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Hong Kong Beats Netherlands and U.S. as Best Place for Business
Hong Kong (HSI), a bastion of free-market policies and low corporate taxes as well as the gateway to the world’s most populous nation, is the best place to do business, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
The city of about 7 million people secured top position in a new index based on six criteria including the degree of economic integration and labor costs. The Netherlands, the U.S., the U.K. and Australia occupied the next four leading slots.
The ranking marks a victory for Hong Kong 15 years after the city’s return to Chinese sovereignty stoked concern that its role as an international financial hub would slide. General Electric Co. has established operations there, Gap Inc. is among the retailers drawn by the 28 million Chinese tourists who pass through it and HSBC Holdings Plc is one of the financial titans listed on its stock exchange.
“Hong Kong is a gateway to China, it has competitive tax rates and that makes it one of the natural choices for companies to set up their Asian headquarters,” said Tomo Kinoshita, deputy head of Asia economics research at Nomura Holdings Inc. who has worked in the city for five years. “It makes sense for companies that want to be close to China as well as the rest of Asia to use Hong Kong as their base.”
Bloomberg Rankings measured 160 markets on a scale of zero to 100 percent based on six factors. These are the costs of setting up business, hiring and moving goods; the degree of economic integration; less tangible costs such as inflation and corruption; and the readiness of the local consumer base, a category that includes the size of the middle class, household consumption and gross domestic product per person.
Hong Kong (HSI), a bastion of free-market policies and low corporate taxes as well as the gateway to the world’s most populous nation, is the best place to do business, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
The city of about 7 million people secured top position in a new index based on six criteria including the degree of economic integration and labor costs. The Netherlands, the U.S., the U.K. and Australia occupied the next four leading slots.
The ranking marks a victory for Hong Kong 15 years after the city’s return to Chinese sovereignty stoked concern that its role as an international financial hub would slide. General Electric Co. has established operations there, Gap Inc. is among the retailers drawn by the 28 million Chinese tourists who pass through it and HSBC Holdings Plc is one of the financial titans listed on its stock exchange.
“Hong Kong is a gateway to China, it has competitive tax rates and that makes it one of the natural choices for companies to set up their Asian headquarters,” said Tomo Kinoshita, deputy head of Asia economics research at Nomura Holdings Inc. who has worked in the city for five years. “It makes sense for companies that want to be close to China as well as the rest of Asia to use Hong Kong as their base.”
Bloomberg Rankings measured 160 markets on a scale of zero to 100 percent based on six factors. These are the costs of setting up business, hiring and moving goods; the degree of economic integration; less tangible costs such as inflation and corruption; and the readiness of the local consumer base, a category that includes the size of the middle class, household consumption and gross domestic product per person.