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BEIJING, Dec. 28 (Xinhuanet)-- In a few days, the
Chinese mainland and Hong Kong will celebrate the first anniversary of the
Closer Economic Partnership Arrangement (CEPA), the first bilateral free trade
agreement (FTA) for either of them.
The pact has met early expectations of giving Hong Kong a head-start in accessing the mainland market
ahead of foreign competition to be allowed access under the mainland's World
Trade Organization (WTO) commitments, said business people and experts.
Hong Kong businesses are making best use of an
expanded CEPA that will be in place in 2005, before the mainland opens its
markets to foreign investors in 2006 at an unprecedented level.
Trade
The immediate effect of the CEPA was that Hong Kong
exports to the mainland increased.
But what is more important, said experts and industry
leaders, is the potential revival of Hong Kong's manufacturing power.
Under the free-trade pact, 374 Hong Kong-made
products are exempted from import duties, accounting for more than 90 per cent
of goods that the metropolis of 7-million makes, according to Roger Chu,
director of Hong Kong Trade Development Council's mainland division.
"CEPA has given Hong Kong products an advantage," Chu
told China Daily.
Up to now, 2,711 Hong Kong manufacturers have
obtained certificates of origin that allow them to enjoy zero-tariff treatment.
By December 13, a total of 2,811 items of goods,
worth HK$1.68 billion (US$215 million), have been approved by the Trade and
Industry Department of Hong Kong to enter the mainland free of duties, according
to official data.
Chu said traditional Chinese medicine, jewellery,
chemicals and information technology products dominated Hong Kong's exports.
"Hong Kong produces intermediate goods with
competitive technologies and exports them to the mainland for labour-intensive,
further manufacturing," he said. "It has become a trend."
Following the export boom is the rejuvenation of Hong
Kong's manufacturing sector, with an increasing number of producers moving
production bases back from the mainland to take advantage of duty-free exports.
"There are signs that Hong Kong's manufacturing
sector is bouncing back with a revitalization in certain products such as
chemicals, medicine and food," said Chu.
That might have a profound effect on Hong Kong's
economy in the long run, helping create jobs and rally industrial confidence
that was eroded by the Asian financial crisis in the late 1990s and the
subsequent economic downturn.
Services
CEPA's core spirit is investment facilitation and
market opening, which led to a mushrooming of Hong Kong businesses on the
mainland in 2004.
A total of 18 service sectors were opened in advance
or much more widely to Hong Kong companies and individuals, compared with the
pledges that the mainland made to the WTO upon its entry in late 2001.
"Indeed, opening up of the service sectors is the
most valuable privilege that CEPA has offered to Hong Kong businesses," said
Chu. "It gives wider accesses to the 1.3-billion-population market."
Hong Kong service companies made forays into the
mainland market in the second half of the year after completing market surveys
and qualifying to operate on the mainland.
"Under CEPA, we are allowed to work on projects of
State-owned companies. Previously, we were confined to business with foreign
companies and joint ventures," Ng Wing Fai, deputy director of Hong Kong-based
Widnell Ltd, told China Daily.
The construction and property service company
established two subsidiaries in Chengdu and Chongqing this year. Before that, it
had offices in Beijing, East China's Shanghai and South China's Shenzhen.
And Ng is glad to see his company's earnings soaring
this year.
"Our Beijing office is expected to increase its
turnover by 30 per cent to about 5 million yuan (US$602,000), and the total
turnover on the mainland will reach 30 million yuan (US$3.61 million) this
year," he said.
In other sectors such as advertising and exhibitions,
Hong Kong investors also surged ahead of foreign companies, with CEPA allowing
them to set up wholly-owned firms on the mainland.
Star TV, the Hong Kong-based News Corp broadcaster,
launched the mainland's first wholly foreign-owned advertising company in July.
Meanwhile, foreign investors are bound to share
requirements in the mainland.
The lifting of share restrictions for Hong Kong
advertising agencies came about two years earlier than foreign investors.
In Shenzhen, Hong Kong's nearest mainland neighbour,
more than 10 Hong Kong-based exhibition firms have set up or applied to set up
wholly-owned subsidiaries.
CEPA II
An increased number of preferential measures will
benefit Hong Kong industries beginning from 2005, according to an expanded CEPA
pact, or CEPA II as it has been dubbed.
Another 713 more items will enjoy zero tariffs and
eight new service sectors will be opened for Hong Kong investors.
However, the time left for Hong Kong businesses to
enjoy the head start is short, probably one year.
Similar preferences are supposed to be given to ASEAN
countries under the China-ASEAN FTA and to other foreign investors under WTO
commitments in the near future in a phase-by-phase manner.
"So, the year 2005 will turn out to be critical for
Hong Kong business people," Fan Ying, a professor at China Foreign Affairs
University in Beijing, told China Daily.
Chu echoes her view, saying under CEPA II, almost all
the sectors that could be opened to Hong Kong will be opened in 2005, and Hong
Kong businesses should not miss their chance.
"We should get as strong as possible before foreign
competitors arrive. We plan to set up subsidiaries in Northwest China next
year," Ng of Widnell said.
"That is the last move of our goal of covering major
Chinese cities."
(China Daily)
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