China’s got a blueprint for its industrial wastelands

Cities such as Shenyang are rolling out incentives to switch to advanced manufacturing

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The hulking, brown-brick industrial plants lining the roads were once the backbone of Shenyang city. Today, they are outdated and unwanted, and the region is one of the Chinese economy’s most troubled.

A short drive away, however, a newly-minted industrial park offers reasons for optimism. Liu Qi, chairman of PQI Industrial Technology Group, opened an $18 million (Dh66 million) factory there last year, equipped with whirring robots that pound out car parts for the German automaker BMW.

The factory, and the more than 200 jobs it has created, is just one small part of a grand plan led by China’s government to rejuvenate Shenyang, a city of 8 million, by replacing stumbling state industries with modern manufacturing and start-up companies. “When things hit bottom, there is an opportunity for things to go up,” Liu said.

Whether the rejuvenation happens will shape not only the future of Shenyang but also, potentially, the entire Chinese economy. The city’s woes represent a broader problem: There are too many unproductive, debt-laden factories that are losing business as China’s growth slows. If Beijing fails to overhaul those crumbling industries and revive the communities that rely on them, Shenyang and the surrounding area — and other similar regions — could weigh heavily on the country’s economic progress.

The story of Shenyang will probably sound familiar in places such as Midwestern towns in the US that have seen important industries decline or depart. During China’s go-go years, when factories, roads and housing were constructed with wild abandon, the city’s heavy industrial companies, many of them owned by the state, boomed.

A rush of wealth was ploughed into new apartment towers and shopping malls in Shenyang. The city still has an industrial air, with central office blocks designed in a near-uniform drab brown, matching its factory complexes.

But as China’s investment binge fizzled, Shenyang and its factories sputtered. Last year, the economy of the northeastern province of Liaoning, of which Shenyang is the capital, shrank 2.5 per cent — a shocking figure in a country accustomed to seemingly endless expansion. Other major cities have sped ahead of Shenyang in the development of the high-tech and service companies expected to propel China’s future growth.

The entire northeast of the country, where much heavy industry has been concentrated, runs the risk of being left badly behind. The decay of this factory zone has left Beijing with a similar knotty problem to the one that has plagued Washington for decades: how to resurrect down-on-their-luck areas.

In the US, President Donald Trump plans to streamline regulation, cut corporate taxes and renegotiate trade pacts to bring factory jobs back to troubled towns.

Around the world, state intervention to attempt to stimulate a domestic economy is not unusual. But officials in China, as is often the case, have adopted a much more hands-on approach. With lavish incentives and initiatives, they are trying to attract investment to the region and to upgrade its industries.

Shenyang is a crucial test case. The city has set up a $7 million fund to support high-tech industries, promised a $30,000 bonus for some technology firms, and offered to pare the corporate tax rate for companies in favoured sectors.

Liu’s factory opened inside the China-Germany Equipment Manufacturing Industrial Park, introduced in late 2015 to try to attract advanced production in robotics, automotive components and other industrial sectors. The government offers a 30 per cent discount on land, streamlined regulations and other perks for companies that set up in the facility. PQI is now negotiating for rent breaks and cheap land for his current factory, as well as for future investments.

Working example

Zhang Yanzan, the park’s deputy director, says since its opening, more than 140 factories have been completed or are under way, hauling in a total investment of nearly $6 billion. “We hope this park can be an example for other areas,” he said.

The city authorities are also striving to persuade local college graduates to start companies in Shenyang by offering subsidies. The effort is focused on a shopping arcade of fast-food restaurants and computer outlets that had Start-Up and Innovation Street added to its name in 2015.

On the top floor of one office tower in the area is an incubator called Phoenix Valley, founded by two Shenyang-born businessmen. One room is a cafe, where budding entrepreneurs swap tips over cappuccinos and browse shelves of books on business building. Next door, desks can be rented in a communal office for 300 yuan (Dh165) a month. The incubator has more than 100 members and will soon open a second office in the city.

“The development in Shenyang is not as fast as in Beijing and Shenzhen, but if start-ups are really good at what they do, they will have more potential to grow,” said Hong Qifan, who founded Phoenix Valley.

Shenyang’s taxpayers are contributing to the effort. Some entrepreneurs are eligible for subsidised housing, with rent costing the equivalent of $30 a month. This year, Phoenix Valley received a cash handout from the central and municipal governments worth more than $70,000. Local officials also helped the incubator’s founders negotiate a below-market rent for its headquarters.

Still, Innovation Street pales in comparison to the efforts in hot spots such as Beijing and Hangzhou, a city in the east, which have not only higher salaries, but also entire neighbourhoods of start-up centers. And the residents of Phoenix Valley complain that venture capital and talent are scarce in Shenyang.

Other initiatives in the city seem to be generating more buzz than business. In April, Shenyang opened a branch of the provincial free-trade zone, in which companies can benefit from reduced red-tape, discounted land and other advantages. At its offices, in the corner of a gargantuan, columned hall worthy of a Star Trek set, dozens of businesspeople and their agents lined up to register companies.

But the zone’s rules do not require these businesspeople to start any actual operations there. Tian Jiawei, a manager at an agricultural company based near Shenyang, registered an export-import firm, but has no plans to open an office or hire workers.

“I’m not sure what kind of tax break I might enjoy, but I didn’t want to miss the opportunity,” he said.

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