Hong Kong’s key advantages as an IFC remain solid. Our location at the heart of Asia and excellent connectivity are as important as ever, while our low and simple tax rate remains globally competitive. The city has a superb professional services ecosystem with world-class talent including lawyers, advisors and accountants. All of these are underpinned by the strong foundation of the rule of law, with the benefits of a common law system, independent judiciary, clean transparency index and trust in the core system.
In addition, our connections with the Chinese Mainland cannot be replicated by any other city. As the global trade and business landscape evolves, Hong Kong will continue to provide a crucial service as a bridge between the Mainland and the rest of the world. This will involve helping Chinese companies seeking growth in new markets including Southeast Asia, the Middle East and Central Asia, as well as international corporates keen to explore the emerging onshore opportunities.
Hong Kong also benefits from cross-border ties in terms of product innovation. The Greater Bay Area is at the forefront of innovation in financial products and fintech, and China has some of the most innovative payment methods in the world. To date, these have mostly been applied in a closed payment loop, but Hong Kong could be the channel to test a more regional reach. China is also moving forward in Central Bank Digital Currencies, with development of the E-CNY.
Looking ahead, Hong Kong should also look to develop its own product innovations related to areas where the city is already strong. In ESG, for example, Hong Kong is doing well in green finance. But we should also see where we can contribute to the real economy – in energy, recycling, real estate and transport – and ensure that the financial services sector is helping these industries to become sustainability leaders.
In terms of emerging sectors, the Hong Kong government is making significant efforts to promote the city as a virtual assets hub, including through stronger regulations such as the new Virtual Assets Trading Platform licencing regime. This approach has already attracted the attention of the industry globally, and a strong virtual assets capability will provide another string to the city’s bow as a broad-based financial hub.