Saturday, June 15, 2019

Fujian Is Growing and the Time to Invest Is Now



Beijing fuels the second cities race investing in one of the Dragon’s most dynamic and productive regions
With an almost continental size, the ‘real’ People’s Republic of China lies in the diversity and richness of its regions. It’s a far more heterogeneous territory than Westerners often imagine. Official government statistics estimate a 56% increase in consumption in urban areas by 2022, with a new Chinese middle class constituting roughly half (54%) of the PRC’s urban population. But what is changing in less popularized regions of the country, and which regions make the best case for foreign investment?
The obvious answers – Beijing or Shanghai – are now close to saturation, so it’s best to look at China’s new economic centers, many of which remain unknown to outsiders. The race has just begun, and the Chinese government has already put significant infrastructure and manufacturing facilities in place. Investors must play ahead of competitors, and to do so, must watch out for the rising markets of Fujian.
Fujian Province
The Fujian Clique: Chinese leadership has big plans for the province
Located in China’s Southeast – the Strait of Formosa in front of Taiwan, to be precise – this green, wooded province boasts an ancient and millenarian history. It’s a top choice tourist destination for Chinese citizens but remains off the map of their Western counterparts. Inside China, Fujian is referred to as ‘      田’, meaning ‘eight parts mountain, one part water, and one part fields’, to summarize the region’s natural bounty.
But Fujian isn’t just forest. Its GDP currently ranks 10th among all China’s provinces with an annual growth rate of 8.4%, and Chinese leadership has big plans for the region. Xi Jinping was Governor of the province from 1999 until 2002. As such, the region’s path toward progress started under the watchful eye of Xi, who transformed the region into a lighthouse for foreign investment.
So why follow the economic development of Fujian? Look to who has power in Beijing. Many of the key posts in the country’s current leadership are held by those who were Xi’s comrades and colleagues during his Fujian tenure, thus forming the “Fujian clique”.
Xiamen: the Pearl of Fujian and gateway to southeastern China
The province perfectly embodies the production prototype of China 2.0. Few heavy industrial zones, wide open spaces for high-tech, respect for the environment, and R&D capacity for foreign investors. Furthermore, Fujian exists in a productive ‘cluster’ between Fuzhou and Xiamen, making it an exemplar of a second-class metropolis that is progressing, developing and looking abroad with curiosity. In short, Fujian is emerging as a potential market for many foreign brands.
So where to invest? Not only in infrastructure, but also in web and technology. Noteworthy is the “Digital Fujian” project started by Xi Jinping himself when he was Vice President of the Republic. This economic program is the emblem of a China that views e-commerce and the internet sphere as one in the same. Thanks to this initiative, Fujian is currently the sixth most digitized region in China and many of the country’s most successful start-ups have been born within its confines.
Although Fuzhou is the administrative capital of the region, Xiamen is the true pearl of this coastal province and leads to the southeast of the country. Positioned exactly in front of Taiwan and hosting one of the most prestigious universities in all of China, Xiamen has been labeled one of the best Chinese cities for quality of life. It’s headquarters for the country’s best-known sports brands such as Anta, 360 °, and Peak. Much of the economic success of this second-tier city comes from its nomination as one of the first four Special Economic Zones in China that engaged in trade with the outside world. This advantage, after thirty years, continues today.
Xiamen International Airport welcomes 38 million passengers per year, topping traffic for second-tier cities. Fujian’s flagship airline, Xiamen Airlines, which links the province with some of the best known international destinations such as Amsterdam, Los Angeles, and Singapore, was the first Chinese air carrier founded entirely with private capital. The company has also established 33 new international routes in the past two years.
International outlook continues today – now it’s time to invest
…But Zhongnanhai’s projects are long-term, and they’re directly related to the New Silk Road. Currently, Fujian ports have recorded a cargo traffic of 500 million tons, and Xiamen’s single port is one of the most important in the People’s Republic of China. According to Beijing’s calculations, the expansion of the city’s port will go hand in hand with the development of the Fujian Free Trade Zone (FTZ), a vast area inaugurated in 2015, which sees the Fuzhou, Pingtan, and Xiamen as central poles to the nervous system of the greater region. Through pointed taxation and investment in these areas, the government will achieve its aims.
Why look to Fujian? The answer is obvious. This province is the gateway to the entire southeast of China. A huge market with the highest growth rates in the People’s Republic. An arrival of goods via infrastructure based on rubberized and railway transport in Xiamen that facilitates influx into the greater region, such as Hunan province or the Low Zhejiang. All areas bordering Fujian.
So the Xiamen FTZ is a real opportunity for many players. This is why, since 2015, international brands with offices in Beijing or Shanghai have opened branches in Xiamen. This is China 2.0. In Fujian, an all-dimensional, multilevel and wide-ranging model of openness has emerged that has enabled the Province to trade globally, leading it to establish economic and commercial relations with 225 new markets that include entire nations.


Fujian, a Lesser-known Chinese Tech Hub

Xiamen Software Park
Xiamen and Fuzhou are lesser known Chinese tech cities, compared with Beijing, Shenzhen, Hangzhou, Chengdu or Shanghai. Both are part of Fujian, a province on China’s southeastern seaboard historically known for its entrepreneurial spirit.
Though Fuzhou is the provincial capital, Xiamen currently is more attractive to tech startups and talent, being more economically advanced as one of the five Special Economic Zones established in the 1980s. Tech founders in Fuzhou also enjoy the advantage of relatively low labor costs. But talent acquisition is a big problem for entrepreneurs in both cities.
Unlike most other Chinese tech hubs, Fujian has few highly ranked schools in computer science, or even in science and technology in general. Meitu, the fast-growing Xiamen-based mobile photo app developer, is trying to lure employees working at big tech companies in other cities but originally from Fujian province. It has successfully hired staff from companies such as Baidu.
NetDragon
NetDragon, headquartered in Fuzhou and established in 1999, is one of the first and best-known Fujian tech companies. It went public as an online gaming company in Hong Kong in 2008. But to many, it is better known for Baidu’s US$1.85 billion purchase of 91Wireless, a third-party mobile app distributor NetDragon acquired in 2010.
In almost all Fujian-based tech companies I’ve visited or know of, there are key managers who came from NetDragon. Ma Zhijun was one of the first language specialists NetDragon hired to help export its games overseas. Ma, an Arabic-speaking Muslim, and his team successfully took several NetDragon PC games to the Middle East. After leaving NetDragon and briefly working at a mobile game company, Mr. Ma co-founded SoarDragon which focuses on localizing Chinese mobile games and exporting them to the Arabic-speaking countries. Since its licensed games generate healthy revenues, SoarDragon has begun developing mobile games in-house and other utility apps. SourDragon’s goal is to become one of the most highly regarded internet service providers in the Middle East.
Cai Wensheng
Cai Wensheng (also known as Mike Cai) is associated with many Fujian located tech companies, including Meitu, 4399 (casual game platform), Feiyu Technology (game developer) and Feibo (social marketing agency). Briefly, after moving back to China from Southeast Asia in 1999, he made a fortune from internet domain name investment and then began to invest in Chinese tech startups. Besides those located in Fujian, he has also invested in 58.com (NYSE:WUBA), Baofeng (online video streaming and tools), CNZZ (online data service).
There are many stories about how shrewd an industry insider Cai is. In 2003 he founded web directory 265.com, a clone of Hao123.com, launched in 1999 and acquired by Chinese search giant Baidu in 2004. About a year after Google entered mainland China, Cai successfully sold it to Google China, then a direct competitor of Baidu.
What’s interesting is Cai later invested in 4399, the next startup by Hao123 founder Li Xingping, and then became chairman of the board. Though Li isn’t originally from Fujian, 4399 is located in Xiamen. 4399 is one of the most popular small casual game platforms in China. More than 400 million users now consume in-house and licensed games on the platform. The company filed for IPO in December 2014. If successful, 4399 will be the second gaming company invested by Cai to go public, after Feiyu Technology which was listed in Hong Kong in early December 2014.
Cai now serves as chairman of Meitu, the photo app developer based in Xiamen. Starting up in 2008, the company has developed some of the most popular photo editing and sharing apps in China, with 800 million users combined, and is expanding overseas.
Rising Stars
Apart from Meitu, other rising stars in the Fujian tech scene include MeetYou (Xiamen), Wifibanlv(Xiamen) and Babybus (Fuzhou).
MeetYou and Dayima are the two of China’s biggest woman’s health apps. BabyBus is one of the few Chinese app developers making educational content for markets outside China. Wifibanlv (or Wifi Partner) provides a network of WiFi hotspots for free.

Editing by Mike Cormack (@bucketoftongues)

China (Fuzhou) Pilot Free Trade Zone and eBay join hands to set up a pilot cross-border e-commerce industrial park

Image result for fuzhou

FUZHOU, ChinaJan. 12, 2018 /PRNewswire/ -- U.S.-based on-line auction giant eBay is taking new steps into the Chinese market by setting up a filiale in China (Fuzhou) Fujian Pilot Free Trade Zone on January 11.
The eBay Fujian company is eBay's first cooperation platform with the Chinese government and is eBay's second branch company in China following Shanghai.
eBay on the same day also announced that it has teamed up with Linca Industrial (Fujian) Group Co., Ltd. to build a cross-border e-commerce industrial park in Fuzhou, capital of east China's Fujian Province. The park will be the first industrial park with full industry chain of cross-border e-commerce in China. It is the outcome of a proposal signed by Fuzhou City government, the Department of Commerce of Fujian Province and eBay in April 2017.
The planning area of the first stage of the park is about 30,000 square meters, comprising a logistics center, maker incubators, a talent training center as well as a payment service support center, among other services.
"Fujian sellers have always been active on eBay and offering a rich variety of products with quality services. The landing of the industrial park showed our firm faith in the huge potential of cross-border e-commerce in Fujian. We hope we can work together with local government to bring more companies and products from Fujian on eBay, and further on help them reach more consumers across the globe," said John Lin, chief executive officer of eBay Greater China.
"We hope to stimulate the potential and vitality of Fujian, which has always been a major province of export trade, and nurture a demonstrative policy environment and ecosystem for cross-border e-commerce industry in China, " said Liang Yong, deputy director of the Fujian Pilot Free Trade Zone.
An eBay cross-border e-commerce institute was also established on the same day. Jointly organized by the Fujian Pilot Free Trade Zone, eBay and Fujian Business University, the institute features two majors - e-commerce and international trade, along with other optional courses. Qualified graduates will be granted a certificate from eBay and offered opportunities to work at excellent e-commerce companies in Fujian. The institute is estimated to educate 2,000 to 3,000 e-commerce professionals for Fujian every year.
From March 13 - 15, 2018, the eBay-Fujian Cross-Border E-commerce Summit will be held at the Fuzhou Strait International Conference and Exhibition Center.
The summit, boasting an area of 22,000 square meters and 1,000 booths in seven sections, will become an important opportunity for cross-border sellers to attract millions of possible clients in the Chinese market and enhance the influence of Chinese brands.
E-commerce has become a major growth engine in China. According to a report jointly released by Alibaba and Accenture, China will become the world's largest market for buying and selling products online by 2020, with the total value of commodity sold by e-retailers to overseas consumers estimated to reach 994 billion U.S. dollars. The partnership between eBay and Fujian will no doubt be a win-win choice.
Established in 1995 in California, eBay is one of the largest, most dynamic e-commerce platforms in the world. The company has been the top choice for many Chinese companies to explore overseas markets.
Fujian is the second largest cross-border e-commerce exporting province in China and registered an annual growth of over 35 percent in cross-border e-commerce exports over the past three years. The capital city of Fuzhou is home to many manufacturers and e-commerce sellers. In the future,  Fuzhou plans to partner with global e-commerce titans including eBay and Amazon and wish to further strengthen its role in cross-border e-commerce.
SOURCE China (Fuzhou) Pilot Free Trade Zone

Fuzhou and Xiamen: the Gateway to the Global Market lies in Fujian

Fujian province - fuzhou - cifnews
Due to Deng Xiaoping’s opening reforms, Chinese cities have shown extraordinary growth over the past decades helping the country to become the second largest economy in the world. Moreover, some of these cities have achieved such an economic development that now Western business hubs have got nothing on these Eastern economic centers. Chengdu, Jinan, Weifang, and Xi’an are just some of the second-tier cities that are quickly developing new industries attracting worldwide enterprises.
Although they are mostly unknown to the Western world, these are the Chinese Tier 2 cities, which are now considered “first-class opportunities” by both Chinese and foreign investors. Boosted by local investments, the growth of these emerging areas and the country as a whole have been influenced by the development of infrastructures that increased access to these regions.

Fujian province - fuzhou and xiamen - cifnews
© Pixabay. Although it is popular for its mountains and nature, the Fujian Province is also home to Chinese internet giants such as Net Dragon, Meitu, and MeetYou.

Fujian Province, with its two emerging Tier 2 cities, Fuzhou and Xiamen, is surely one of the most promising growing local economies of the country.
Located in China’s Southeast, the Province is a top choice tourist destination for Chinese citizens. It is referred to as “八山一水一分田” meaning “eight parts mountain, one part water, and one part fields” but it recently became much more than that.
Thanks to the “Digital Fujian” project started by Xi Jinping when he was Vice President of the Republic, the region now embodies the production prototype of China 2.0 with few heavy industrial zones, spaces for hi-tech, respect for the environment and also great opportunities for foreign investments.

Today, Fujian’s GDP ranks 10th among China’s provinces with an annual growth rate of 8.4%and it is the 6th most digitized region having given birth to many of the country’s most successful startups.


In April 2015, the Pilot Free Trade Zone in the Fujian Province was implemented, and since then cities like Fuzhou and Xiamen could benefit from the possibility of importing goods without the application of customs duties.
Ranked as the 10th Fastest Growing Metropolitan Areas in the world by Brookings Institution in 2015, Fuzhou is the Province’s capital. It is known as the “city with good luck” and it is one of the cities, which developed the most after the reform and opening policy since the late 70s.
During the 80s, Fuzhou was the first city in China where the stored program control – a telecommunication technology – was introduced and it was opened to overseas investments marking both a milestone in the history of telecommunications and the building of a rapid development area.

Fujian province - fuzhou - cifnews
© Unsplash. Fuzhou, Fujian. Many of China’s industry leaders have been funded in Fuzhou such as Net Dragon, one of the first and best-known Fujian tech companies.

Since the Fuzhou High-Tech Industrial Development Zone was launched in 1991, the city entered the first group of state-level hi-tech zones. The 42 square miles area now hosts six industrial parks attracting various kind of resources and influencing the local economy. The area always attracted talents from all over the country, in fact, several industry leaders have been funded in this Zone while many international companies such as LG and Epson set up their factories here.
Today the Fuzhou Zone is among the top 34 of 116 state-level High-Tech Industrial Development Zone, powerfully supporting the most promising startups and actively contributing to the country’s hi-tech development.
In addition, in December 2016, the first offline cross-border business center was opened, covering an area of 7.45 square miles, with a wide variety of stores selling products from many overseas countries. A project that allowed the city to become one of the forerunners in the vast cross-border market.

Fujian province - pay while you buy - cifnews
© 123rf. Recently, supermarkets such as Walmart and Carrefour in Fuzhou have launched the “Pay while Buying” service that allows consumers to scan and pay food directly from the smartphone.

However, although Fuzhou is the administrative capital of the region, Xiamen is the true pearl of this coastal province. Positioned exactly in front of Taiwan and hosting one of the most prestigious universities in all of China, Xiamen has been labeled one of the best Chinese cities for quality of life.
Much of the economic success of this second-tier city comes from its nomination as one of the first four China’s Special Economic Zones that engaged in trade with the outside world, an advantage that still pays off after thirty years.
The city not only hosts the annual China International Fair for Investment and Trade but it is also the headquarter for the country’s best-known sports brands such as Anta360°, and Peak Sport.

As the primary international port of the Province, Xiamen soon became a center of China’s trade, with hundreds of thousands of tons shipped abroad every year.


In 2018, Amazon Global Selling decided to invest in the city and it launched its Xiamen Cross-border E-commerce Park, the first cross-border e-commerce park in South China opened by Amazon, and the second cross-border e-commerce park in the country. This marks the strong intention to promote the export of regional cross-border e-commerce embracing foreign trade.
Today, the Xiamen International Airport welcomes 38 million passengers per year. Moreover, Fujian’s flagship airline, Xiamen Airlines, which links the province with some of the best known international destinations such as Amsterdam, Los Angeles, and Singapore, was the first Chinese air carrier founded entirely with private capital.
So, Xiamen embodies both a strategic commercial route as well as one of the most popular Chinese tourist destinations.

Fujian province - xiamen - cifnews
© Pixabay. Xiamen, Fujian. Historically known as the British tea trade harbor, today Xiamen is one of the busiest centers of China’s trade.

Fuzhou and Xiamen are thus rapidly expanding manufacturing and commercial hubs while many of the world’s leading digital Chinese companies have been founded by people from the Fujian area.
Currently, Fujian ports have recorded cargo traffic of 500 million tons, while Xiamen’s port keeps being one of the most important in the People’s Republic. Then, since the Fujian Free Trade Zone was developed in 2015, the Province quickly became the most important gateway to the entire southeast of China.
So, as more foreign companies do business in China’s second-tier cities, why is Fujian so important?

In China 2.0, the Fujian Province represents an all-dimensional, multilevel and wide-ranging model of openness.


The Province not only is a huge market with the highest growth rates but it represents also a hub for the arrival of foreign goods through developed infrastructures, which facilitate influx into all the areas bordering Fujian.
For this reason, since 2015, international brands with offices in Beijing or Shanghai have opened branches in Xiamen enabling the Province to trade globally. Fujian, in fact, already established economic and commercial relations with 225 new markets that include entire nations.
While the Made in China 2025 plan lays its foundations in ambitious local economies for building a self-sufficient hi-tech leader, Fuzhou and Xiamen are two strategic outposts for the Belt and Road Initiative that will connect this new Chinese hi-tech superpower with the global market.
The two fast-growing cities speeded up their development to become future hubs for Beijing’s new plans of innovation and now they represent an emerging opportunity for both local economy and foreign enterprises.
From a strategic port for the tea trade from Britain to a strategic gateway for the global market, the Fujian Province is probably going to attract much more foreign interest in the near future.

Fujian FTZ brings China closer to the world

Over the last 40 years, China has transformed itself from an agrarian society to the world's second-largest economy thanks to its continuously evolving reform and opening-up policies.
As a commitment to the continuation of deepened reform and opening-up, a total of 12 pilot free trade zones (FTZs) have been established in China since 2013, including in Shanghai, Tianjin, Guangdong Province, and most recently, Hainan Province. Inside these zones, policies related to foreign investment, trade liberalization and facilitation, the currency market and banking are more relaxed.
The China (Fujian) Pilot Free Trade Zone is closest to the Treasure Island of China - Taiwan. It was officially launched in 2015 and integrates three areas – Xiamen, Fuzhou and Pingtan. The Free Trade Zone covers a total of 118 square kilometers and promotes free-flow of goods, capital and services, while giving full play to Taiwan's advantages. 
"Over the past three years, we've used the Fujian FTZ as a platform to help boost cross-Strait communication and integrate development between the Chinese mainland and Taiwan," said Dai Bin, Director of Policies and Regulations Bureau of the Administration of Xiamen Area of China (Fujian) Pilot Free Trade Zone.
Dai further explained that the Fujian FTZ established some new models and mechanisms in the process. For instance, the FTZ used its negative list management system to attract investment and cooperation opportunities from Taiwan's emerging and modern service industries. To strengthen cross-Strait economic ties, the FTZ has also utilized the province's shipping service to import and distribute goods from Taiwan. From the sea to the land, the FTZ has also facilitated the transportation of Taiwan's electronic components via China-Europe freight trains to countries in Central Asia and Europe.
The Fujian FTZ had a total trade volume of 192.93 billion yuan in 2017, a year-on-year increase of 31.6 percent.
To adapt to the increasing import and export volume through Fujian, the Xiamen Area of the Fujian FTZ, which is also an important international seaport on the southeastern coast of China, is developing a smart port model as part of the FTZ's technological innovation. The intelligent port model employs remote control technology on the port's quay cranes. Thanks to this update, quay cranes can now be commanded remotely from a control room. It dramatically enhances the efficiency of crane operations while improving the work environment of operators by reducing safety risks.
"By installing new electronic devices onto our original cranes, including scanners, vehicle tracking systems and ship monitoring systems, and by pinpointing trucks, we have realized the semi-automation of moving containers from the sea to the land," said Chen Shulin, a mechanic operator of Xiamen Container Terminal Group.
Chen said the smart-port technology has reduced his workload by 70 percent and has vastly improved the working environment. "In my ten years as a crane operator, I never thought I would be operating quay cranes so easily. For the foreseeable future, all ports can use this technology in large-scale application," he added.
The Fujian FTZ doesn't only focus on innovation along the coastline. In Fuzhou, 250 kilometers north of Xiamen, a prominent financial innovation feature known as Fuzhou Mawei Fund Town is managing the investment of over 100 billion yuan from around the world to help boost Fujian's real economy. The private equity fund was established in 2017 based on the FTZ's advantages in geography and policymaking. The aim is to serve the real economy by attracting high-quality fund enterprises from around the world to set up investment operations in the Fujian FTZ.
Zhang Zhenmin, Vice General Manager of Fuzhou Mawei Fund Town, said some of their fund products were explicitly planned for Belt and Road programs.
"The famous Quandt Family from Germany is expected to issue a fund with a total value of over five billion yuan, which will be invested primarily in biomedicine and logistics programs under the BRI [Belt and Road Initiative]," Zhang said.
"The town has enjoyed huge profits brought by China's 40 years of reform and opening-up. In the future, we'll continue to utilize the FTZ's geographical and political advantages to be of greater service to the real economy and to contribute our strengths to the country's reform and innovation process." Zhang added.
Relying on Fujian FTZ's streamlined customs procedures, Best Logistics Technology, a Chinese logistics supply chain service provider backed by Alibaba, has set up a local subsidiary in Fuzhou to provide logistics and warehousing services for cross-border e-commerce businesses, which have boomed in Fujian in recent years thanks to the 21st-Century Maritime Silk Road.
"Within the FTZ, we use warehousing software to synchronize with the system used by customs, so that customs can monitor our inventory status in real time. Then we use logistics software to distribute our goods to consumers," said Zhao Yuchen, Assistant Manager of Best Logistics (Fuzhou) Co., Ltd.
As the core area of the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road, Fujian connects the land with the sea through ship-to-freight-train transportation of goods, boosting exports from Taiwan and Southeast Asia to Europe and Central Asia. According to the Department of Commerce in Fujian Province, over 5.79 billion yuan worth of goods have been transported since the Taiwan-Fujian-Europe freight trains were launched in 2015.
"We also import daily consumer goods from countries such as Japan, South Korea, and Australia. These goods include facial masks from South Korea, biscuits from Japan and powdered milk from Australia, to name a few," Zhao said.
The Fujian Pilot Free Trade Zone, along with the other 11 free trade zones in China, works as a testing ground for comprehensive deepening of reform, where measures such as streamlined business registration and easier access to administrative services are tested before being promoted nationwide.
China has reiterated on many occasions that the country will open its door even wider to the world. The steady development of free trade zones will bring about new prospects for reform and opening-up at a higher level. 

Fuzhou unveils raft of business-friendly policies

By ZHONG NAN in Beijing and HU MEIDONG in Fuzhou | China Daily | Updated: 2017-02-09 08:08


Fuzhou unveils raft of business-friendly policies
Tourists row boats on a lake in Fuzhou, the capital of Fujian province, Jan 28, 2017. [Photo/VCG]
Fuzhou, the capital of Fujian province, has issued 10 investment-friendly policies including measures to stimulate the service and high-end industries to promote economic innovation, in a bid to improve its capacity to compete with rivals in other coastal provinces.
These 10 policies offer 49 measures, covering the aspects of overall economic development, high-end recruitment and technology, modern vocational education development, and the development of the internet of things and big data industries.
"The move is crucial to the government to serve the enterprises and promoting development. We can see that the government is determined to accelerate the process of building a new Fuzhou and setting a good example for other coastal cities," said Ni Yuefeng, Fujian's deputy Party chief.
Huang Xuexun, deputy director of Fuzhou's commerce bureau, said these policies can help Fuzhou create a good environment for innovation-driven development and take the lead in attracting domestic and overseas investment.
Under the new policies, companies with headquarters registered in Fuzhou in 2015 or later can be regarded as newly introduced headquarters.
Those companies can be rewarded up to 20 million yuan ($2.9 million) to facilitate their business development.
Besides company headquarters, sales centers and operating centers, as well as research and development centers that have reached certain standards can be regarded as headquarters, and rewarded up to 10 million yuan.
Among the measures to promote technological research and development, apart from a bonus for setting up technology and industrial design centers, companies that have developed the first set of equipment can get an extra bonus up to 2 million yuan.
The policies are also beneficial to absorbing foreign investments. According to Huang, Fuzhou's commerce bureau has a goal of attracting $1.94 billion foreign investments this year.
"The new policies are closely related to our automobile industry. Our company is going to take this opportunity to attract high-end employees, and to increase research productivity, as well as technological innovate ability, in order to better build the automobile brands of Fujian," Huang Chun, chief executive officer of Fujian Motor Industry Group Co, commented.
Zheng Yiran contributed to this story.

The Benefits of doing business in Fujian

The weather isn’t the only reason luring more and more foreign businesses to Xiamen. Sophie Loras spoke to AustCham-Fujian chair, James Rein, about the business opportunities in the region.
Xiamen in Fujian province may not have as many millionaires as Shanghai and Beijing, but it certainly has better weather, brand new infrastructure and boasts one of China’s largest deep-water ports. Located on the southeastern Chinese coast, the city overlooks the Taiwan Strait and prides itself on its mild and subtropical climate as well as its reputation as a logistics hub between China and North-East Asia, Southeast Asia, and Taiwan.

It is for many of these reasons, that James Rein, the current chair of newly formed AustCham-Fujian, chose to base his China ventures out of Xiamen over the bigger cities of Shanghai and Beijing when he first arrived in China in 2004, first with a coffee business and in 2009, his wine distribution business, Oz Cellars.

“Xiamen is a beautiful city, it’s very modern with a high disposable income,” says James.

“People who’ve made good in second and third-tier Chinese cities often end up migrating to Xiamen – there’s a lot of development but no industry on the island, which means a lot of very clear beautiful skies, brand new modern office spaces and a high distribution of income and standard of living amongst its populace.”

Fujian has a long, historical reputation as a global trading hub, with many overseas Chinese having, through history, migrated from the region.
“They are the ones who went out into the world, and they are the ones who brought the world back to China,” says James.

With China connections on both sides of his family – via famous brother-in-law, Australian Foreign Minister Kevin Rudd, and his Hong Kong wife’s mainland connections in Jiangsu and Fujian provinces, China had been on the Rein family radar for a long time.

James’ wife Lina formed the AustCham-Fujian & Xiamen Australian Investment Association in April 2009 to respond to the growing number of Australian and Chinese- Australian businesses setting up business interests in the region.

“When foreigners come to China there is a need to talk to people, learn the tricks of the trade without having to pay for it, and without making mistakes,” says James, who believes many Australians come to China for the first time with blinkers on.

“Many Australians in joint ventures still don’t cross the T’s and dot the ‘I’s when they come to China. They don’t do due diligence as you would in Oz and they get into a lot of trouble,” he says.

AustCham-Fujian’s aim is to better promote the interests’ of Australian business in the region and work in co-operation with the extended AustCham China networks in Shanghai, Hong Kong & Macau, Beijing and South China. It already represents the interests of almost 50 businesses covering a range of industries including manufacturing, property development, investment, international trade, energy and resources, the service sector and logistics.

“In today’s modern world and with electronic business, it is not difficult to get to Shanghai, Beijing, Chengdu. Everything is close,” says James of life in Xiamen.

james_and_lina_rein_slide
Endorsing Xiamen as a multinational business hub are companies such as Dell, ABB, Kodak and Lenovo, who have all set up their headquarters in the coastal city.

James Rein’s advice to companies looking at China, is to not automatically think of Beijing and Shanghai when exploring options.
 
*Pictured right: James and Lina Rein.
“Yes they are very interesting cities and you don’t need a great deal of Chinese language
to live and work there, but for the true China experience you need to get out,” he says.
“It’s an extremely competitive market – whatever the industry – so in China start in the second and third tier cities, establish your name and good volume.”
He says China’s second and third-tiers cities are thirsty for foreign investment.
“They are incredibly welcoming from both a business to business point of view and a government to business point of view.
“Living here in China is a great lifestyle, and if you work hard you can have a very good business as well as opportunities which are 100 times greater than at home.”