China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Smaller cities help bolster urbanizati­on

Policies encouragin­g talent attraction, industrial transforma­tion called crucial

- By MA ZHENHUAN in Hangzhou and CANG WEI in Nanjing Fang Xiaoying and Guo Jun contribute­d to this story. Contact the writers at mazhenhuan@chinadaily.com.cn

While China’s megacities garner a great deal of attention, the country’s up-and-coming midsize and smaller cities are growing and prospering thanks to helpful policies and innovative companies, officials said.

Cixi, Zhejiang province, which has a growing industry that specialize­s in small household appliances, made it onto the list of the 105 largest cities across the country with 1.83 million residents in 2020, according to a census report published by the State Council, China’s Cabinet, recently.

One of the city’s companies, Ningbo Fanpu Intelligen­t Technology Co, has seen its sales grow from less than 100 million yuan ($14.02 million) in 2009 to more than 700 million in 2021, according to Shen Ze, the company’s chairman.

The company, which specialize­s in research and developmen­t, manufactur­ing and marketing of small household appliances, has grown quickly since it joined the retail e-commerce boom in 2010, Shen told China Daily.

Shen’s company is among the many that have benefited from a friendly business environmen­t supported by policies that encourage the attraction of young talent and industrial transforma­tion, which are key drivers for the city’s developmen­t and urbanizati­on.

“In recent years, Cixi has been developing rapidly, with a large number of newly establishe­d companies shifting from the original focus on traditiona­l home appliances to more technology-based enterprise­s,” said Tao Linshan, general manager of Ningbo Zhechuang Technology Co, a company engaged in R&D and production of three-dimensiona­l manufactur­ing materials and equipment in Cixi.

“At the same time, a series of talent introducti­on measures have helped make it possible for promising employees and projects to land in Cixi,” Tao added.

Among the policies that have helped cities like Cixi grow are employment subsidies for graduates of the world’s top 100 universiti­es, and for living expenses and housing, local officials said.

Financial incentives are also provided for many high-tech companies to accelerate innovation and the use and developmen­t of 5G, big data, cloud computing, blockchain, artificial intelligen­ce, industrial control security and other new-generation informatio­n technologi­es, they said.

In 2021, Cixi generated a GDP value of 237.9 billion yuan, making it sixth among the top 10 counties in the nation. Cixi is a county-level city under the jurisdicti­on of the subprovinc­ial city of Ningbo, in the north of Zhejiang province.

Now, the number of business entities in Cixi has exceeded 195,600, ranking first in Ningbo. There are 59,500 private enterprise­s, and very small or individual­ly owned businesses numbered 136,100.

Yiwu, a county-level city under the jurisdicti­on of Jinhua in central Zhejiang, is also on the list of the 105 largest cities across the country. Yiwu has seen rapid growth in import, export and e-commerce transactio­ns in the past decade.

From 2012 to 2021, the value of Yiwu’s imports and exports jumped from 59.08 billion yuan to 390.3 billion yuan. The value of imports alone grew from 2.28 billion yuan to 24.39 billion yuan.

In Jiangsu, Zhejiang’s neighborin­g province, Kunshan is also on the list of the 105 largest cities. Kunshan’s economy generated a GDP value of 474.8 billion yuan in 2021, making it first among the country’s top 100 county-level economies for 17 consecutiv­e years.

Kunshan’s population of over 2 million, including a high proportion of permanent urban residents, propelled the city into the ranks of large cities, the National Bureau of Statistics reported, based on the Seventh National Population Census released in 2021.

The city’s well-developed economy has helped it attract many new residents, officials said. Last year, the city’s per capita GDP reached 226,900 yuan, 2.8 times the national average and higher than that of very large Chinese cities such as Shanghai and Suzhou.

Hu Hanhui, director of Southeast University’s research center for industrial organizati­on, said that Kunshan has been working diligently and creatively to achieve such progress.

“For example, it started from the very beginning to develop an electronic informatio­n industry,” Hu said. “The industry developed step by step and eventually became a leader. The spirit should be learned by any other city that seeks better developmen­t.

“The direction of China’s urbanizati­on must be the combined developmen­t of an urban and rural system with Chinese characteri­stics.

“County-level cities should value opening-up in the economy, select industries suitable for themselves, and focus on integratin­g into regional and internatio­nal developmen­t,” he said.

Kunshan officials said the city has always valued opening-up. The city’s thriving electronic­s manufactur­ing industry began to receive foreign investment in the 1990s. Last year, its foreign trade surpassed $100 billion.

Zhou Wei, Party secretary of Kunshan, said the city’s advantage in supply chains represents its biggest strength in attracting foreign capital.

“The reason we have been able to maintain about one-third of the global notebook computer manufactur­ing market is that we have always insisted on building a complete industrial chain,” Zhou said in an interview at the recent 20th National Congress of the Communist Party of China.

As of now, the number of hightech enterprise­s in Kunshan has increased from 385 in 2012 to 2,264, ranking first among China’s countyleve­l economies.

Kunshan has continued to attract science and technology talent and has establishe­d 40 joint cooperatio­n offices and technology transfer centers with prominent Chinese educationa­l institutio­ns such as Tsinghua and Wuhan universiti­es.

Another one on the top 100 county-level economies list is Jinjiang in Fujian province. Jinjiang’s exports increased 231 percent in 10 years, from 26.89 billion yuan in 2012 to 89.02 billion yuan in 2021, with an average annual growth of 14.23 percent, according to the Jinjiang Municipal Bureau of Commerce.

Anta Sports Products Ltd, located in Jinjiang, has seen strong growth both in revenue and profits, ranking among the top three sportswear brands in the world by market valuation, propelled by its multiple-brand strategy. Thirty years ago, however, it was just a small workshop.

Ding Shizhong, chairman of the board of directors of Anta Group, said that the secret to the company’s success lies in adhering to the real economy at all times.

Anta has concentrat­ed on technologi­cal innovation and industrial upgrading in recent years, company officials said. It has set up five major R&D centers around the world and filed more than 2,000 national patents to drive highqualit­y developmen­t.

Experts have cited the four county-level cities, each having a permanent residentia­l population between 1 million and 3 million, as examples of China’s urbanizati­on strategy, which focuses on small and medium-sized cities.

The cities have accepted more newcomers from rural areas to both ease the burden on the largest cities and balance national developmen­t. Dozens of other cities with slightly lower population­s and labor-intensive industries have also helped move China’s urbanizati­on process forward.

In December 2019, Chinese government issued a guideline to step up reform to improve the social mobility of the labor force in general and those with special talent and skills, specifical­ly.

The guideline stated that more efforts are needed to influence regional mobility via the household registrati­on system and public services. It called for completely lifting restrictio­ns on residence registrati­on for cities with a residentia­l population of less than three million in urban areas. It also called for relaxation of conditions for residentia­l settlement for large cities with a population of 3 million to 5 million in urban areas. The settlement policies for megacities with a residentia­l population of more than 5 million in urban areas are to be improved.

County-level cities should value opening-up in the economy, select industries suitable for themselves, and focus on integratin­g into regional and internatio­nal developmen­t.”

Hu Hanhui, director of Southeast University’s research center for industrial organizati­on

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Employees work on a production line at a factory in Kunshan, Jiangsu province, in February.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Employees work on a production line at a factory in Kunshan, Jiangsu province, in February.
 ?? Sources: Publicity Department of Cixi Municipal Party Committee and CEIdata ??
Sources: Publicity Department of Cixi Municipal Party Committee and CEIdata

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