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China FTZs development

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Aerial view of Shanghai FTZ

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Aerial photo taken on Sept 29, 2014 shows the Waigaoqiao area of the Shanghai free trade zone (FTZ) in Shanghai, east China. The Shanghai FTZ was launched in September 2013. [Photo/Xinhua]

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Aerial photo taken on Sept 29, 2014 shows the Waigaoqiao area of the Shanghai free trade zone (FTZ) in Shanghai, east China. The Shanghai FTZ was launched in September 2013. [Photo/Xinhua]

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Aerial photo taken on Sept 29, 2014 shows the Waigaoqiao area of the Shanghai free trade zone (FTZ) in Shanghai, east China. The Shanghai FTZ was launched in September 2013. [Photo/Xinhua]

7b2c9211273d5cef78366c141f11bfe3.jpg
Aerial photo taken on Sept 29, 2014 shows the Waigaoqiao area of the Shanghai free trade zone (FTZ) in Shanghai, east China. The Shanghai FTZ was launched in September 2013. [Photo/Xinhua]

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Aerial photo taken on Sept 29, 2014 shows the Waigaoqiao area of the Shanghai free trade zone (FTZ) in Shanghai, east China. The Shanghai FTZ was launched in September 2013. [Photo/Xinhua]

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Aerial photo taken on Sept 29, 2014 shows the Waigaoqiao area of the Shanghai free trade zone (FTZ) in Shanghai, east China. The Shanghai FTZ was launched in September 2013. [Photo/Xinhua]
 
China to build more FTZs similar to Shanghai FTZ

By PTI | 27 Oct, 2014, 07.54PM IST

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Xi said the experience gained at Shanghai Pilot Free Trade Zone (Shanghai FTZ) can be copied to more places "as soon as possible".

BEIJING: China is looking to build more Free Trade Zone projects on the lines of the one launched in Shanghai last year, President Xi Jinping said today.

Xi said the experience gained at Shanghai Pilot Free Trade Zone (Shanghai FTZ) can be copied to more places "as soon as possible".

Billed as a 'test bed' for the new Chinese leadership's drive of deepening market-oriented reforms and boosting economic vigour to halt the slowing economy, the FTZ in China's biggest city and trade centre was expected to pose stiff competition to Hong Kong as a centre for international trade and financial centre with free exchange of currencies.

As per the blueprint of reform, FTZ which functions from an area of 29 sq kms in Shanghai, will have specific tasks which include easing restrictions on yuan, investment and trade to spearhead a new strategy to spur growth.

The experience gained at Shanghai FTZ can be compared to "seeds cultivated from an experimental plot," Xi said at the sixth meeting of the Leading Group for Overall Reform.

"We should plant these seeds in more land so that flowers will blossom and fruits be harvested as quickly as possible," Xi said.

According to the reform blueprint adopted last November, China plans to build several FTZs in suitable places other than Shanghai.

The country will copy the replicable practice from Shanghai FTZ to other places as soon as possible, and some of them will be promoted nationwide, he said.

Xi acknowledged the progress made in the Shanghai FTZ, praising the efforts in transforming government functions, facilitating investment and trade and improving business environment.

Some 12,000 firms have been established in the Shanghai FTZ since its launch in September last year and foreign trade reached 747.5 billion yuan (121.7 billion US dollars) in its first year of operation.

The FTZ in the Chinese financial hub has promised free trade, greater financial opening and fewer government controls in business activities.
 
China to approve 7 more FTZs: report
2016-10-24 14:39 | Xinhua | Editor: Xu Shanshan

General plans for China's third group of free trade zones (FTZs), announced in August, will be approved soon, the Shanghai Securities News reported Monday, the latest step in the country's expanding FTZ network.

In August, China approved the establishment of seven new free trade zones, including coastal Zhejiang and Liaoning provinces and the landlocked provinces of Henan, Hubei, Sichuan and Shaanxi as well as Chongqing Municipality, as the country looks to replicate the success of previous trials.

The total number of FTZs now stands at 11 after the first one was founded in Shanghai three years ago and a second group was established in coastal Tianjin, Fujian and Guangdong in late 2014.

According to Minister of Commerce Gao Hucheng in August, Liaoning Province in northeast China will focus on market-oriented reforms to transform the old industrial base into a more competitive area, while Zhejiang is expected to explore trade liberalization of commodities and improve its abilities in the global distribution of commodities.

Central China's Henan will tap its potential in transportation and logistics, and Hubei will build high-tech bases and facilitate the development of the Yangtze River Economic Belt.

China hopes the FTZs in Chongqing, Sichuan and Shaanxi, all in the country's less developed west, will help open the regions to bring out their economic vitality.

FTZs are part of government efforts to test reform policies, including interest rate liberalization and fewer investment restrictions, to better integrate the economy with international practices.

Among the successful trials in the first two groups of FTZs has been the introduction of a "negative list," which specifies investment sectors off-limits to foreign investors and allows industries not on the list to follow the same new investment rules as domestic firms.

Encouraged by the results, China is considering expanding the approach nationwide.
 
Enhancing Northeast's economy
2016-10-25 09:41 | China Daily | Editor: Feng Shuang

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Workers at Shenyang North Heavy Industries Group Co Ltd dismantle the shield-tunneling equipment
ready for export to Brazil. (Photo/Xinhua)


Stimulus package aims to drive forward innovation and boost manufacturing capability

To boost the slowing economy in Northeast China, the central government has announced another round of stimulus measures for innovation and to upgrade the manufacturing sector.

The 13th Five-Year Plan for Revitalizing Northeast China was approved by the State Council, or China's Cabinet, last Tuesday along with another supportive document to introduce measures at the second meeting of the Leading Group for Revitalizing Northeast China and Other Old Industrial Bases, which was presided over by Premier Li Keqiang.

The documents are the latest move by the central government to support the development of Liaoning, Jilin and Heilongjiang provinces, as well as the eastern part of the Inner Mongolia autonomous region, which geographically neighbors, and was, historically, part of Northeast China.

Northeast China has more than 120 million people and has played a key role in nursing the country's industrial output since 1949. China's first domestically-made vehicle was produced in 1956 in Changchun, provincial capital of Jilin. The region's contribution to China was similar to the Ruhr Valley's in Germany.

The region's pillar industries embraced automobile-making, equipment manufacturing, and some heavy industries such as steel and iron, as well as coal mining. As the central government promotes cutting overcapacity and economic restructuring, the region's economy seemed suddenly to brake.

Liaoning, which has relied on energy production, agricultural goods and commodities, saw its GDP decrease by 1 percent for the first half of this year compared to the same period last year, the lowest in the country.

All of these sectors have been suffering overcapacity and, consequently, declining prices. This situation, together with falling private investment, curtailed the province's growth, Liang Qidong, vice-president of the Liaoning Academy of Social Sciences, told thepaper.cn, a news website based in Shanghai.

Meanwhile, the past year saw a sharp decline in private investment in Northeast China, with that in Liaoning decreasing by 58 percent in the first half of this year.

Northeast China borders Siberia, North Korea and Mongolia, where border trade and economic exchanges are much less active and profitable than in southern China, said Lyu Chao, a researcher on border studies at the Liaoning Academy of Social Sciences.

At the meeting, the premier called on local governments to boost innovative technologies and ways of management, and link their equipment manufacturing with advanced designs as used in the south.

Lu Hao, governor of Heilongjiang province, said some former employees of coal mines have started to sell high-quality agricultural goods online. The premier said, in response, that the key to upgrading the local economy still relies on innovation.

Li added that the business environment must be changed to usher in new investors. After the meeting, many netizens complained online of the region's sluggish business environment and low efficiency.

"I heard from some of the region's entrepreneurs that a project was required to get more than 200 seals before being approved," the premier said. "Many of them have complained that the business environment in the northeast is much worse than some regions in the south. The northeast must follow the south to improve governmental services and prioritize investment to attract new investors."

The premier also inquired why the region has none of the country's top 100 internet companies while it can boast hundreds of renowned universities and research institutes which should have provided a strong momentum for innovation.

Many college students would rather go south than stay in the region after graduation and a large number of well-known craftsmen have been lured by better payment from companies in the south, Lyu said.

The region should also introduce international business management for marketing to explore a wider global market, Lyu said. Other cities could learn from Shenyang, capital of Liaoning province. The city has an industrial park jointly launched with Germany to make products, such as BMW cars, he added.

Fortunately, Lyu believed, the region still enjoys an advantageous geographical location to make use of rich resources, and exports from neighboring countries that can help upgrade pillar industries. "As the measures are carried out, the region can see bright prospects as long as it changes deep-seated and outdated thinking and management to keep expertise and investment," Lyu added.
 
China seeks to replicate FTZ reform trials nationwide
2016-11-11 11:25 | Xinhua | Editor: Mo Hong'e

Chinese government is seeking to replicate its success in several free trade zones (FTZs) nationwide.

The State Council has published a circular mapping out the replication, which will see 19 new items applied across the country.

Among the successes of the FTZs has been the introduction of a negative list, which specifies investment sectors off-limits to foreign investors and allows industries not on the list to follow the same new investment rules as domestic firms.

Other items include simplified trade procedures and customs regulations.

FTZs are a way of testing new policies, including interest rate liberalization and fewer investment restrictions, to better integrate the economy with international practices.

The expansion comes more than three years after the launch of China's first FTZ in Shanghai.

In late 2014, Tianjin, Fujian and Guangdong were allowed to set up the second group of FTZs. Another seven were added across the country in August this year.
 
7 new FTZs to open around China
(People's Daily Online) 15:01, December 15, 2016

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[File photo]

China will replicate its success in seven new free trade zones (FTZ), which are expected to be opened in January 2017.

“The third batch of FTZs is now waiting for final approval from the government. Though some provinces still need to further develop their plans, some FTZs are expected to be opened as early as January next year,” an anonymous insider told Economic Information Daily on Dec. 15.

The remark came after Chinese authorities approved the construction of seven new FTZs, in Liaoning, Zhejiang, Henan, Sichuan and Shaanxi provinces, as well as in Chongqing municipality. The approvals came in August, as an effort to boost the development of inland areas.

Unlike the former four FTZs, the third batch are located in inland areas of China, with the primary aim of better implementing national strategies, including the Belt and Road Initiative. The new zones also look to copy China’s existing FTZs.

“Once the third batch of FTZs is opened, there will be 11 FTZs across the nation. They will serve as platforms to try out new [economic] plans, and will widen the range of FTZ experiences,” Bai Ming, deputy director of the Ministry of Commerce of the International Market Research Institute, told Economic Information Daily.

According to Bai, China will also focus on tasks including innovation in service trade and an integrated clearance system, in an effort to take advantage of the country’s open policies.

“It has been 37 years since China launched it's reform and opening policy. The benefits created by former policies have already been enjoyed, while new benefits are waiting to be released for China’s future economy,” Bai said.
http://en.people.cn/n3/2016/1215/c90000-9155383.html
 
FTZs poised to sharpen growth edge
2016-12-27 14:24 | China Daily | Editor: Feng Shuang

Zones allow inland regions to diversify manufacturing and geographic advantages

The development of free trade zones will create a competitive edge for China to tap supply-side reform and the Belt and Road Initiative, as well as allow inland regions to diversify their manufacturing and geographical advantages, senior commerce officials said on Monday.

Commerce Minister Gao Hucheng said China has introduced 19 practical measures on the investment environment, administrative reform and policies to assist innovation gained from the operation of its four FTZs.

Approved by the central government in August, the country will open another seven FTZs-the third batch, including Liaoning and Zhejiang provinces, to create new market growth points for both trade and investment.

FTZs offer greater access for global companies to expand in China and for Chinese companies to move their capital to overseas markets in diverse services and financial operations such as e-commerce, manufacturing and logistics.

"Based on statistics between January and November, China is expected to gain $126 billion in foreign direct investment from the non-financial sector in 2016," Gao said at the ministry's annual meeting in Beijing.

The third batch of FTZs are expected to be officially launched as early as January, according to the Economic Information Daily.

Tang Wenhong, director-general of the ministry's department of foreign investment administration, said the nation will further simplify and modify four foreign investment laws and encourage foreign companies to invest in the country's central and western regions next year.

"China's modern service businesses, environmental protection, communication and information services, as well as high-tech industries will offer more market access to foreign investment in 2017," said Tang.

"Foreign companies have discovered that market demand in China is changing as both consumers and companies want to purchase more high value-added products and there is a surging demand for services," said Li Gang, vice-president of the Beijing-based Chinese Academy of International Trade and Economic Cooperation, the ministry's think tank.

Li said because the service infrastructure facilities of China's central and western regions are not as advanced as those in eastern regions, foreign companies are keen to enter markets which have yet to fully develop.

"The upcoming Hubei FTZ could possibly cut companies' financial costs in the area," said Fu Cheng, chairman of Exsun Electronics and Information Technology Inc, a company manufacturing satellite positioning systems in Wuhan, capital of Hubei province.

He said if the Hubei FTZ adopts the operating mode of Qianhai in Shenzhen, where inter-company transactions are tax-free, and businesses pay taxes annually instead of monthly, then liquidity costs will be significantly reduced. Now companies have to pay tax as long as transactions are billed, even if customers have yet to pay.

Timeline for FTZ development

September 2013

China (Shanghai) Pilot Free Trade Zone was inaugurated.

March 2014

A plan for three FTZs in Tianjin, Guangdong and Fujian, and the expansion of the Shanghai FTZ was approved by the central government.

August 2016

Seven new FTZs were approved by central government, in Zhejiang, Liaoning, Henan, Hubei, Sichuan and Shaanxi provinces, and Chongqing municipality.
 
President Xi urges more efforts on FTZ construction
2016-12-31 13:06 | Xinhua | Editor: Feng Shuang

Chinese President Xi Jinping has called for greater efforts to make innovation and breakthroughs in the construction of free trade zones (FTZ).

The building of Shanghai Pilot Free Trade Zone is a strategic move that the central authorities take to deepen reform and opening up under the new situation, Xi said in a recent instruction on Shanghai Pilot FTZ.

Priority must be given to identify key tasks for the FTZ in the next stage and take the initiative in reforms, so as to score greater successes in institutional innovation which could be copied and promoted nationwide, Xi stressed.
 
China collects over 400 bln yuan in taxes from major FTZs
(Xinhua) 15:24, March 05, 2017

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  A photo of Tianjin Port. [Photo: Xinhua/Zhang Chenlin]


China collected 409 billion yuan (59.3 billion U.S. dollars) in taxes in four major free trade zones (FTZs) last year, data from the State Administration of Taxation (SAT) showed.

The tax revenue growth was driven by fast development, reasonable industrial structure and strong innovation in the Shanghai, Tianjin, Fujian and Guangdong FTZs.

Nearly 90 percent of the tax revenue came from the modern services sector, while high-end manufacturing witnessed strong growth in tax revenue, SAT data showed.

SAT data showed tax receipts from car manufacturing had annual growth of 44 percent last year, 34 percentage points higher than the national average.

Internet, software and information technology services posted stellar growth in tax revenues. The Guangdong FTZ, supported by tech-hub Shenzhen, saw tax revenues from the two sectors increase 470 percent and 390 percent respectively year on year.

FTZs are part of government efforts to test reform policies, including interest rate liberalization and fewer investment restrictions to better integrate the economy with international practice.

China launched its first FTZ in Shanghai in 2013. In late 2014, Tianjin, Fujian and Guangdong were allowed to set up a second group of FTZs. Another seven were approved in August 2016 in a bid to replicate the success of previous trials.
 
China collects over 400 bln yuan in taxes from major FTZs
(Xinhua) 15:24, March 05, 2017

View attachment 382115
  A photo of Tianjin Port. [Photo: Xinhua/Zhang Chenlin]


China collected 409 billion yuan (59.3 billion U.S. dollars) in taxes in four major free trade zones (FTZs) last year, data from the State Administration of Taxation (SAT) showed.

The tax revenue growth was driven by fast development, reasonable industrial structure and strong innovation in the Shanghai, Tianjin, Fujian and Guangdong FTZs.

Nearly 90 percent of the tax revenue came from the modern services sector, while high-end manufacturing witnessed strong growth in tax revenue, SAT data showed.

SAT data showed tax receipts from car manufacturing had annual growth of 44 percent last year, 34 percentage points higher than the national average.

Internet, software and information technology services posted stellar growth in tax revenues. The Guangdong FTZ, supported by tech-hub Shenzhen, saw tax revenues from the two sectors increase 470 percent and 390 percent respectively year on year.

FTZs are part of government efforts to test reform policies, including interest rate liberalization and fewer investment restrictions to better integrate the economy with international practice.

China launched its first FTZ in Shanghai in 2013. In late 2014, Tianjin, Fujian and Guangdong were allowed to set up a second group of FTZs. Another seven were approved in August 2016 in a bid to replicate the success of previous trials.
3000km HSR!
 
Seven new FTZs will accelerate opening-up
2017-04-01 09:54 | China Daily | Editor: Wang Fan

China will launch seven more free trade zones starting on Saturday, including several in inland areas for the first time, a move that is expected to accelerate the country's opening-up and boost the Belt and Road Initiative, the Ministry of Commerce announced on Friday.

The inland FTZs will be opened in Henan, Sichuan, Shaanxi and Hubei provinces, as well as in Chongqing. The two new coastal FTZs will be in Liaoning and Zhejiang provinces.

The seven bring the country's total number of FTZs to 11.

Vice-Commerce Minister Wang Shouwen said the new FTZs are established based on the operation mode and experiences gained from Shanghai and other existing coastal FTZs, with well-developed, state-level new bonded zones and high-tech parks. Each covers less than 120 square kilometers and consists of three subareas.

The central government approved the latest group of FTZs in August. The State Council has issued the general developing plans for them.

Among them, Shaanxi will focus on trade connections with economies related to the Belt and Road Initiative, while Henan will build itself into a major international logistics and transportation center.

Hubei will build a base for high-tech industries and facilitate the development of the Yangtze River Economic Belt.

"These plans will help deepen reforms to streamline administration, delegate power, strengthen regulations and improve services, as well as ... expand opening-up in inland provinces," said Wang Ning, vice-governor of Sichuan.

The move came nearly four years after the launch of China's first FTZ in Shanghai to pilot reforms aimed at opening wider to foreign investment and easing restrictions on capital flows.

China also set up FTZs in Tianjin, Fujian and Guangdong in 2015.

Hubei Vice-Governor Tong Daochi said the new FTZs will help facilitate investment and further liberalize trade in commodities.

Bai Ming, a researcher at the Chinese Academy of International Trade and Economic Cooperation, said, "Western provinces and autonomous regions such as Yunnan, Guangxi and Xinjiang are also likely to be selected to build FTZs."
 

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