Beijing will withdraw 1000 again by 2020. Home general manufacturing companies, 300 markets and logistics centers. Liu Bozheng, deputy director of the Beijing Collaborative Development Leading Group Office, will introduce the mid-term phase of coordinated development of Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei from 2018 to 2020. It will continue to be a four-category non-capital function in Beijing, namely, general manufacturing and regional Markets, schools and hospitals are working to resolve problems. According to reports, by 2020, Beijing will withdraw from about 1,000 general manufacturing enterprises and ease about 300 market and logistics centers.
Among them, in 2018, Beijing will also adjust to exit 500 general manufacturing enterprises, ease the improvement of 176 markets and logistics centers, and promote the process of resolving some universities and hospitals. The draft Beijing 2018 budget report submitted for review shows that Beijing plans to invest 12.2 billion yuan in 2018 to ease non-capital functions, an increase of 340 million yuan over 2017. In addition, the reporter learned that in 2018, in order to develop higher quality, Beijing will revise the catalogue of prohibitions and restrictions on new industries. In 2015, the “Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei Collaborative Development Plan” was officially released. Over the past three years, Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei coordinated development of more than 990 tasks involving Beijing has been basically completed, and Beijing has realized an important shift from “gathering resources for growth” to “resolving functions for development” in transportation, eco-environment and industry. Key areas achieved breakthroughs. Liu Bozheng said that non-capital function relief is a good way to cure large cities in Beijing, but the disease in big cities is still far from being solved.
According to the construction of the city’s sub-center and the two wings of Xiong’an, Beijing will be single-pointed. Reconciliation turned to big relief. In the future, Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei will continue to promote integration in standards, access, and the market to crack invisible barriers.