China Daily

Sustainabi­lity, not economic growth, to be top priority, say experts

- By LUO WEITENG in Hong Kong sophia@chinadaily­hk.com

Sustainabi­lity will continue to be the top priority amid growing concerns about global economic growth, experts said on Monday at the Asian Financial Forum (AFF).

The current rhetoric and mentality may usher in a new era of protection­ism and populism, while rising geopolitic­al tensions, volatile financial markets and a deteriorat­ing economic outlook makes it tough to post sustainabl­e economic growth, said Vincent Lo Hong-shui, chairman of the Hong Kong Trade Developmen­t Council.

Jin Liqun, president and chairman of the Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank (AIIB), said that it was an opportune time to redefine the concept of growth.

“Growth is not everything. It makes sense only when it has achieved all its dimensions, rather than a mere figure or gross domestic product,” Jin reckoned.

If a 9-percent growth is based on 3 percent from pollution and another 3 percent from cleaning up the pollution, then such a growth model is far from sustainabl­e, he said.

Last week, the Beijing-headquarCr­edit tered multinatio­nal developmen­t bank set up a $500 million fund for infrastruc­ture developmen­t in emerging Asian markets, with the aim of promoting green and sustainabl­e investment­s in the region. The AIIB Asia ESG (environmen­tal, social and governance) Enhanced Managed Portfolio is expected to focus largely on infrastruc­turerelate­d bonds.

In her opening address, Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor, the chief executive of Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region, reiterated her confidence in the seminal role played by the SAR in driving regional growth. The city’s growth potential and competitiv­e edge will continue to be buttressed with a huge ribbon of AIIB-funded bigticket projects and its strategic location along the Belt and Road Initiative.

The financial hub, which has made great strides in green finance and financial technology, is focused on developing the economy in a sustainabl­e manner. “Our inaugural government green bond will soon be issued and it comes with a borrowing ceiling of HK$100 billion ($13 billion),” said Lam.

Pierre Gramegna, finance minister of Luxembourg, said: “As trade tensions are rising, strengthen­ing cross-border trade ties and reinforcin­g the theme of sustainabi­lity remains perhaps the sole and only driving force. A triple A credit rating is not enough anymore. We also need to have a triple A in sustainabi­lity.

“No nation can stand aloof. It should be reminded that sustainabi­lity is no longer a national issue. We should look at it from a multinatio­nal and multi-continenta­l scope,” he said.

The two-day forum will see over 130 policymake­rs, financial and business leaders and investors from countries and regions across the globe discussing economic opportunit­ies and challenges as well as financial innovation and technology. The event has a theme of “Creating a Sustainabl­e and Inclusive Future”.

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