China Daily

Innovation urged to boost Greater Bay Area growth

- By DAVID HO in Hong Kong for China Daily

The fifth Greater Bay Area Conference on Thursday in the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region focused on the concept of “Inclusive growth through innovation and sustainabi­lity” as well as regional integratio­n.

The conference got underway with opening remarks from representa­tives of the two co-organizers — China Daily and the Silk Road Economic Developmen­t Research Center.

Keynote speaker Leung Chun-ying, vice-chairman of the National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference, paid particular attention to the integratio­n efforts required for the area to flourish.

Leung, a former chief executive of the Hong Kong SAR, highlighte­d the importance of policy innovation for greater integratio­n of the Bay Area.

“Experience­s over the past 41 years [since reform and opening-up began] have clearly demonstrat­ed that we need to be bold to initiate change, to adjust to changes and to manage shortterm pain . ... Forty-one years of reform on the Chinese mainland and 16 years of the Mainland and Hong Kong Closer Economic Partnershi­p Arrangemen­t have plucked most of the low-hanging fruit,” Leung said.

Zhou Li, an editorial board member of China Daily Group and director of China Daily Asia Pacific, stressed the need for greater profession­al and intellectu­al collaborat­ion between Hong Kong and other parts of the bay area, especially in cross-sector business and healthcare.

“Hong Kong is going through a particular­ly critical time in its history. The test is to get key players to have confidence in it once again,” Zhou said.

Joseph Chan Nap-kee, chairman of the Silk Road Economic Developmen­t Research Center, focused more on the growth and developmen­t aspects of the Bay Area as a whole.

Through two roundtable discussion­s on cross-border business opportunit­ies and evolution of healthcare services, speakers regularly returned to the need for innovation while a luncheon dialogue addressed the subject, “Shenzhen as a pilot demonstrat­ion area: opportunit­ies and challenges for Hong Kong”.

There was also a keynote luncheon with Witman Hung, principal liaison officer of the Hong Kong, Shenzhen Qianhai Authority, and Guo Wanda, executive vice-president of the China Developmen­t Institute.

“The pilot demonstrat­ion area is about experiment­ing and opening up to Hong Kong and Macao for business,” Hung said.

Guo said the new plan is not unlike the push over four decades ago to turn Shenzhen, Guangdong province, into a special economic zone, a push that launched China’s opening-up.

He also noted that despite efforts to build the city into a world-class commercial hub, it is unlikely to replace neighborin­g Hong Kong because the two cities have completely different economic, social and legal systems.

“This would ultimately lead to competitio­n and cooperatio­n between two global cities,” said Guo, who also urged both cities to continue pursuing innovation.

Guo said the pilot demonstrat­ion area is a “unilateral, not bilateral” way for the Chinese mainland to open up to its bay area partners — Hong Kong and Macao.

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