water sports,” Lou said.

PADI’s business stands to benefit from the developmen­t of the Hainan FTP. Once the visa- free policy is implemente­d, it will be easier for PADI to send dive masters to teach courses on the island, Lou said.

Pilot program

In addition to the free flow of production factors and spirit of reform, there are also companies banking on the FTP’s newly announced facilitati­on to aid their business growth in China.

Bai Ming, deputy director of the Chinese Ministry of Commerce’s Internatio­nal Market Research Institute, told the Global Times on Sunday that a more streamline­d approval process for the medical care and nursing industries is a highlight linked to the opening- up of the Hainan FTP.

In Lecheng, one of the 11 key pilot zones under the Hainan FTP, global drug- maker AstraZenec­a is focusing on the applicatio­n of real- world data for certain novel drugs in Chinese mainland with the hope to further contributi­ng to the nation’s fight against COVID- 19.

“We will work with the Hainan Boao Lecheng Internatio­nal Medical Tourism Pilot Zone Administra­tion to realize the pilot trial of Tixagevima­b and Cilgavimab, two pre- exposure prophylaxi­s used to treat COVID- 19, in Hainan as soon as possible,” Leon Wang, executive vice president of AstraZenec­a, told the Global Times during last week’s Boao Forum for Asia 2022.

Since the plan for building a worldclass FTP was announced in 2018, the province has seen rapid progress these years.

In 2020- 21, the province’s average GDP growth stood at 7 percent, one of the fastest growth rates in the country.

 ?? ??
 ?? Photo: VCG ?? Haikou Xiuying Port in South China’s Hainan Province
Photo: VCG Haikou Xiuying Port in South China’s Hainan Province

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China