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Building FTZ and Free Trade Port

Island sets its sights on free trade future

chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: 2019-09-02

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An aerial view of the first building phase of the Boao Lecheng International Medical Tourism Pilot Zone in eastern Hainan province. [Photo/Xinhua]

Known as a test bed for many of the country's innovations, the province has been given the green light to further open up

Editor's note: As the People's Republic of China prepares to celebrate its 70th anniversary on Oct 1, China Daily is featuring a series of stories on the role regions have played in the country's development and where they are today.

Since the central government declared Hainan Island a pilot free trade zone in April last year, provincial authorities have taken great strides to try to ensure its success.

The Hainan government has introduced more than 40 measures to promote further opening-up and facilitate a sound international business environment, said Liu Cigui, Party secretary of Hainan.

Under the central government plan, Hainan has been given the tasks of completing important development steps by next year, establishing a basic free trade port system by 2025 and having a world-class free trade port by 2035.

Established in 1988 as the country's largest special economic zone-Hainan, covering an land area of 35,400 square kilometers-has long been at the forefront of China's reform and opening-up.

The island has piloted 100 reforms over the past 31 years, according to the provincial government.

They include the joint-stock system in public companies, the introduction of the "small government, big society" administrative system, and an integrated planning strategy to protect ecological resources while promoting social and economic development.

Despite the reforms, Hainan still lags behind developed countries and regions, Liu said.

Future reforms should give full play to the role of the market in allocating resources, promoting liberalization of investment and trade, the free flow of funds and people, and accelerate the development of a unified market environment.

Liu said Hainan has made institutional reform a central plank of high-quality development of the Hainan FTZ, the nation's 12th such zone and 32 times the size of Hong Kong.

Sun Dahai, deputy secretary-general of the Communist Party of China Hainan Provincial Committee, said to date 42"institutional innovations" have "proven original, effective and able to be copied by other areas in the country".

One cited by the State Council as a model reform is the simplification and speeding up of business registration. Using a smartphone, registration can be completed in about 30 minutes with no need to go to commercial registration offices.

Health reforms

Reforms at the Boao Lecheng International Medical Tourism Pilot Zone in eastern Hainan are helping to attract the latest technology, equipment, medicine and top doctors from home and abroad.

The progress has meant many local people with serious illnesses no longer have to travel elsewhere for treatment, according to pilot zone officials.

Wang Meimei said her 9-year-old son's hearing difficulties had dramatically improved after receiving a cochlear implant from the Boao Super Hospital recently.

The hospital is one of eight in the pilot medical tourism zone that offers treatments raging from the removal of tumors to plastic surgery.

Boao Super Hospital has attracted 19 academicians and their teams to sign up.

Since setting up in March last year, they have achieved 10 landmarks in the medical field.

Lin Ping, an official with the zone, said it had attracted 24 foreign medical technology companies and 36 overseas doctors from countries including the United States, Germany, Japan and South Korea. A total of 55,000 patients have been treated at hospitals in the zone since last year.

Li Lanjuan, president of the Boao Super Hospital, said due to the preferential policies and advanced medical technology, equipment and medicine from overseas, the hospital was "three to five years ahead of other places in the country".

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