On May 16th, Chengdu
Tianfu New Area of China (Sichuan) Pilot Free Trade Zone stands against the
blue sky and white clouds.
Benchmarking against high evaluation standard
How
do the three major areas play this?
● South Sichuan Port Area: Launching a
three-year operation plan to optimize the business environment; exploring reform
of the “hour-list system”; some indicators of its commercial system have
reached or outnumbered that of Hong Kong.
●Chengdu Qingbaijiang Railway Port Area:
Exploring the special pilot reform to optimize the business environment;
exploring the "one bill-of-lading" reform for multi-modal transportation,
etc.
● Chengdu Tianfu New Area: Exploring to
implement the special pilot reform to optimize the business environment; exploring
a rapid review mechanism for cases related to intellectual property, etc.
Two Years of Sichuan Pilot Free Trade
Zone
Achievements
[The pilot missions have been fully carried
out]
● Over 95% of the 159 pilot reforms and
tasks assigned by the central government have been implemented
● More than 400 practical cases have
been formed
[Continued improvement of business
environment]
● Two batches of 142 provincial-level
management authorities have been delegated to areas of the Pilot Free Trade
Zone
● "The hour-list system" has
reduced the time for starting businesses to 2 working days, and sometimes to as
fast as one hour
● Shuangliu Airport has adopted the
clearance system for “7×24 hours” with appointment, and the customs clearance
efficiency of Chengdu ranks among the leading ones of the 42 districts in
China.
[Reform dividends continue to be
released]
As of the end of 2018
● 53,000 enterprises have been newly
established in the Pilot Free Trade Zone with a registered capital of 759.9
billion yuan
● A total of 628 foreign-invested
enterprises have been introduced, with 85% of them from the high-end service
industry
●More than 200 major projects have been
signed worthy of around 400 billion yuan
Get a snapshot of the achievements in
the frontline
From May 7th to 10th, the report team of
"The Magnificent 70 Years of Struggle for A New Area - Field Investigation
of Reporters to National Pilot Areas" set foot on the Sichuan Pilot Free
Trade Zone.
Their first stop is the Comprehensive
Service Hall of South Sichuan Port Area in Luzhou City. Upon entering the door,
the reporter saw a huge screen that displayed the used time and time limit for
the handling of administrative examination and approval related items - this is
the "hour-list system" which marked local exploration. “An important
reason for exploring this system is that we are improving the business
environment with reference to the World Bank Business Environmental Assessment
System.” The on-site staff introduced.
The World Bank's business environment
evaluation system, a fancy yet unfamiliar term, was brought up many times in their
subsequent talks with others. The responsible persons of the three areas of the
Sichuan Pilot Free Trade Zone have told reporters that this evaluation system
represented the standard in their exploration of a realistic path to improve
the business environment.
Why did they adopt the same standard
without consultation beforehand? What does this innovative exploration mean?
What has it brought forth?
How did it start?
Knowing the gap in the processing time
for examination and approval items, each area has decided to take business
environment improvement as the focus, and to voluntarily benchmark against the
indicators of the World Bank's business environmental assessment system
Zhong Wen had the idea of benchmarking
during his visit in Hong Kong.
Dating back to 2017 when the Sichuan
Pilot Free Trade Zone has just been established, the head of the Planning and
Research Center and Management Committee of the South Sichuan Port Area went to
the Hong Kong Buildings Department for the first time. "It’s so different!"
Zhong Wen said that the time needed for the local approval of construction
projects can be pin down to a specific working day. If there is a delay, Hong
Kong civil servants will have to catch up with the scheduled time even if it
meant they must give up holidays.
Almost at the same time, Chen Li, head
of the Policy Research Office of Chengdu Free Trade Office, also saw the latest
World Bank business environment report on the Internet. China ranks in the
middle of the list. “This report used Shanghai and Beijing as sample cities,
and the business environment in the western regions like Sichuan will rank even
behind.”
After noticing
the gap, the areas of Sichuan Pilot Free Trade Zone has successively
established the business environment improvement as a key task: the three-year
operation plan of optimizing the business environment in the South Sichuan Port
Area; the Chengdu Tianfu New Area and Qingbaijiang Railway Port Area of the
Sichuan Pilot Free Trade Zone are also exploring the implementation of a
special pilot reform to optimize the business environment. In this process, the
World Bank's business environment evaluation system indicators have always been
held up as the guiding principle of each district; and the top ranked places like
Singapore and Hong Kong have turned out to be the target of every area.
Why does the Pilot Free Trade Zone pay
so much attention to the improvement of the business environment? Deng Fuhua, Assistant
Dean of the Comprehensive Research Institute of China (Sichuan) Pilot Free
Trade Zone of Southwestern Finance University, talked about his view: The
important task of the Pilot Free Trade Zone is to improve the open economic
system. Creating a stable, fair, transparent and predictable business
environment represents the institutional innovation just needed for Sichuan's
further expansion.
What path did they follow?
Benchmarking against the World Bank’s
high standards represents a process of “localization” through “international
path”
On May 9th, the report team arrived at
Chengdu Qingbaijiang Railway Port Area. A billboard on the roadside caught the
attention of the reporter. A train passed by with its top body painted with several
characters - "Here links the world."
The business environment needs to “face
the world” like a train with a clear direction and a fixed path. The World Bank
has provided 10 clear first-level indicators for the above-mentioned system,
including starting a business, handling construction permits, obtaining
electricity, registering property rights, obtaining credit, protecting minority
investors, paying taxes, cross-border trade, contract execution, and declaring bankruptcy;
they can also be subdivided into more than 40 secondary indicators, each of
which has high international standards for reference – for example, it takes
only half a day to start a business, and it takes an average of 120 days to
resolve a commercial dispute.
Can these standards be applied directly
to Sichuan? Almost all respondents answered “no”. Chen Li mentioned that the
legal framework, institutional mechanisms and realities at home and abroad are
completely different, thus direct application does not work at all.
Chen Ran, Deputy Manager of the Multimodal
Transportation Department of Chengdu International Land Port Operation Co.,
Ltd., shared an interesting point: the high standard of the World Bank represents
a process of “localization” through “international path”.
Like the "one bill-of-lading"
reform of multi-modal transportation he had took part in, its intention was to
make cross-border land transportation as convenient as the world-wide shipping services
that have been around for hundreds of years. However, the land trade rules are
not as complete as maritime trade. Not to mention the cumbersome procedures, moreover
the railway transport documents have no property rights and cannot be pledged.
"How could a piece of document be used as real goods to apply for a
mortgage? What if the goods are stolen on the road? What if damaged?" Most
banks held reservations.
After
receiving the cold shoulders from banks, Chen Ran and his colleagues decided to
separate the financial part, and launch “door-to-door” service instead with
simplified formalities, and gradually upgrade the cargo monitoring, etc., to
accumulate conditions for future pledge and financing with document. “When we
have a customer base, and when our monitoring conditions are mature, the banks
will naturally recognize us.”
This reform referred to as “the first
step in exploring the rules of land trade” by domestic media has ushered in its
favorable turn this year: when the multimodal transportation “one bill-of-lading
system” concluded more than 1,000 orders, banks reached us for cooperation.
Chen Ran said that in the first four months of this year, pledge financing has
been secured for 13 orders, which is many times more than that of the last
year.
What is the signal?
In less than two years of benchmarking, Sichuan
has found its tight path, and relevant explorations have sent a positive
signal.
What are the gains from referring to the
World Bank Business Environmental Assessment System?
The most direct expression can be seen
on the summary materials provided by the Provincial Office of Free Trade. The
material lists typical items from more than 400 practical cases in the Sichuan
Pilot Free Trade Zone over the past two years since establishment, of which
more than 80% are closely related to the improvement of the business
environment. “Promoting trade facilitation embodies the two-year practice of
the Sichuan Pilot Free Trade Zone.” Deng Fuhua said that the relevant system of
the World Bank has guided Sichuan in finding its own right direction.
As for the changes brought about by these
explorations, many interviewees said that although it has yet to reach two
years since the benchmarking initiative, still the positive signals at present
are gratifying already. “Referring to the World Bank's business environment
evaluation system, we chose the fourth-ranked Hong Kong as our matching
target.” Feng Jian, Deputy Director of the Administrative Examination and
Approval Bureau of the South Sichuan Port Area Management Committee, said that
some of the indicators of the commercial system in South Sichuan Port Area have
reached or exceeded the level of Hong Kong by means of the “hour-list system”
and other reforms. “Like business registration, it takes 5 working days in Hong
Kong, and we could handle it in 18 hours.”
Companies have benefited the most in
this regard. In the Chengdu Qingbaijiang Railway Port Area, Liu Xia, Manager of
the Business Department of Sichuan Port and Air Supply Chain Management Corporation,
told reporters that the custom clearance for parallel-import vehicles is faster
than the coastal ports. “It takes a week for a coast port to get the car, and
it only takes up to 3 days via this land port”; In the Chengdu Tianfu New Area,
Jiang Tao, Head of Chengdu Blue Wind Group Holdings, said that thanks to the proposed
rapid review mechanism of local intellectual property-related cases, nowadays
law suits for counterfeit products encountered in the wholesale market can be filed
directly and handled within 3 months. This is something he dare not think about
in the past...
Many people have mentioned the same data
to demonstrate the improvement of the business environment: In the past two
years, the Sichuan Pilot Free Trade Zone has attracted many foreign-invested
companies which account for nearly 1/2 of the provincial total with less than
1/4000 of the provincial total area.
On May 10th, the report team arrived at
their last stop of the China-European Center. In the newly-funded Free Trade
Zone Administrative Service Hall, a British businessman Mike who came here for
consultation said: "every window is equipped with a translating device, so
I think the environment and services here are at least international-oriented."