China will dramatically expand the size of a free trade zone (FTZ) in Shanghai to include the city's commercial centre where major multinational companies and Chinese banks have their headquarters, state media reported. The official Xinhua news agency cited the conclusion of the 12th meeting of the National People's Congress on Friday, but it did not given a date for the formal expansion nor mention any new policies for the zone.
Under the plan, the zone will be enlarged to include the Lujiazui financial district, Shanghai's riverside commercial centre and home to its tallest skyscrapers. It will include the Jinqiao and Zhangjiang districts nearby. The expansion will allow companies in those areas to take advantage of existing preferential policies for companies in the free trade zone and it fulfils a government commitment to expand the zone once conditions were deemed ripe.
The zone was launched in 2013 to much fanfare but it has failed to live up to expectations. Media reports predicting that opening the FTZ would be followed by deep liberalisation to China's capital account, the scrapping of wide restrictions on foreign investment, and even the lowering of China's censorship firewall inside the zone went largely unfulfilled. At the same time, the leadership gave the green light to many projects outside the zone that duplicated or exceeded the policy benefits the Shanghai municipal government hoped would remain exclusive.
Not only did Beijing authorise competing zones in other cities, it also launched nationwide pilots testing liberalisation for currency controls and cross-border investment, most recently the Shanghai-Hong Kong Stock Connect programme, that diminished the zone's relative appeal. The Shanghai zone's geographic isolation out near the airport and the port area was also a disadvantage. Companies with existing footprints in the city were reluctant to relocate given uncertainties about the depth of Beijing's commitment to the Shanghai FTZ - a caution now paying off for those who waited. In addition, analysts said that while many of the liberalisations implemented in the zone targeted service industries, the zone's separate areas were all far from the central business district.
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