President Xi Jinping announced at a gathering celebrating the 30th
anniversary of the founding of Hainan province and the Hainan Special
Economic Zone in Haikou, Hainan, on April 13 that the island province
will be turned into a free trade port.
We have since learned that Hainan will take on a larger role
through a pilot scheme in the nation's ongoing reforms and opening-up,
according to the nation's development strategy for the next 40 years.
This will be another four decades of great success for the Chinese
mainland following the first 40 years of reform and opening-up.
According to the top-level design by central authorities, the
Hainan Pilot Free Trade Zone should have made significant progress by
2020; its free trade port system should take shape by 2025 and become
much more mature by 2035. Its business environment is among the best in
the world; by the middle of this century, the province will achieve
socialist modernization ahead of the rest of the country. It will be
able to boast a highly market-oriented, internationalized, rule of
law-based and modernized system of administration to keep it ahead of
other places in terms of competitiveness and cultural influence.
This plan is an integral part of the greater blueprint for
building a strong, modern socialist country as outlined at the 19th
National Congress of the Communist Party of China. This will once again
show the world China is pursuing the great rejuvenation of the Chinese
nation through wider reforms and opening-up on all fronts.
After the 18th National Congress of the CPC in November 2012, as a
ground-breaking effort to deepen reforms and opening-up on all fronts,
Shanghai became the first mainland city to establish a pilot free trade
zone (PFTZ) in September 2013, combining three separate bonded areas
with a total land area of less than 29 square kilometers. In December
2014, the PFTZ expanded to include the Lujiazui financial district,
Jinqiao development district and Zhangjiang high-tech district; three
more PFTZs were established in Guangdong, Fujian and Tianjin. All four
PFTZs occupy an area of around 120 square kilometers each, larger than
Hong Kong Island but far smaller than the Hong Kong Special
Administrative Region. In March last year, seven more PFTZs were
established in Liaoning, Zhejiang, Hubei, Chongqing, Sichuan and
Shaanxi.
Building on the momentum of PFTZ expansion, the 19th National
Congress of the CPC decided to "try and develop free trade ports
(FTPs)". Many people predicted then that the first FTP will probably be
an existing PFTZ (such as the one in Shanghai) but Hainan province,
which covers about 339,000 square kilometers and has a population of
about 8.67 million, was chosen as the country's first FTP.
Hong Kong has been a world-famous free trade port for a long time
but that does not mean it cannot be inspired by the decision to turn
Hainan Island into an FTP with Chinese characteristics.
Hong Kong has been a free port since 1842 but its economy
depended mainly on transshipment trade until the 1950s, when
export-oriented manufacturing began growing. This became a bona fide
pillar industry in the 1970s. In contrast the Hainan FTP will not rely
on foreign trade and manufacturing as growth engines. Instead it will
focus on developing tourism, modern services and new technology
industries. This means it is starting on a higher level than Hong Kong
did, and is aiming for a higher position.
Hainan is more than 30 times bigger than the HKSAR, which
translates into far more room for demographic growth. That is why Hong
Kong must keep its leading position as an advanced tourist and modern
services center while working harder on developing its innovation and
technology sector. This is needed to maintain its economic lead over
Hainan.
Take the modern services industry as an example. Hainan plans to
focus on developing tourism, internet-based services, medical and health
services, financial services and conference and exhibition services. It
will also host international exchanges of energy resources, shipping,
bulk commodities, property rights, stocks and carbon emission rights.
Hainan will increase international flights to major destinations around
the world and improve the efficiency of its shipping ports, especially
Haikou and Yangpu. All those efforts will put pressure on Hong Kong to
elevate its own financial markets, air-shipping services and port and
transport services to even higher levels.
From the beginning of next month Hainan will let travelers from
59 countries enter visa-free. The southernmost province of the country
will also introduce policies designed to attract more tourists. These
include more duty-free shopping options for foreign visitors, a higher
ceiling on duty-free spending per visit, and adding rural destinations
and tropical small towns with unique ethnic flavors. Hong Kong, on the
other hand, has been losing its "shoppers' paradise" appeal in recent
years. It must find effective ways to restore this, while developing new
tourist attractions with Hong Kong characteristics.
Hainan is a maritime province; this is why it will significantly
increase investment in the exploration and development of ocean
resources and step up development of new ocean-based industries. Hong
Kong, a maritime city, should therefore do whatever is necessary to
enhance its own ocean-based industries in the future.
Most importantly, Hong Kong needs to become more innovative soon -
not least in resolving the biggest hindrances to economic, political
and social development.
http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/hkedition/2018-04/25/content_36086738.htm
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