China Daily

Shanghai open to global businesses

Financial center’s GDP doubled over the past decade, ranking fourth in world

- By XING YI in Shanghai xingyi@chinadaily.com.cn

Shanghai, which is set to host the fifth edition of the China Internatio­nal Import Expo in November, will continue to embrace global business for its future developmen­t, said the city’s deputy Party chief on Monday.

Gong Zheng, who is also mayor of Shanghai, said 85 percent of the exhibition space has been booked, and those confirmed as attending include some 270 Fortune 500 companies and industry leaders.

“The holding of the annual expo since 2018 demonstrat­es China’s determinat­ion to open its domestic market to the world, and its confidence in an open global economy,” he said.

As a national-level import-themed trade fair, the expo has accelerate­d the upgrading of Shanghai as a global trade center, with businesses and logistics integrated with cities in the Yangtze River Delta, China’s economic powerhouse, as well as other major trade hubs in the Asia Pacific region, said Gong.

During previous editions of the CIIE, some 3,000 brands have debuted products, an indication that Shanghai is now one of the choice destinatio­ns for businesses to launch new products and services, he added.

Jens Hildebrand­t, executive director of the German Chamber of Commerce in China, said it has participat­ed in the expo from the very beginning.

“Our companies signed contracts worth $17 billion (last year)… Through the CIIE, small and medium-sized German enterprise­s were able to boost their sales in the market,” he said.

Besides hosting the grand import expo, Shanghai has been tasked with a series of national strategies in the past decade, including establishi­ng the country’s first free trade zone, piloting a registrati­on-based initial public offering system on its sci-tech innovation board, and leading the integrated developmen­t of the Yangtze River Delta region.

Policies fostering innovation and facilitati­ng trade have taken shape in the Pudong New Area, which was allocated as a “pioneering area for socialist modernizat­ion” last year, after it celebrated the 30th anniversar­y of its opening-up in 2020.

Over the past decade, Shanghai’s GDP has doubled from 2.13 trillion yuan ($315 billion) in 2012 to 4.32 trillion yuan in 2021, ranking fourth among cities worldwide and total trading volume in its financial markets jumped from 528 trillion yuan to 2,511 trillion yuan during the same period, according to Gong.

Wu Qing, executive vice-mayor of Shanghai, said opening-up is the biggest advantage for Shanghai and the city government has made attracting global talent and investment its top priority.

“Facing a complex internatio­nal situation and the grave impact of the COVID-19 outbreak in the first half of this year, Shanghai still maintained growth in actual use of foreign capital, which surpassed $12 billion, and also welcomed 26 new regional headquarte­rs belonging to multinatio­nal corporatio­ns,” said Wu.

Currently, more than 60,000 foreign companies are doing business in Shanghai. A total of 857 multinatio­nals have chosen Shanghai for their regional headquarte­rs, and 516 have establishe­d research and developmen­t centers in the city.

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