Chinese leader Xi Jinping showcases policy priorities on first trip to Shanghai since 2020

Footage from the innovation exhibition showed Xi examining a display of semiconductor integrated circuits – a technology that lies at the heart of China’s tech competition with the US – and watching a walking, human-shaped robot in the artificial intelligence section.

He also visited a project providing affordable rental accomodation for migrant workers in the city’s Minhang district and gave a speech to the tenants outside.

It was Xi’s first visit to Shanghai since the end of the Covid-19 pandemic and follows last year’s prolonged, two-month lockdown that caused the city to virtually grind to a halt.

Xi last visited Shanghai in 2020, when he attended a celebration of the 30th anniversary of the development of Pudong, the city’s financial hub.

This week, the Post also reported exclusively that Xi will host a meeting to discuss the Yangtze River Economic Belt, one of his signature projects, with officials from the city and three neighbouring provinces.
The Chinse leader also visited a project providing affordable accomodation to migrant workers. Photo: Xinhua

Earlier this week, the Communist Party Politburo endorsed plans to speed up the development of the region, one of China’s most important economic hubs.

However, the meeting did not announce a date for the third plenary session of the 20th Central Committee, an event that usually sets the country’s development strategy and priorities for the next five to 10 years.

That omission means the plenum is unlikely to happen this year because the Politburo will only meet once more before the new year, in late December, which will be the next window of opportunity to announce the date of the plenum.

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Xi’s visit comes just after the end of the China International Import Expo – a major showcase for the country’s vast market. It also coincided with the 10th anniversary of the creation of the Shanghai Free-Trade Zone, a testing ground for China’s economic reforms.

Five years ago, on a visit to the first import expo, Xi announced that a 120sq km (46sq mile) area in the eastern part of the city would be given free-trade zone status in a bid to attract global investors.

Since then a host of major foreign companies have since set up shops and factories, including Tesla, which began delivering its Shanghai-made vehicles in January 2020.

Xi inspects a display during his tour of the city. Photo: Xinhua

With a population of more than 25 million residents contributing nearly 4 per cent of China’s economic output, Shanghai is home to some of the biggest foreign investors in the country. These include General Motors and the Walt Disney Company, as well as the electric car maker.

Additional reporting by Phoebe Zhang