From: Dr. David K. Kahaner US Office of Naval Research Asia (From outside US):  23-17, 7-chome, Roppongi, Minato-ku, Tokyo 106 Japan (From within  US):  Unit 45002, APO AP 96337-0007  Tel: +81 3 3401-8924, Fax: +81 3 3403-9670  Email: kahaner@cs.titech.ac.jpRe: Hong Kong Tech Center05/24/94 (MM/DD/YY)This file is named "hk-tc.94"ABSTRACT. Hong Kong's Industrial Technology Center as a incubation fortechnology start-ups.Conceived in 1988 by the Hong Kong government, the Hong Kong IndustrialTechnology Center, (HKITCC, but usually referred to at the HK TechCenter) was designed to facilitate the promotion of technologyinnovation in Hong Kong by nurturing, building and championing oftech-based businesses. Hong Kong feels that it can achieve success inhigh tech, it also recognizes that the approach must be different fromother Asian countries such as Singapore or Taiwan. It is clear that HongKongers believe that their own talents in capital investment,commercialization and design and development of marketable products willbe complemented by human skill from China as a manufacturing base, andthat China now holds the key to Hong Kong's success as a broker ofrelevant technologies.The tech center is planned to ultimately accommodate up to 30 startups;five are operating currently; one, Sintek Semiconductors has the onlysemi-automatic micromanipulating probing station capable of supporting8inch wafers, in Hong Kong.  Special rental rates of 50%, 75%, and 87.5%of market rental rates are provided for a startup's first three years.There are also established companies that are encouraged to situate inand around the Tech Center, which is adjacent to the Hong KongProductivity Council and City Polytechnic. Silicon Graphics will becomethe Tech Center's first multinational tenant when it arrives in October,leasing 13,000 square feet. Another tenant is Centro, a successful HongKong firm that specializes in multi media and computer generated visualswith a staff of 100. Centro produced a strikingly beautiful computeranimation of Hong Kong's planned new airport (Flight Path to theFuture). This was awarded the 1993 Gold Mercury Award for outstandingachievement in professional communications by the International Academyof Commercial Arts and Sciences.Further information on the HK Tech Center can be obtained from the following.         Hong Kong Industrial Technology Center Corporation         4 D01., HKPC Building         78 Tat Chee Avenue         Kowloon, Hong Kong          Tel: +852 788=5400; Fax: +852 788-5584Relevant to the future of Hong Kong, Dr R.Ch'ien recently gave a speechat the Hong Kong Economic Association's annual dinner. Ch'ien is on theHong Kong Governor's Executive Council, and is also the CEO of the TechCenter Corporation.  His remarks are presented below.             Do We Still Love Laissez Faire?     Hong Kong's New Industrial Policy in the 90's             Speech by Dr. Raymond Ch'ien            Hong Kong Economic Association             Annual Dinner  8 March 1994I did not do any research for this talk. So I cannot pin point when, howand why the phrase "laissez faire" or its rather inane latter daysuccessor "positive non-interventionism" entered Hong Kong's publicaffairs vocabulary. I can say with conviction however, that for as faras I can remember, Hong Kong has not practiced "laissez faire".More than half of our population live in government provided housing andthe Hong Kong dollar is pegged to the US dollar. To a Hong Konger, thereare few things more important than housing and money, which are by nomeans public goods. The government has chosen to intervene massively inthese markets. Why is it then the myth of "laissez faire" persists? Itis because Hong Kong government, to its credit, has always interpretedmarket failure conservatively.In other words, the government does not intervene unless there is a cleardemonstration of market failure with unfavorably wide spread and longterm ramifications. If I remember correctly, the Hong Kong government gotinto the housing business in the 1950s in response to a rapid swellingof refugee population, which, with few savings, was living in hazardoussqualor. It would have taken years for these people to accumulate enoughsavings to obtain passable housing under the market system. In themeantime, repeats of accidents such as the Shek Kip Mei fire threatenedto turn thousands into the streets, jeopardizing social stability. Thegovernment intervened in a timely and massive manner. Thirty years on,the fact that we are debating the "affluent tenant" or double rentpolicy shows, given time, Hong Kong's free market system is indeedeffective in helping people generate wealth. However, back then, if thegovernment had not intervened, chaos could have ensued.The story of the peg [HK to US $] is more fresh in our memory. At thetime of its implementation in 1984, political factors overwhelmedeconomic factors in the exchange market. Holders of Hong Kong dollarsrequired excessive risk premiums and the market had ceased to functionnormally. As an aside, the market mechanism, efficient and powerfulthough it may be, is in some respects quite fragile.  It goes awry underexcessive environmental volatility. Regardless of one's politicalleaning, one must agree that stability is a necessary condition forprosperity, but I hasten to add, not a sufficient condition.Now that I have made the argument that Hong Kong Government's economicpolicy is not so much guided by the principle of "laissez faire" as bythe health of the market mechanism, the question becomes, to what extentdoes the government need to intervene to ensure a robust future for HongKong's industrial sector?Some of you may ask, does Hong Kong need an industrial future?  Afterall, manufacturing employment has declined steadily since 1980 from over1.5 million to just over half a million and manufacturing as a percentageof GDP has declined from around 24 percent to 13 percent during the sameperiod. To surmise from these statistics that industrial activity islosing its relative importance to Hong Kong is akin to treating a threedimensional object as being two dimensional.Lets take a look at the third dimension. Hong Kong's unified stockexchange came into being in 1986. Between the end of 1986 and 1992, thelast year for which compiled statistics are available, the marketcapitalization of industrial stocks grew by some 300 percent, that isfourfold. In comparison, the capitalization of all stocks grew by about200 percent. Stock market statistics do not show a complete picture ofgeneral economic performance. Nonetheless, as a rough approximation, Iwould venture that the rate of growth of industrial activity generatedwealth has significantly outpaced that of other sectors, roughly 15percent versus 10 percent, on an annualized basis after adjusting forinflation, the preponderance of property related wealth in Hong Kongnotwithstanding.I am quite sure future historians of China's late 20th century economictake off will attribute a leading role to Hong Kong industrialists whostarted the whole process by setting up manufacturing plants in thePearl River Delta, beginning in the early 1980s. Will Hong Kongindustrialists continue to enjoy a seat at the head of the table in the21st century? That, I think, will depend to a large extent on howsuccessfully they can embody technology in their activities.There is a wide and well established body of economic literatureexamining sources of economic growth. In general, the three key factorsof growth are enhanced capital, labor and technical progress. One doesnot have to be an econometrician to conclude that from the time SouthChina opened its gates to Hong Kong capital and entrepreneurial acumen,labor accretion has been our main source of growth. At the latest countthere were more than four million mainlanders working across the borderfor Hong Kong companies. While this may continue for a number of years,there are other large, cheaper sources of labor now flowing into theglobal labor pool. Due to reasons such as cultural differences andlanguage barriers, the costs of accessing these labor sources for HongKong industrialists can be significantly higher than tapping the SouthChina pool.Most time series studies of post second world war economic growth inadvanced countries identify technical progress as by quite a wide marginthe main source of economic growth, followed by capital and then labor.Ask any bright technocrat in Guangdong, Shanghai or Tianjin to describehis vision of his region's economic future, and you can bet technologywill be mentioned within the first minute. Which brings us finally tothe topical question: can we count on market forces alone to make HongKong industrialists invest sufficiently in technology?I have served on the board of the Hong Kong Industrial Technology CentreCorporation for some time. It is a government owned enterprise set up toincubate infant companies adopting either new or innovative technologyand to provide rental space to more financially mature but nonethelesssmall- to medium sized "high-technology" companies. Before I becameinvolved with the Tech Centre, I had thought Hong Kong's long termeconomic destiny rested mainly with financial services, marketing anddistribution.Today, I strongly believe that in the next few decades, Hong Kong standsa better chance than any other place in the world of repeating theSilicon Valley story.All the right ingredients are in place. There has been  a mushroomingof  knowledge-  or  technology-based entrepreneurial initiatives in HongKong. We see more and more well educated young Hong Kong people leavingteaching and research posts at universities and technology oriented jobsin large firms to start up their own businesses. Typically, they arearmed with limited personal savings and one bright idea. Importantly,many of them have good knowledge of the talents available in the variouspockets of scientific and engineering excellence in China, where theirbright ideas can be complemented or leveraged at a relatively low price.If a bright idea indeed gets to the manufacturing stage, manufacturingoverheads, the bane of young companies elsewhere, are low in China.Through the efforts of organizations such as the Tech Centre and itsmore established cousin the Hong Kong Productivity Council, the HongKong community or tax payers are in fact creating a sub-environment thatis nurturing to technology-based entrepreneurial endeavors. Thisdoesn't mean we are necessarily picking sure winners. Probably, mostof these start-ups won't make it. However, even the efforts of thosethat fail will have generated meaningful external economies by enhancingthe body of knowledge and skill level in society.In general, there are a few factors which may inhibit the supply ofprivate goods in an otherwise normally functioning market economy.  Theyare: very large scale capital requirements relative to the financialresources available to the person who possesses the enabling technologyor know-how; long pay-back horizon; and high risk premium.Our new airport is a good example. Theoretically, it could be built withprivate capital, but it would require a watertight government guarantee.In this case, it is better for the government to foot the bill and forthe community to enjoy the substantial future economic rents, ratherthan private investors who would have borne no commercial risk.New technology based firms face similar difficulties albeit to a lesserdegree. I am not advocating that the Hong Kong Government should followthe Taiwan example and fund the start-Up of a US$500 million waferfabrication plant, even though I was informed by the management ofTaiwan Semi Conductor Manufacturing Corporation on a recent visit to itsfuturistic plant in Hsinchu Science Based Industrial Park that they hadjust paid all their employees a 20-month bonus. I wish I could make thatmuch profit to pay my staff a 20-month bonus.Hong Kong has not been completely faithful to "laissez faire" but it isa principle we still love and so we should. It has served us well andwill continue to do so. It has often been said that one reason for HongKong's success is that the government has over the years, provided afriendly macro environment conducive to the pursuit and accumulation ofwealth. In the future more attention has to be given to micro managementof sub-environments. Which is quite a far cry from picking winners.----------------------------------END OF REPORT---------------------------