
During a visit to southern China, the Chinese president urged Guangdong to deepen cooperation with Hong Kong and Macau across technology, infrastructure, and governance to drive regional development
President Xi Jinping has directed Guangdong province to take a leading role in advancing the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area initiative, calling for stronger cooperation with the two special administrative regions in innovation, infrastructure, regulation, and governance.
His comments, delivered during an inspection tour of the province, mark his most detailed remarks on the Greater Bay Area since the Communist Party’s Central Committee outlined priorities for China’s next five-year development plan.
Xi told senior Guangdong officials that developing the Greater Bay Area is both a major responsibility and a rare opportunity, urging them to expand ties with Hong Kong and Macau in areas such as technology, infrastructure connectivity, market regulation, and judicial collaboration.
The Greater Bay Area, which includes Hong Kong, Macau, and nine Guangdong cities, aims to build an integrated economic and innovation hub to rival global metropolitan regions such as Tokyo Bay and the San Francisco Bay Area.
The initiative is a cornerstone of Beijing’s broader effort to modernize China’s southern economy and foster cross-border synergy under the 'one country, two systems' framework.
Xi’s call for deeper alignment follows recent progress in joint Guangdong-Macau projects, including the Hengqin Cooperation Zone, which has advanced cross-border business integration and talent exchanges.
Analysts say the new emphasis underscores Beijing’s intent to solidify Guangdong’s role as the anchor of China’s high-tech and manufacturing transformation.
However, aligning distinct legal and financial systems between the mainland and the two special administrative regions remains a complex challenge.
Xi’s message makes clear that Guangdong’s mission is to turn policy ambitions into practical outcomes, reinforcing the Greater Bay Area as a pivotal driver of national growth.
His comments, delivered during an inspection tour of the province, mark his most detailed remarks on the Greater Bay Area since the Communist Party’s Central Committee outlined priorities for China’s next five-year development plan.
Xi told senior Guangdong officials that developing the Greater Bay Area is both a major responsibility and a rare opportunity, urging them to expand ties with Hong Kong and Macau in areas such as technology, infrastructure connectivity, market regulation, and judicial collaboration.
The Greater Bay Area, which includes Hong Kong, Macau, and nine Guangdong cities, aims to build an integrated economic and innovation hub to rival global metropolitan regions such as Tokyo Bay and the San Francisco Bay Area.
The initiative is a cornerstone of Beijing’s broader effort to modernize China’s southern economy and foster cross-border synergy under the 'one country, two systems' framework.
Xi’s call for deeper alignment follows recent progress in joint Guangdong-Macau projects, including the Hengqin Cooperation Zone, which has advanced cross-border business integration and talent exchanges.
Analysts say the new emphasis underscores Beijing’s intent to solidify Guangdong’s role as the anchor of China’s high-tech and manufacturing transformation.
However, aligning distinct legal and financial systems between the mainland and the two special administrative regions remains a complex challenge.
Xi’s message makes clear that Guangdong’s mission is to turn policy ambitions into practical outcomes, reinforcing the Greater Bay Area as a pivotal driver of national growth.







































