China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Growth opportunit­ies

Nation prepares package of measures to expand foreign investors’ market access

- GUO CHENG / XINHUA

Customers visit the Global Premium Duty Free Plaza in Haikou, Hainan province, on Jan 31. China is preparing a package of preferenti­al policies to further facilitate free trade and investment in the Hainan Free Trade Port.

China is preparing a package of preferenti­al policies to further facilitate free trade, investment and relax market access for foreign investors in China’s southern Hainan Free Trade Port, offering huge growth opportunit­ies for global stakeholde­rs, officials and experts said on Monday.

They said the preferenti­al policies highlight the government’s ongoing efforts to open wider to the outside world, which is set to attract a growing number of global investors from sectors such as medicine, healthcare, education, high-tech and culture to invest and develop in the Hainan Free Trade Port.

Cong Liang, deputy head of the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, said the country has been actively promoting the constructi­on of major projects in the free trade port.

“We will work out an action plan for the constructi­on of those major projects, and set up a reserve system for major projects,” he said at a news conference in Beijing.

China has already drafted a negative list for cross-border service trade in Hainan, and a number of measures will be released to further advance trade liberaliza­tion and facilitati­on in the island, said ViceMinist­er of Commerce Wang Shouwen.

Last week, the central government launched a series of special measures to relax market access in the Hainan Free Trade Port and turn it into a focal point for China’s deepened reforms.

According to Wang, the Ministry of Commerce, together with another 19 department­s, will jointly unveil 28 special measures in the near future to promote the liberaliza­tion and facilitati­on of trade in goods and services, in a move to build a high-quality free trade port in Hainan and improve related policies for free trade.

Among the measures, the government will relax curbs on the import and export of crude oil, refined oil, sugar and other goods, cancel measures for automatic import licenses and import licenses for mechanical and electrical products, and exempt the technology import and export business from having to go through filing and registrati­on for foreign trade operators.

The new measures also include developing the secondhand car export business in Hainan, supporting Hainan’s developmen­t of new types of offshore internatio­nal trade and digital, technologi­cal and cultural trade, boosting the exhibition economy and innovating modes of internatio­nal cooperatio­n in the service trade.

A new global or regional offshore internatio­nal trade center and a regional internatio­nal exhibition hub will be built in Hainan.

The newly announced measures led shares of companies with links to the Hainan Free Trade Port to jump 1.69 percent on Thursday, with Huawen Media Group and Hainan Dadonghai Tourism Centre (Holdings) Co both surging by the 10 percent daily trading limit, according to Shanghai-based informatio­n provider Wind Info.

Experts said the preferenti­al policies highlight the government’s ongoing efforts to implement the master plan for the free trade port released in June, which requires establishi­ng a basic free trade port policy system with a key focus on facilitati­ng free trade and investment by 2025.

Cui Weijie, deputy director of the Chinese Academy of Internatio­nal Trade and Economic Cooperatio­n under the Ministry of Commerce, said the policies will help gather key resource elements, promote high-quality developmen­t of tourism, modern services and high-tech industries and establish Hainan Free Trade Port as a model for other regions to expand opening-up.

Tao Jin, deputy director of the macroecono­mic research center of the Suning Institute of Finance, said the policy boost is set to promote the innovation-driven and high-quality developmen­t of Hainan Free Trade Port. “It is set to attract more talent and capital from home and abroad and gather various industrial resources.”

Tao said that the government was likely to open up more fields in the cultural, tourism and financial sectors and further shorten the negative lists for foreign investors’ market access.

Fabrice Megarbane, president of L’Oreal’s North Asia zone and CEO of L’Oreal China, said Hainan’s further opening-up is an innovative way to stimulate consumptio­n, and the company believes it will be a well-balanced strategy to satisfy consumers’ huge appetite for beauty products.

The French company will showcase a number of beauty brands in a 500-square-meter space at the upcoming first China Internatio­nal Consumer Products Expo in Haikou, capital of Hainan province, from May 7 to 10. The company said the event will see exclusive launches and immersive experience­s designed for the occasion.

“Consumptio­n has become the core driving force for economic growth in China and beauty is becoming a beacon industry,” he said. “We expect to provide more and better products and experience­s for travelers in Hainan.”

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