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A shining light of economic growth

2013-03-29 14:54 China Daily     Web Editor: qindexing comment
The busy expressways of Chengdu, capital of Sichuan province. The city has become a hub for many global financial service companies and manufacturing giants. [Photo/Provided to China Daily]

The busy expressways of Chengdu, capital of Sichuan province. The city has become a hub for many global financial service companies and manufacturing giants. [Photo/Provided to China Daily]

City has become one of the country's centers of international investment

On a nighttime satellite map taken by Google Inc that went viral in China recently, the country's most illuminated parts - a clear sign of economic prosperity - are concentrated in the coastal areas of the Yangtze and Pearl river deltas.

But in China's vast western region, there's another area standing out brightly from the surrounding darkness: the growing Chengdu metropolitan area, which is becoming one of the country's shining examples of economic growth.

Officials at the city's bustling Shuangliu International Airport - the fourth-busiest in China in terms of passenger numbers after Beijing, Guangzhou and Shanghai - are already contemplating the addition of more terminals, shops and runways to cater for ever-growing traffic, even as the paint dries on a new terminal.

Scores of taxis and buses are on hand to whisk arriving passengers to the city center, and along the busy expressway you cannot fail to notice the showrooms selling top automobile brands, and shopping malls full of customers.

Several of the city's glitzy five-star hotels, set up by major chains such as Kempinski and Intercontinental, are now looking to expand further to cater for their growing number of international guests.

The capital of Sichuan province has become a hub for many global financial services firms and manufacturing giants, propelling the previously lesser-known city into one of the country's fastest-growing foreign direct investment locations.

The Tianfu New Area is Chengdu's new focus, which will become an international livable area with modern manufacturing industrial clusters and high-end services. It will become a model area that combines modern industries and modern lifestyle in regional development.

Chengdu was the only interior Chinese city that appeared in the 2011 and 2012 annual Top 10 Best Foreign Investment Strategy Cities in Asia and the Pacific Region published by FDI, the news and foreign direct investment publication owned by The Financial Times.

And in June, it will become the first western Chinese city to host the prestigious Global Fortune Forum, after Shanghai (1999), Hong Kong (2001) and Beijing (2005).

Announcing the city as its choice for the event - which is expected to attract numerous Fortune 500 companies and their top brass, along with government and industry leaders - Andy Serwer, Fortune magazine's managing editor, said: "At a time when China is in the forefront of global business, Chengdu is the ideal location for the next Global Forum."

Situated in the heart of China's rapidly growing western region, Chengdu has become a dynamic magnet for multinational companies, a center for higher education, and a leader in diverse range of industries from automotive and logistics to technology and services, he said.

The organizers have suggested that its success can be best summed up in just three words: "China's New Future".

The cumulative direct investment made by 233 Fortune 500 companies in Chengdu during 2012 was $8.59 billion, a 31 percent growth year-on-year

In 2007, when Bai Fan first arrived in Chengdu on a cold night at Shuangliu airport, things were not as hunky-dory as they are today.

Now the general manager of the Chengdu operations of Symantec Corp - the American global computer security software company, and a Fortune 500 company - he had arrived to research a possible operation in the city.

Fan found himself staring at deserted parking lots with no taxi or bus in sight. There were no foreign faces around, nor were there any signs of expatriate communities.

He says no one at the company's headquarters in California had ever heard of Chengdu, but over the next five years, he and his team worked hard to make Symantec an integral part of the Chengdu High-tech Industrial Development Zone. It has also set up a Security Response Center in Chengdu to support its other centers in Tokyo, Dublin and Culver City in western Los Angeles County, California.

"When you compare these past five years with the 30 years that it took for Symantec to evolve as a global company, it does not seem like a long time," said Bai.

"But we have made tremendous progress in China during these years, with Chengdu becoming the vital cog in that journey."

Surrounding Symantec at the Tianfu Software Park are other multinational corporations such as IBM, Cisco and Dell.

Though wary at first, much as he was, many have decided to set up shop in Chengdu after being convinced by the city's "can do" attitude, he says.

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