
Business Park Consultancy:
Examining Feasibility and Setting Priorities
A Discussion Paper by
the Hong Kong Coalition of Service Industries
March 1998
¡@
Background
In his policy address last
October, the Chief Executive of the SAR Mr Tung Chee Hwa announced that the government
would be commissioning a study into the need for and feasibility of a Business Park for
Hong Kong.
Before investigating the
detailed feasibility of the Business Park, it is important to first establish the need for
such a provision. The first stage of the consultancy study should therefore be undertaken
with the objective of consulting with interested parties both within Government and the
private sector on the broad criteria that should be applied in order to measure
needs and priorities for potential users of Business Park(s) in Hong Kong. The output
of such an investigation should enable the Administration to then frame appropriate Terms
of Reference for the substantive project. If this is not done, the Study will lack ¡§edge¡¨ and there is a
danger that it may run off the rails.
Whilst not prejudging the
outcome of any investigation, there would appear to us to be a prima facie case for a
business park to meet the needs of the service industries. The number of parties
interested in securing the privilege of premises on a Business Park is potentially huge.
In particular, there is considerable interest from the group of service industries that
can loosely be described as ¡§distribution-related¡¨. There are companies wanting to establish regional
logistic and distribution centres; local distributors will demonstrate their needs on
grounds of both economy and health; while freight forwarders may want a centralised
facility to enhance their operations.
The new Business Park(s),
if justified, will be an instrument of Government policy, as was the case for the Hong
Kong Industrial Estates Corporation (HKIEC) when this was established. Thus the policy
objective for the Business Park(s) need to be firmly defined in advance in order to
guarantee the Study¡¦s success.
As a form of ¡§brainstorming¡¨ rather than giving
fixed views, the following are some of the issues which in our view the preliminary study
should cover.
¡@
¡@
Suggestions on issues to
be considered
- The HKIEC, one surmises, was established to
help stem the flow of manufacturing from Hong Kong into China. Some would argue that more
recent allocations of land have been misplaced. One could now set out a convincing case
that businesses having needs that can more satisfactorily be met by relocating some or all
of their business activities across the border should not have a high priority for
benefiting from SAR investment subsidies in Business Park(s). More specifically,
priorities could be more appropriately allocated to businesses having an inherent need
based upon (for example) serving the SAR market, or needing to tap into the SAR¡¦s infrastructure in
relation to import/export markets.
- How much weight should be given to economic
elements such as:
- employment generation
- employment preservation
- capital investment generation/preservation
- regional competitiveness
- international competitiveness
- local consumer advantage
- the promotion of cross-border trade in
goods and services (in contrast to procuring these from elsewhere)?
- How can a firm line be drawn between the
objective of the Study and the objectives of existing public bodies such as:
- HKIEC
- Port Development Board
- Buildings Department
& Lands Department
- Urban & Regional
Councils
- Land Development
Corporation
- The Study should have definitive guidelines
on such matters, since the above bodies (and potentially others) will have existing policy
guidelines that should be taken either as fixed or subject to review. In the former case,
the guidelines should be reflected in the Terms of Reference. If the latter were the case,
the time-frame for the Study might perhaps be too short.
- Should environmental elements, perhaps in
their wider sense, be included in the assessment, and if so, according to what criteria?
- Should specific types of business, as a
matter of Government policy, be excluded from the Study?
- Synergies will be available from
co-location of businesses and much benefit can also be derived from various service-sector
industries having unique facilities together in a Business Park environment. How should
such benefits be measured and prioritised:
- Economic (and environmental) value added?
- Should land cost (lease or rental) be
excluded, or included in this calculation?
- How should existing co-location be
accounted for (e.g. light goods export industry, almost exclusively located in Tsim Sha
Tsui)?
- The current availability of facilities at
commercial rents?
- Should the Study include or exclude the
implications for land sales/usage conversion revenue for the SAR Government? This may be a
significant factor.
- To what extent should the Study address the
implications for businesses which have more recently invested in new facilities under the
current regime, and who would potentially be disadvantaged in comparison to later
investors in the Business Park(s)?
- Should the Study address the likely
resultant impacts upon areas where existing facilities are vacated once businesses have
relocated to Park(s)? This is not an issue to be taken lightly, since a partial
elimination of business use (industrial or commercial) does not easily lead to full zoning
conversion (c.f. Kwai Chung, with an uneasy mix of large-scale industry, light industry,
commercial and residential property uses). This factor may have widespread implications,
and the assessment of their impact needs to be defined at some stage.
¡@
¡@
