China Daily

Hong Kong ‘can’t afford to miss the boat’ on BRI

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

Top mainland and Hong Kong officials threw their support behind the city’s push to play an enthusiast­ic role in the Belt and Road Initiative. That role emphasizes advantages that are expected to enable the Asian financial center to move forward amid social turbulence and geopolitic­al storms.

“The connectivi­ty and cooperatio­n promoted by the Belt and Road have become increasing­ly prominent in today’s complex social and business environmen­t,” Chief Executive of the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor said at the Belt and Road Summit in Hong Kong on Wednesday.

The two-day event, in its fourth edition, was jointly organized by the HKSAR government and the Hong Kong Trade Developmen­t Council. It attracted nearly 5,000 participan­ts and over 80 government officials and business leaders from over 60 countries and regions.

Amid signs of a new era of global protection­ism, the visionary and far-reaching BRI will take on new significan­ce, said Xie Feng, commission­er of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in the SAR.

Citing a World Bank study released in June, Xie said BRI transport projects, if fully implemente­d, could increase global trade up to 6.2 percent and boost trade for BRI-related economies by as much as 9.7 percent.

“While the concept of BRI comes from China, the outcomes of BRI are shared by the whole globe,” said Ning Jizhe, vice-chairman of the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission. “Pursuit of a bigger part in the initiative not only gives full play to Hong Kong’s impeccable strengths, but also fits in well with what the country truly needs.”

By the end of August, the world’s second-largest economy had signed 195 BRI-related cooperatio­n agreements with 166 countries and internatio­nal organizati­ons, said Wang Bingnan, vice-minister of commerce.

“Hong Kong’s biggest advantage lies in the ‘one country, two systems’ principle,” said Hao Peng, Party committee secretary and chairman of the State-owned Assets Supervisio­n and Administra­tion Commission of the State Council. “Riding high on the city’s open, free market mechanism, Hong Kong has what it takes to join hands with its mainland counterpar­ts to build a community with a shared future.”

As Shenzhen charts its course as a demonstrat­ion pilot zone for socialism with Chinese characteri­stics, Hong Kong is well positioned to join forces with its Guangdong province neighbor to gain momentum from the groundbrea­king policy, Hao added.

Such a policy, under the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area plan, reinforces the theme of high-level regional collaborat­ion. “This is part of a whole package of opportunit­ies, and Hong Kong cannot afford to miss the boat,” said Gao Yunlong, vice-chairman of the 13th National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference.

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