Last week Hong Kong Chief Executive, Donald Tsang entertained mainland and international
investors whose firms
have been crowding into
the city-state, boosting
the total number of regional
and head offices to nearly
6000 by the end of 2004.
In
welcoming the guests,
Mr. Tsang said: “We
are just one week away
from the opening of
Hong Kong Disneyland,
thereby joining Tokyo
and Paris as international
home for some of the
world’s best loved
characters. In December
we play host to the
World Trade Organization’s
Sixth Ministerial Conference,
a clear illustration
of the important role
Hong Kong plays in
international trade.
Just one week later
we will open AsiaWorld-Expo,
our new world class
exhibition center at
the airport. That in
turn will make it possible
for us to host ITU
Telecom World in December
2006, the first time
the event will have
been held outside Geneva.”
Mike
Rowse, Director-General
of Investment Promotion
at Invest Hong Kong,
said the year 2004
was Hong Kong’s most
successful year ever
for investment promotion.
Invest Hong Kong assisted
205 foreign and Mainland
companies to set up
or expand operations
in Hong Kong last year.
By the end of the year,
over 5900 mainland
and overseas companies
had regional headquarters,
a regional office or
a local office in the
city. The figure is
up from 5414 in 2003
and 4867 in 2002.
Mr.
Rowse noted that inward
investment has stayed
on the upswing. At
the end of June, Invest
Hong Kong had assisted
over 144 companies
in investing or expanding
in Hong Kong, thereby
achieving more than
half of its annual
target of 220 and representing
a healthy 13.4% increase
from the same period
last year.
These
projects led to the
creation of more than
1,400 jobs. The same
investors plan to create
3,000 additional jobs
in the next two years.
Initial investment
by these companies
topped over $1.5 billion.
“CEPA
had a clearly positive
impact on attracting
investors,” Mr. Rowse
said. “A quarter of
the companies we have
assisted so far this
year told us that CEPA
played an important
role in their decision
to invest here. We
continue to see increased
interest from Mainland
companies in using
Hong Kong as a springboard
to overseas markets,”
he said. “It has been
12 months since the
implementation of the
Ministry of Commerce’s
investment facilitation
policy for Mainland
enterprises to invest
in Hong Kong. Between
September 1, 2004 and
August 15, 2005, 257
Mainland enterprises
were granted approval
to invest in Hong Kong,
according to the Ministry.
These projects involve
an investment amount
of $8.03 billion (US$1.03
billion).”
Mainland
companies made up nearly
17% of the department’s
completed projects
in the first six months,
and now constitute
20% of the current
live case-load.
“At
the same time, our
traditional source
markets of investment
projects including
the Asia-Pacific, Europe
and North America,
continue to be key
contributors to our
economy,” Mr. Rowse
said. “They represented
36%, 25% and 19%, respectively,
of our total number
of projects in the
first six months.”
The
department is optimistic
that the results of
investment promotion
in 2005 will reflect
a steady growth.
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