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Guangxi deputies just love Beibu Bay
By Zhao Huanxin and Huo Yan (China Daily)
Updated: 2008-03-14 07:16

National lawmakers from the Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region have a pet topic at the ongoing parliamentary session in Beijing: The Beibu Bay Economic Zone, which is slated to become an engine of growth for the country.

Before they left for the annual session of the NPC, the legislators visited the zone's landmarks, and now they are taking every opportunity to publicize it and solicit support.

Ma Biao, chairman of Guangxi, said the Beibu Bay Economic Zone is among the first in the country to pilot "development priority zoning", a stipulation Premier Wen Jiabao made in his work report last week.

In his annual policy address to the country's top legislature, Wen pledged to promote balanced development among different regions.

The government work report is currently open for comment and under deliberation by NPC deputies.

 

A woman and a little girl look at a display of fruit and vegetables at a China-ASEAN Expo in Nanning, Guangxi. Beibu Bay in the autonomous region has become a gateway for exchanges between China and ASEAN members. File photo

Ma, a lawmaker himself, proposed the government work report makes it clear the country will vigorously support the zone's growth, as much as it has done with the Binhai area.

Over the past few years, the central government has endorsed blueprints for developing the western region, revitalizing the northeastern industrial belt, and accelerating growth of the Bohai Sea Rim area in the north. All have turned out to be engines for regional growth.

Designated a national economic zone in mid-January to help narrow regional disparity, Beibu Bay is strategically important to deepening China's cooperation with the Association of the Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), as it is a gateway to its member countries, Ma said.

Chen Wu, a legislator from Nanning, the Guangxi capital, said the central government has offered an aid package including the building of bonded ports and logistics systems.

More support is likely to follow to help the region take off, he said.

As well as trying to attract banks from Guangdong and Vietnam to set up branches in the zone, authorities are planning to set up a Beibu Bay Bank or Guangxi Bank to sustain financial support for the area, Chen said.

He declined to specify a timetable, but said the bank will come into being "soon".

Lian Younong, another NPC deputy, yesterday said the Beibu Bay zone will screen investment projects, by giving the go-ahead only to those that are friendly to the environment and are low energy consumers.

Yu Yuanhui, a national legislator from Wuzhou in Guangxi, said Beibu Bay will provide a good option for manufacturing industries from coastal provinces looking to cut costs by relocating.

"We have relatively less expensive labor and land; and we share the same dialects and customs with them," he said.

Last month in Beijing, the region held a recruitment in a bid to attract leading professionals to the new zone, Li Jinzao, vice-chairman of Guangxi, said.

The region is also about to launch a series of outreach missions. Next month, a trade delegation will visit ASEAN member countries, Hong Kong and Macao, Li said.

Ultimately, the Beibu Bay zone will develop into a base for coastal industries, cooperative ventures in logistics, commerce and trade, and information exchange, between China and ASEAN, he said.

(China Daily 03/14/2008 page6)



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