레이블이 Hong Kong인 게시물을 표시합니다. 모든 게시물 표시
레이블이 Hong Kong인 게시물을 표시합니다. 모든 게시물 표시

2014년 12월 20일 토요일

[CCTV] Chinese Mainland, HK and Macao sign Trade Liberalisation Deals

Chinese mainland, HK and Macao sign trade liberalization deals
China’s Ministry of Commerce signed its first trade liberalization deals Thursday, with the‪#‎HongKong‬ SAR and ‪#‎Macao‬ SAR governments.
Drafted under the framework of CEPA (Closer Economic Partnership Agreement), the new deal opens 153 of Guangdong Province’s 160 service industry subsectors to HK and Macao’s service providers.
The deals also offer ‘national treatment’ to the two SARs in 58 subsectors, which means that any preferential treatment offered by the mainland to other countries and regions that is better than CEPA’s terms, those will automatically extend to HK and Macao as well.
Analysts say the agreements will further eliminate the barriers between the three regions, and will especially boost deeper cooperation between HK’s service industry and the mainland’s manufacturing industry.
Moreover, the agreement will encourage more citizens from HK and Macao to start their businesses in mainland. According to Zhang Guangnan, professor from Sun Yat-sen University, the deals will especially benefit Macao, as it will reduce the SAR’s reliance on gaming industry and promote industry diversification there.
“Macao is among the world’s top leisure centers. Based on the agreement, Macao could further expand its pillar industries to conferences and exhibitions with the Chinese mainland. That will help to boost the diversification of its industries,” said Zhang Guangnan.

2013년 12월 5일 목요일

[Smartplanet] Top 10 best and worst cities to live

A new ranking measures city characteristics like sprawl, green space, and pollution to determine livability.


The Economist Intelligence Unit -- the city rankings specialists -- has a new list claiming the best cities to live. And they have an interesting new livability metrics to judge the world's cities.
The rankings combined EIU's popular "Liveability Index" with a new measure that focuses on spatial characteristics. The "Spatially Adjusted Livability Index" takes into account seven characteristics:
Sprawl: using the "estimated relation between the metropolitan region’s surface and its total population, the overall coherence of the metropolitan form and an estimate of the extent of low density urban fabric."
Green space: based on "the distribution of green spaces within the metropolitan region, the number of local green spaces and the number of metropolitan scale green spaces."
Natural assets: using "Google Earth satellite imagery and information from Open Street Map to assign points to cities based on the natural features" and the number of protected areas around a city center.
Cultural assets: counting the number of UNESCO World Heritage Sites in the vicinity of the cities.
Connectivity: calculating how many cities can be reached by plane from a city and the average number of flights from that city.
Isolation: based on the number of large cities near a city.
Pollution: using World Health Organisation (WHO)’s Air Pollution in Cities database to calculate air quality with a concentration of particulate matter of over 10 micrometres.
Using these criteria here are the 10 best cities to live in:
  1. Hong Kong
  2. Amsterdam
  3. Osaka
  4. Paris
  5. Sydney
  6. Stockholm
  7. Berlin
  8. Toronto
  9. Munich
  10. Tokyo
And the 10 worst:
  1. Tehran
  2. Nairobi
  3. Lusaka
  4. Phnom Penh
  5. Karachi
  6. Dakar
  7. Abidjan
  8. Dhaka
  9. Lagos
  10. Harare

The top ranked city in the U.S. was Washington, D.C. (14), followed by Chicago (15), New York (16), Los Angeles (17), and San Francisco (18).
Of course, no rankings or measurements are perfect, and this one is no exception. Only 70 of the cities on the original EIU "Liveability Index" had their spatial characterists analyzed, for example.
Nonetheless, spatial characteristics are important -- if sometimes overlooked -- aspects of livability. And it's not just about how many parks cities have. Where cities are located and how they grow can have major impacts on the economy, health and wellness of cities and their inhabitants.
UPDATE: Anthony Ilukwe from Buzzdata points out that this ranking was part of a contest in which EIU partnered with Buzzdata to crowdsource a metric for the best city ranking above. As Ilukwe explained in an email to me, "The best city was determined as a result of an experiment in which the EIU opened their city ranking and cost of living data to the world (public) and invited people to compile a new city index." The winner of the contest was Filippo Lovato, from Italy, who came up with the Spatially Adjusted Livability Index.
Photo: Flickr/xopherlance

Tyler Falk

Contributing Editor
Tyler Falk freelance journalist based in Washington, D.C. Previously, he was with Smart Growth America and Grist. He holds a degree from Goshen College. Follow him on Twitter. Disclosure