Tianjin, a megacity that has long been
overshadowed by neighboring Beijing, has finally burst into the
spotlight this year. On Monday, the State Council announced its
endorsement for the city's plan to build itself into an economic
center for northern China.
Earlier this year, the central government announced a package of
preferential policies for the development of the city's Binhai New
Area, which resembles Shanghai's Pudong New Area.
It is obvious that the central government has pinned its hope on
Tianjin in its search for a place that can play a role in the north
like the one Shanghai plays in spearheading growth in east
China.
Being an economic center of China's northern bloc means the
city, which now produces 2 percent of the country's total gross
domestic product, should become a leading driver for growth in the
area stretching from the northeast all the way down to east China's
Shandong Province.
Tianjin has already been thinking big. Its grand plans in
infrastructural construction, financial industry development and
many other areas already bespeak its ambition.
However, Tianjin should focus more on its proximity before a
real take-off can be achieved. It should first make sure its
development fits into the overall situation of its surrounding area
Beijing and Hebei Province. Tianjin's chance of fulfilling
its ambition will be dimmer if it cannot coordinate with the other
two. In fact, development of all three will be limited if they do
not pay attention to making their respective development stories
compatible and complementary to one another.
To that end, the three should cooperate more closely in
developing cross-border infrastructure. The construction of an
inter-city rail between Tianjin and Beijing is coming to the final
stage. That was a good start.
The three should also bring down protective barriers limiting
the flow of goods, people and capital.
Coordination between Beijing and Tianjin has been developing
rather positively in recent years.
Beijing, which used to be a centre for everything in the
country, gave a much more prominent position to services than
manufacturing in its latest version of development plan. That
basically indicates the end of the two cities' bitter decades-long
competition in manufacturing.
Beijing and Tianjin have long been like two prosperous islands
because surrounding Hebei is much more underdeveloped. Now Hebei is
eager to become a link in the new chapter of the tale of two
cities.
The ideal scenario, broadly speaking, is that Tianjin become a
modern manufacturing center, Beijing excels in services, and Hebei
takes over heavy industries moving out of Tianjin and serves as an
upstream producer for firms in Tianjin and Beijing.
However, it is enterprises that will make the business decisions
about their locations. We are not living in the era of planned
economies any longer.
What the governments should do is to create a favorable
environment for business, something the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei area
lacks, compared to the commercially successful areas of Yangtze
River Delta and Pearl River Delta in the south.
(China Daily August 10, 2006)