How Hong Kong can beat Singapore as the launch pad for Chinese firms
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AdvertisementHong Kong economyOpinionHong Kong OpinionRyan Ip,Jason Leung Yeuk-hoandWenhui JiaOpinionHow Hong Kong can beat Singapore as the launch pad for Chinese firmsChinese enterprises going global is this decade’s economic story. Hong Kong needs a system to guide them through each stage of their journey 3-MIN READ3-MIN ListenRyan Ip,Jason Leung Yeuk-hoandWenhui JiaPublished: 5:30am, 19 Apr 2026For a Chinese enterprise venturing overseas, the first decision is often not which market to enter, but which city to launch from. And that choice increasingly narrows to Hong Kong or Singapore. Both offer deep capital markets, common law systems and Chinese-speaking talent. Both want to be the trusted first stop. But a gap has emerged – not in what the two cities offer on paper, but in how they treat the enterprises they both want. What does a “launch pad” deliver? It is where a Chinese enterprise establishes its regional headquarters, deploys capital through offshore accounts, coordinates cross-border supply chains and validates business models before expanding into the Middle East or Southeast Asia. The destination may vary. The need for a trusted guide does not. AdvertisementConsider how Singapore welcomes a newcomer. A tech founder from Shenzhen flies into Changi airport, visits the Economic Development Board (EDB) and within an hour, an officer is orchestrating his entry. The officer lines up exactly which agencies he needs to see. This is the “no wrong door” experience: a single-entry point that holds the entrepreneur’s hand through every step. Enterprises never feel lost.The contrast lies in the details. The EDB’s Professional Services Partner Guide is a road map split into two sections: “Developing in Singapore” and, more importantly, “Expanding into Southeast Asia”. The founder can not only find a local tax adviser but also see which firms can support his move to Bangkok or Jakarta. Singapore is ready for his next move before he has even set foot in the country. AdvertisementIn Hong Kong, the contrast is stark. Last year, the government launched the GoGlobal Task Force, bringing together multiple bureaus, public organisations and professional bodies. On paper, it looks like a war room. In practice, for an entrepreneur in Beijing or Shanghai, it looks like a labyrinth. Which of the many agencies should he contact? The pieces are all on the table, but we have failed to build the machine.AdvertisementSelect VoiceSelect Speed0.8x0.9x1.0x1.1x1.2x1.5x1.75x00:0000:001.00x



