How Hong Kong can help shape reforms in China’s tech-focused five-year plan

  • China’s latest five-year plan includes heavy investment in technology, innovation and soft power but still leaves key issues such as property reform unaddressed
  • Hong Kong’s commercial legal system preserves property rights secured by independent judges and can provide a template for legal reforms on the mainland

A farmer smokes as some buildings on his land are demolished to make way for the construction of new urban property in Hefei, southeast Anhui province. Land reform remains an important issue on the mainland, one for which Hong Kong’s legal system can provide a template. Photo: Reuters

What can investors expect of China in the next 10 or 15 years? Fortunately, it has laid out a mere 60 key points in its 14th five-year plan. Interestingly, it seemed to focus more on 2035 than 2025 – perhaps the kind of time span of control for which the current leadership feels responsible.

Amid the flurry of language about furthering a prosperous society, investors need to take note of the diamonds in the rough. The key focus must be on what China is really good at and what it can realistically accomplish with its assets of a population of 1.4 billion and the world’s largest middle class of nearly half that size.

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