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Hong Kong will host a meeting of the Apec Business Advisory Council from April 22 to 25. Photo: K. Y. Cheng

Apec Business Advisory Council meeting: Hong Kong to highlight culture, innovation and sustainability to impress delegates

  • Hong Kong is hosting a three-day meeting of the Apec Business Advisory Council next week for the first time since 2015
  • Culture, innovation and sustainability are some of the areas that will be highlighted to show the city is more than just a finance centre, Hong Kong delegate says
Hong Kong’s representatives to the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) business advisory council plan to use the platform to showcase the city as more than just a finance hub.

The city will host a meeting of the Apec Business Advisory Council (ABAC) from April 22 to 25. Some 200 delegates from across the region, as well as China and the United States, will be in Hong Kong for the first time since 2015.

“Besides seeing Hong Kong as a financing centre, we hope that [Apec delegates] will have a different view of the city,” said Nisa Leung, managing partner of Qiming Venture Partners and one of Hong Kong’s representatives to ABAC.

Culture, innovation and sustainability are some of the areas that will be highlighted, she added.

Marjorie Yang (left), chaiman of Esquel Group, and Nisa Leung, managing partner of Qiming Venture Partners, are two of the three Hong Kong representatives to the Apec Business Advisory Council. Photo: Xiaomei Chen

Towards this end, the Hong Kong government announced a raft of innovation and technology initiatives in the budget, with various funding schemes to foster a vibrant and diversified economy, pledging continued support for turning the city into a global tech hub.

The government has committed HK$24 billion (US$3.07 billion) to boost the tech-driven economy and extended the Green and Sustainable Finance Grant Scheme to 2027 in this year’s budget.

Established in 1996, the ABAC is an advisory body which offers advice to economic leaders, ministers and senior government officials from Apec, an intergovernmental organisation intended to promote free trade among its 21 members in the Asia-Pacific region, plus China and the United States.

ABAC members are appointed by their respective economic leaders and represent a range of business sectors, including micro, small and medium-sized enterprises.

The council comprises up to three members of the private sector from each economy, and meets four times a year. The two other ABAC representatives from Hong Kong are Marjorie Yang, chairman of Esquel Group, and Mary Huen Wai-yi, CEO of Standard Chartered Hong Kong.

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“This is a very good opportunity to welcome our good friends to Hong Kong, to let them have a better understanding and to make their own decision about Hong Kong,” said Yang.

“This is a time for the whole of Asia-Pacific to work together to get ourselves out of a hole. The economy is pretty fragile, and if we can work together to push for regional economic development, this would be best.”

The theme of the ABAC this year is “people, business, prosperity”, which aims to guide the council’s work on key issues such as trade and investment facilitation, digital transformation, sustainability and inclusion, according to a spokesperson for the government’s Trade and Industry Department.

“Much work in ABAC resonates with the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region’s policy priorities and in fact, Hong Kong has a lot of good stories to tell,” the spokesperson said.

“In addition to the ABAC meetings, delegates will be given the opportunity to see for themselves the development of our city on various fronts, including logistics, smart healthcare, conservation, innovation and technology development and to exchange views with some of our leaders in business associations and professional bodies.”

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