IDEAS Insights EY Strategic Growth Forum (Shanghai) | Page 3

The Strategic Growth Forum (SGF) did not formally commence until the 11th, but having arrived on the 10th, the opportunity to join the pre-conference trade delegation meeting was too great to pass on. Here, we heard from representatives from the Hangzhou, Ningbo, Shandong and Guangdong bureaus of commerce, each of whom pitched the merits of investing, working and visiting their provinces to a small room of government members, investors and business people from around the planet. In the afternoon, our delegation was bused out to the Shanghai International Automobile City Group, a high-tech electric vehicle plant. We were walked through their Public Data Collection, Monitoring & Evaluation Centre, which displayed a large, wall-sized interactive panel of all electric vehicle hubs in the city, and learnt about the business model underpinning this new industry: the price model here is partly derived from a calculation of savings made per minute. Following this, we visited the adjoining Test-Ride and Drive Centre. The red Tesla was particularly fun! The conference kicked off formally the following morning, with a networking breakfast and subsequently energetic keynote from Daniel Zhang, Chief Executive of Alibaba. Mr Zhang explained that Alibaba’s main driver is the company’s aim to serve 2 billion global customers. He described this as being part of a far broader trend of ‘consumption upgrading’ occurring in societies and cultures everywhere. The next panel dovetailed well with this, entitled ‘China’s bold pursuit of innovation’. A major takeaway here was the suggestion that 65% of children today will ultimately have jobs that do not currently exist. The Chinese government is improving the capability of banks to support start-ups, by reducing capital requirements. Incredibly, $1.4 trillion was invested in R&D in 2015, of which only 30% came from the government – 70% was derived from businesses. Perhaps unsurprisingly, IPO valuations in Asia are now 37% higher than in Hong Kong (HK). The day concluded with a snapshot of EY’s ‘Asia-Pacific Entrepreneurial Winning Women’, an amazing set of entrepreneurs supported by EY, many of whom were extraordinarily inspirational.