By John Sudworth BBC News, Shanghai
The sign marks the "Shanghai Pilot Free Trade
Zone"
To look at it you wouldn't think the
future of the world's second largest economy depended on it.
The 10-sq-km block in the eastern suburbs of Shanghai currently contains a
few bonded warehouses, some factories and the odd patch of open scrubland.
But the brand new sign, with the words "Shanghai Pilot Free Trade Zone"
written on a yellow and red steel archway over the access highway, is causing
quite a stir nonetheless.
The plan, which has some powerful backers including China's Prime Minister,
Li Keqiang, is being seen as deeply significant - a sign that the country's
leadership is preparing to test out important, and long awaited, economic
reforms.
Some are already drawing parallels with China's great architect of economic
transformation, Deng Xiaoping.
Continue reading the main story
“Start Quote
The core part is how to redefine the relationship between
the government and the markets”
End
Quote Haibin Zhu Chief China economist at JP Morgan
"There is a lot of resistance towards reform, especially
in the financial sector," Xu Bin, professor of economics and finance at the
China Europe International Business School (CEIBS), tells me.
"So Li Keqiang is learning from Deng Xiaoping. He wants to start from a small
area as a breakthrough, so he picked Shanghai. Symbolically speaking, it is
very, very significant."
'High level openness'
Free trade zones are not new to China.
In fact, the bonded warehouses and the factories mentioned are already part
of the existing Waigaoqiao Free Trade Zone which offers customs benefits to
manufacturers and traders.
But it is the backing of China's State Council, the country's cabinet, with
the recent suspension of certain laws relating to foreign investors that signals
something different is about to take shape in Shanghai.
In fact, four existing bonded zones - Waigaoqiao Free Trade Zone, Waigaoqiao
Free Trade Logistics Park, Yangshan Free Trade Port Area and Pudong Airport Free
Trade Zone - will all find themselves inside the new pilot zone.
Haibin Zhu, chief China economist at JPMorgan, also believes that the new
combined, 28-sq-km area will be about so much more than just tax breaks for
imports and exports.
"The free trade zone is about a more high level openness and reform," he
says.
"So it includes at least four areas. One is the traditional trade openness,
but also on top of that there is investment reform, administrative reform and
financial reform.
"The core part," he adds, "is how to redefine the relationship between the
government and the markets."
The existing Yangshan Free Trade Port Area will be
included in the new zone Opening up
Draft plans have been circulating suggesting that in redefining that
relationship, the government is preparing to step aside, lightening the heavy
regulatory load it places on the financial sector.
Banks inside the zone may be given more freedom over interest rates.
Limits may be lifted on currency exchanges.
And foreign investors may be allowed access to industries that are heavily
protected in the rest of China, like telecommunications.
All of these are steps that liberal reformers, both inside and outside of
China, have long been urging the government to take.
But in reality it has not been easy.
In the face of powerful vested interests the momentum of Deng Xiaoping's
economic opening up, launched 30 years ago, has slowed, even slipped backwards a
little some might argue.
Testing ground
Prof Xu Bin says there is a lot of resistance towards
reform in China, especially in the financial sector
The idea of allowing Chinese people to freely swap their yuan for dollars,
for example, terrifies the state-controlled banks, because large sums of capital
would quickly flow abroad in search of more favourable returns in overseas
wealth products.
And overseas-based speculative investors may send large sums of money in the
other direction with unpredictable, destabilising effect.
But now, if it lives up to its billing, the Chinese leadership will have a
testing ground in the new Shanghai Free Trade Zone.
"If you understand China you know that it is impossible to push a radical
policy at the national level," Prof Xu Bin from CEIBS tells me.
It is worth noting, however, that there are, so far, very few concrete
details about exactly what will, or won't be allowed in the zone, and what the
likely timetable for the roll-out of any reforms might be.
Raised hopes
Perhaps, in practice, it may turn out to be little more than a symbolic
gesture, the appearance of doing something, while simply further postponing the
real and painful country-wide economic reform that so many believe is so
necessary.
Much will depend on how strong a firewall is set up between the zone and
Greater China.
The point is to keep the reforms limited and contained of course, but if
there are no spillover advantages for businesses on the outside then the
experiment may well prove meaningless.
But hopes are being raised.
On one small patch of China it looks like trade, investment and money are all
about to start flowing a bit more freely and that will be welcome news for many
observers.
If it isn't the long awaited great leap forward, it is at least a start.
by bbc