Shanghai envisages financial centre with capped population
[BEIJING] China's largest metropolis Shanghai has released a plan for its future through to 2040 that leaves virtually no room for population growth.
In a draft development plan released Tuesday, the city's authorities aim for the financial industry to make up about one fifth of local economic output. That's up from 16.2 per cent last year, based on data from the city's statistics bureau. The plan will cap the permanent population at about 25 million, versus 24.2 million in 2015.
Authorities plan to raise the percentage of newly-built small and medium-sized apartments and rental housing in the city, and limit the supply of land. It envisages handling 160 million to 180 million airport passengers each year.
Shanghai faces the challenge of lacklustre growth as traditional drivers including land sales, foreign investment and exports lose steam, the draft said. Innovative industries aren't stable enough to support expansion, and land use is "seriously inefficient," it said.
The draft plan is open for public input until Sept 21.
BLOOMBERG
KEYWORDS IN THIS ARTICLE
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
International
South Korea’s export growth picks up, supporting outlook
China says Hamas and Fatah express will for reconciliation
US consumer confidence at lowest level since 2022
Record gold prices boost recycling: WGC
Malaysian fast food operator QSR shelves IPO plans amid boycott campaign: sources
WHO warns of bird flu risk spreading to cows outside US