View Full Version : ASIAN CITY OF THE FUTURE --- Winner: Hong Kong


ywkywk
January 5th, 2006, 12:19 PM
http://www.fdimagazine.com/
http://www.fdimagazine.com/news/fullstory.php/aid/1489/ASIAN_CITIES___REGIONS_OF_THE_FUTURE_2005_06.html

ASIAN CITIES & REGIONS OF THE FUTURE 2005/06
December 12, 2005


Hong Kong earns the title of Asian city of the future with India and Australia picking up the regional honours. Courtney Fingar reports on who’s doing most to attract foreign direct investment.

ASIAN CITY OF THE FUTURE:

Winner: Hong Kong

A member of the elite group of truly world-class cities on a par with London, New York and Paris, Hong Kong continues to fend off pretenders to its Asian throne. While Sydney is stunning, Singapore is serene and Shanghai is sizzling, there is still only one Hong Kong. Its status of being Chinese, yet at the same time not entirely, allows it to benefit from China’s ascendance without being steamrollered by it.

This is, in turn, the unique advantage that Hong Kong provides to its foreign investors, and it is one not to be underestimated: come and get a piece of the Chinese action, the city says, but from a safe, stable, somewhat familiar base camp. It is an alluring pitch that will ensure Hong Kong’s spot near the top of the FDI league tables for many years to come.

On quality of life, Hong Kong is tough to beat, as the judges in fDi’s first ever Asian Cities & Regions of the Future competition concluded. But, as much fun as it is to play in this exotic, cosmopolitan city, it is primarily a place for doing business – and on that front there is also much to applaud.

In addition to its first place ranking in the quality of life category, the former British colony and now Chinese special administrative region also came top in transport, IT and telecommunications, and FDI potential. It came in second place, after Sydney, in human resources.



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Runner up: Sydney

Although Hong Kong’s lead in fDi’s competition was comfortable, overall runner up Sydney did manage to better it in the human resources category, proving that the Australian city’s primary competitive strength is to be found in sheer people power.

Sydney’s quality of life was deemed second only to Hong Kong’s, impressing our judges with its high-calibre housing and excellent schools, not to mention its array of cultural offerings. Situated on beautiful Sydney Harbour, anchored by the world-famous Sydney Opera House, the capital of New South Wales boasts a culturally diverse and highly educated population, magnificent scenery and an Antipodean friendliness – all of which make it an exceedingly enticing place in which to live and work.

superchan7
January 6th, 2006, 03:15 AM
A very generalized view of HK, but decently accurate. They appear to be very faithful in Hong Kong's continued prominence, actual or perceived.

Manila-X
January 6th, 2006, 03:44 AM
Cool! Beats Tokyo!

superchan7
January 6th, 2006, 10:43 AM
Sydney is not in Asia, but I guess it is in the Asia-Pacific side.

Manila-X
January 6th, 2006, 11:47 AM
Sydney may not be in Asia but it's in the Asia Pacific region ;)

The future looks great for HK :)

rowell_sk
January 6th, 2006, 12:41 PM
Hong Kong is not the Asian City of the future but the rather the Present Asian City!! :hahaha:

Manila-X
January 6th, 2006, 01:07 PM
I think part of the message is Hong Kong will becomes Asia's no.1 city in the future :D

raymond_tung88
January 6th, 2006, 04:06 PM
Hong Kong is Asia's No. 1 City! What happened to Tokyo?

superchan7
January 6th, 2006, 11:28 PM
I guess Tokyo or Sydney wouldn't be as important as HK as targets for FDI. Rather, Tokyo and Sydney might be big SOURCES of investment.

sfgadv02
January 7th, 2006, 12:31 AM
I think part of the message is Hong Kong will becomes Asia's no.1 city in the future :D

I thought it already is? ;)

Terrence
January 7th, 2006, 01:33 AM
Anyway, Keep rocking on.

fatkid1
January 7th, 2006, 03:27 AM
Huh? Where is Tokyo and Seoul in the article? Im surprised that they are not even mentioned!

OREO
January 7th, 2006, 06:21 PM
Huh? Where is Tokyo and Seoul in the article? Im surprised that they are not even mentioned!
BEST ECONOMIC POTENTIAL (CITY)

Winners: Seoul/Macao (tie)

South Korea’s capital city of Seoul bagged 1483 FDI deals last year for a total of $5.6bn, while the country as a whole attracted 3068 deals worth $12.7bn. Aiming to make Seoul the financial hub of northeast Asia, the local government, led by Mayor Myung-bak Lee (fDi’s Personality of the Year 2005), is constructing Seoul International Finance Centre in collaboration with AIG Group, one of the city’s key investors.

Among other FDI successes, Seoul last year attracted the Korea-German Institute of Technology, bringing a $250m investment, and Trump Korea, for $160m, to the city’s Digital Media City. And the economy looks solid: Seoul posted 6.2% GDP growth in 2004.

Seoul shares the win for best economic potential with Macao, which, like Hong Kong, is a special administrative region of China. Macao’s GDP was $10.7bn in 2004 with a growth rate of an astounding 28%. In 2003, the latest year in which information is available, the former Portuguese colony attracted $263m in FDI inflows. According to the World Trade Organisation, Macao operates one of the most open trade and investment regimes in the world.



BEST ECONOMIC POTENTIAL (REGION):

Winner: Chugoku, Japan

With a reported GDP of $232bn and per capita GDP of $30,005, the Japanese region of Chugoku comes first for economic potential among Asian regions. Investors are drawn by the region’s easy access to Tokyo and cluster of supporting industries such as machinery. And the region is putting the money flowing in to good use, such as the Hiroshima Seifu-Shinto development project which is to culminate in a new urban centre of some 100,000 people with facilities that support living, working and enjoying recreation in the foothills of northwestern Hiroshima City.

Art Deco
January 7th, 2006, 07:39 PM
http://www.brandhk.gov.hk/brandhk/graphics/e_name.gif

waikhplkcc
January 8th, 2006, 07:28 AM
the article shows hk's potential.