With money from idle land, Nanling transforms from woeful to wealthy
Nanling is a village in Shenzhen well-known these days for its affluence, but it used to be known for the opposite.
Through developing market-oriented industries, the village successfully eliminated poverty and achieved assets of billions of yuan.
About four decades ago, Nanling villagers depended on farming to make a living. They could barely survive, and many people fled. Then, in 1980, a policy establishing a special economic zone in Shenzhen brought them new hope.
Investors swarmed in and factories sprung up. The local government needed some of the villagers' idle land and paid them a large transfer fee for it.
Nanling residents could have taken the money and started new homes elsewhere. Instead, they decided to jump on the local economic development bandwagon and transform their hometown.
They used the money to improve fundamental infrastructure in order to attract manufacturing companies. Since then, hundreds of millions of yuan have been poured into building factories and supporting facilities, covering an area of more than 1 million square meters.
As a result, the village community brought in investments of more than 1 billion yuan and over 50 factories manufacturing famous brands, including ZTE.
The village's income took off and kept steadily growing. Its average annual per capita income now sits at about 150,000 yuan ($21,400), three times Shenzhen's average, and the village community's collective fixed assets have reached 3.5 billion yuan.
However, competition has become fierce since many other village communities joined the fray and began leasing space for factories, offices and residential buildings.
Zhang Yubiao, a native of Nanling who serves as the village's Party chief, said the village needs to find new momentum to maintain sustainable development. Incubating high-tech startups could be the answer, and Shenzhen appears to have the same idea.
"We should keep up with new trends and not be left behind in the city's industrial upgrading," he said.
He explained that Nanling's method is to select, invest and incubate, rather than just rent out offices to any startup team. The village has started to build high-tech office buildings, and last year it set up a fund of 500 million yuan from its collective income to invest in startups in strategic and emerging industries such as life science, 5G telecommunication, chip design and artificial intelligence.
So far, many startups, including an intelligent retail service provider, an underwater robot maker and a life science laboratory, have settled in the high-tech parks in the village, which has been transformed into a modern district.
"From farming and the building of factories to incubating high-tech firms, I hope one day I can bring my fellow villagers to ring the opening bell at a stock exchange," Zhang said.
With sustainable economic growth, the village is also improving living standards. New schools, libraries and other infrastructure have been built up as the village aims to become a green and modern zone.
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(China Daily Global 10/17/2019 page5)