Hong Kong to get with mainland's five-year plan
(AP)
Updated: 2006-09-10 09:02

Kapp said American companies usually don't study the plans, but the better ones have someone - like a consultant or trade group - who does study it for them. This is especially true of large food companies and firms involved in big infrastructure projects, he said.

The five-year plan came up during a recent news conference in the Macau with casino tycoon Sheldon Adelson, chairman and chief executive officer of Las Vegas Sands Corp.

Sands executives cited the plan as they defended their intention to invest billions in casinos, hotels and convention facilities in the former Portuguese enclave on the mainland's southeastern coast.

"All the infrastructure they talk about are in these long-term plans," Adelson told The Associated Press in an interview. "Of course you have to read them. Of course you have to pay attention. They set up infrastructure, trains, utilities, water facilities, bridges, airports."

Arved von zur Muehlen, managing director for Greater China for the German airline Lufthansa AG, said his company reads the report for clues about where its customers might be going in China.

"Usually the companies investing in China react to the five-year plan, and we react to how the companies are investing," he said.

The plans highlight Hong Kong's tricky relationship with the mainland. When the former British colony returned to the mainland in 1997, it was allowed to keep its capitalist ways and its legal system - one of the best in Asia.

Close ties with the mainland are crucial for Hong Kong's success. Unlike global financial centers like London, New York and Tokyo, this city doesn't have a large domestic economy to back it up.

To best compete, it needs to link up with the mainland's economy. And it's been doing that. Hong Kong companies are among the biggest investors in the mainland and the city's stock market serves as a major fundraising platform for mainland companies.

The Hong Kong Economic Journal, widely read by intellectuals and business leaders, said in a recent front-page editorial that it's time for the city to play a bigger role in writing the next plan. The paper warned that mainland future financial reforms might erode Hong Kong's role as a global finance center.

"Amid these big changes, if Hong Kong can't play a proactive role in drafting its plans," the editorial said, "then the possibility of becoming marginalized will become extremely big."


 12
 
 

Related Stories