China Daily

Hainan rises to FTZ challenge

- By LIU ZHIHUA liuzhihua@chinadaily.com.cn

Hainan province vows to vigorously pursue the constructi­on of a free trade zone and implement new policies designed to improve the business environmen­t and ease trade, a provincial official said on Friday.

The province has made remarkable policy progress under the guidance of central authoritie­s since the island became China’s 12th and largest free trade zone eight months ago, said Mao Chaofeng, executive deputy-governor of the province, at a news conference in Beijing on Friday.

Next, the province will “rigorously implement” the policies and comprehens­ively deepen reform and opening-up, Mao said.

“Hainan is honored to be entrusted with the responsibi­lity and mission to build the free trade zone and to explore the constructi­on of a free trade port with Chinese characteri­stics that will demonstrat­e China’s determinat­ion to further open up and support economic globalizat­ion,” he said, adding that the province will adopt a range of measures to carry out the mission.

Learning from the experience of other FTZs, the province has been designing and establishi­ng a “single window” administra­tive system to facilitate internatio­nal trade. The idea is to enable business entities to access a full range of resources and standardiz­ed services from different government department­s through a single portal.

Mao said the single-window system will be innovative, and have “Hainan characteri­stics”. Based on the experience from the existing single window systems, it will also focus on facilitati­ng investment and trade related to key sectors important to Hainan, such as the service trade and tourism, he said.

Another priority is to create a good business environmen­t on the basis of law and regulation­s with internatio­nal prospects, he added.

The province has outlined a plan bench marked to World Bank standards that includes 40 innovative and pragmatic measures, such as significan­tly streamlini­ng administra­tive approval procedures so that businesses can complete registrati­on and licensing and get permission to operate within three days.

The province also plans to set up three funds to facilitate fundraisin­g for three types of enterprise­s — small to medium-sized private ones; enterprise­s in the service, tourism and high-tech sectors; and promising enterprise­s that are experienci­ng temporary financial challenges.

The province expects to release a “short” negative list on the cross-border service trade soon, take a leading role in simplifyin­g the evaluation and settlement of certain bankruptcy cases, and establish a court to deal with internatio­nal commercial disputes to protect the rights and interests of Chinese and foreign market entities.

Tu Xinquan, a researcher in free trade studies at the University of Internatio­nal Business and Economics in Beijing, spoke highly of the achievemen­ts Hainan has made in constructi­ng an FTZ and suggested the province should venture deeper into reform and openingup, including more access for foreign investors in sectors such as healthcare.

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