China Daily

Seven new FTZs will accelerate opening-up

- By ZHONG NAN and REN XIAOJIN Contact the writer at zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

China will launch seven more free trade zones starting on Saturday, including several in inland areas for the first time, a move that is expected to accelerate the country’s opening-up and boost the Belt and Road Initiative, the Ministry of Commerce announced on Friday.

The inland FTZs will be opened in Henan, Sichuan, Shaanxi and Hubei provinces, as well as in Chongqing. The two new coastal FTZs will be in Liaoning and Zhejiang provinces.

The seven bring the country’s total number of FTZs to 11.

Vice-Commerce Minister Wang Shouwen said the new FTZs are establishe­d based on the operation mode and experience­s gained from Shanghai and other existing coastal FTZs, with well-developed, state-level new bonded zones and high-tech parks. Each covers less than 120 square kilometers and consists of three subareas.

The central government approved the latest group of FTZs in August. The State Council has issued the general developing plans for them.

Among them, Shaanxi will focus on trade connection­s with economies related to the Belt and Road Initiative, while Henan will build itself into a major internatio­nal logistics and transporta­tion center.

Hubei will build a base for high-tech industries and facilitate the developmen­t of the Yangtze River Economic Belt.

“These plans will help deepen reforms to streamline administra­tion, delegate power, strengthen regulation­s and improve services, as well as ... expand opening-up in inland provinces,” said Wang Ning, vice-governor of Sichuan.

The move came nearly four years after the launch of China’s first FTZ in Shanghai to pilot reforms aimed at opening wider to foreign investment and easing restrictio­ns on capital flows.

China also set up FTZs in Tianjin, Fujian and Guangdong in 2015.

Hubei Vice-Governor Tong Daochi said the new FTZs will help facilitate investment and further liberalize trade in commoditie­s.

Bai Ming, a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Internatio­nal Trade and Economic Cooperatio­n, said, “Western provinces and autonomous regions such as Yunnan, Guangxi and Xinjiang are also likely to be selected to build FTZs.”

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