After SOEs, private sector makes a beeline for Xiongan
China Daily by Zhang Yu and Wang Yu, April 28, 2017 Adjust font size:
A worker at a local clothes manufacturing factory in Rongcheng county is also a pop music lover. [Photo by Leo Chan/For China Daily] |
The proposal to set up the Xiongan New Area is attracting not only State-owned enterprises but the private sector, including startups, entrepreneurs and even fresh graduates from across China.
All are eager to set up a base, perhaps even headquarters, in the upcoming innovation hub.
"Xiongan will be a hot spot for startups and entrepreneurs. It's supposed to drive growth through innovation, technology upgrades and a brand new style of development," said Qu Chunwei, a native of Anxin county, Hebei province, who used to work in Tianjin.
His Xixiangyang village is part of Anxin county, one of the three counties that have been included in the new area, the grand plan for which was announced on April 1.
Qu has just returned to Xiongan to test waters for his own e-commerce business, an online payment app.
The app is expected to aggregate or integrate existing platforms such as WeChat Pay, Alipay, and UnionPay seamlessly. "That way, I can make transactions more convenient, because consumers don't have to download all the e-wallet service apps that different shops demand," he said.
"I think it'll have a huge market as more and more Xiongan residents will choose to pay bills with mobile phones in the future," Qu said.
He said the people of the three counties will become denizens of the Xiongan New Area; thus, all are his potential customers.
Two of Qu's childhood friends from Shanxi province have joined him in the venture. They are receiving training at a startup incubator in Anxin county.
Li Jinkui, deputy bureau chief of the Anxin Employment Service Bureau, said he has received many telephone enquiries from
s and migrant workers about the support they might receive if they relocate to the area to either set up business or work.
Li said free training would be provided to those starting up. The employment bureau will come out with more supportive policies to encourage people to start innovation-related businesses in future.
"We used to ask them (natives settled elsewhere) to return, but we were always rebuffed because they thought the small town didn't offer good opportunities," Li said.
Thanks to the Xiongan New Area plan, the situation has changed now.