Arab Times

Stability in Hong Kong key for Singapore businesses – minister

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Prolonged turmoil in Hong Kong could jeopardise regional financial stability, and that would outweigh any short-term gain for Singapore from flows of funds from investors worried about protests there, a Singapore government minister said.

Two months of increasing­ly violent protests have embroiled Hong Kong in its worst political crisis for decades after what started as an angry response to a nowsuspend­ed extraditio­n bill.

Some tycoons in the Chineserul­ed financial hub have moved funds or are considerin­g doing so, while the unrest has also encouraged some wealth managers to choose to set up in Singapore instead of Hong Kong, Reuters has reported.

But Singapore’s minister of law, K. Shanmugam, told Reuters in an interview on Wednesday that stability was crucial.

“In the longer term, if you take a strategic view on these things, Singapore benefits if there is stability across the region, including in Hong Kong,” he said.

“Short-term benefits through instabilit­y in Hong Kong are outweighed by longer-term disameniti­es and longer-term structural problems that might arise if there continues to be instabilit­y in Hong Kong, or in any other major economy,” Shanmugam said.

Singapore and Hong Kong, both former British colonies, compete fiercely to be considered Asia’s premier financial services centres but neverthele­ss, Singapore wanted to see business as usual in Hong Kong, Shanmugam said.

“From a strategic perspectiv­e, I’d rather see that Hong Kong reverts to how we all know Hong Kong to be,” he said.

Shanmugam said Hong Kong’s proximity to China, meant it had a key role to play as a financial services centre, while Singapore is seeking to build on its status as a leading legal infrastruc­ture hub.

Singapore is making a push into mediation with a new internatio­nal treaty to settle commercial disputes, due to take shape next month.

The UN Convention on Internatio­nal Settlement Agreements Resulting from Mediation, also known as the Singapore Convention on Mediation, is aimed at providing cross-border enforcemen­t of mediated settlement agreements.

“Whichever country signs up to it and ratifies it, then any mediation agreement in one convention country can be enforced in another country,” Shanmugam said.

“The more countries that are parties to the convention, the easier it is to enforce. In that sense, it’s a very important part of global trade flows,” he said. (RTRS)

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