THE NEW NEW
WORLD
Entrepreneurs Flee China’s Heavy Hand: ‘You Don’t
Have to Stay There’
Weary of crackdowns and lockdowns, businesspeople are
moving out of China and taking their wealth with them. Many have found a new
home in Singapore.
By Li Yuan
Jan. 19,
2023
阅读简体中文版閱讀繁體中文版
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/01/19/business/china-singapore-immigration-entrepreneurs.html
SINGAPORE —
They left after the government cracked down on the private sector. They ran
away from a harsh “zero Covid” policy. They searched for safe havens for
their wealth and their families.
They went
to Singapore, Dubai, Malta, London, Tokyo and New York — anywhere but their
home country of China, where they felt that their assets, and their personal
safety, were increasingly at the mercy of the authoritarian government.
In 2022, a
year that proved extremely challenging for China, many Chinese businesspeople
moved abroad, temporarily or for good. They were part of a wave of emigration
that led to one of the year’s top online catchphrases, “runxue,” understood to
mean running away from China.
A
consequential, if privileged, piece of China’s economic puzzle, these people
are pulling their wealth and businesses out when growth is at its lowest point
in decades.
Many of
them are still scarred by the last few years, during which China’s leadership
went after the country’s biggest private enterprises, vilified its most
celebrated entrepreneurs, decimated entire industries with arbitrary regulation
and refused to budge on Covid policies when many businesses were struggling.
While the
government’s tone and policies have turned more business-friendly in recent
weeks, the entrepreneur class, who have lost revenue, fortunes and, most of
all, confidence in the leadership, will not easily be swayed.
Now that
they have lived free of fear in other countries, they are reluctant to put
themselves and their businesses under the thumb of the Chinese Communist Party
again, a number of them told me during discussions in Asia, Europe and the
United States. At least, not until they can be assured the state will have to
follow the same laws as the citizens.
“When you
don’t have a say in how a government makes rules, you don’t have to stay
there,” said Aginny Wang, a co-founder of a crypto banking start-up, Flashwire,
who moved from Beijing to Singapore in June after getting trapped in Shanghai’s
Covid lockdown on a business trip. “There are many other places where you can
do things.”
Mr. Huo,
the founder of Lotusia, an advisory firm that handles business registrations
and visa applications in Singapore, said his Chinese client list had quickly
expanded over the past year. People in the education, games, cryptocurrency and
fintech industries in China — all targets of government crackdowns over the
last few years — had sought his services.
During the
Shanghai lockdown, his phone lines “were ringing off the hook,” he said. The
wealthy, he said, realized that no matter how much money they had, they still
had to scramble for food and supplies under the harsh restrictions of “zero
Covid.”
Even during
the past few weeks, after the Chinese government rolled out the red carpet for
the private sector and Hong Kong vowed to attract crypto talent from mainland
China, Mr. Huo has been busy fielding requests.
“The
entrepreneurs are still pessimistic,” he said. “As long as people are worried
about their assets, they’ll register their companies in Singapore and put their
money here.”
For such
people, Singapore works because about three million of its citizens, or
three-quarters, are ethnic Chinese, and many speak Mandarin. They also like
that it is business-friendly and global-minded and, most of all, upholds the
rule of law.
People in
the West may bristle at Singapore’s limitations on individual freedom. But for
most Chinese, a government that respects the rule of law and doesn’t
arbitrarily change its policies is good enough.
“Singapore
will not crack down on a company or an industry outside its legal framework,”
said Chen Yong, founder of Pionex, a cryptocurrency exchange, who moved here
from Beijing in 2021. “Its policies have more continuity.”
Mr. Chen
and others I met in Singapore said they had no intention of moving to Hong
Kong, despite that city’s enthusiastic attempts to woo people like them in
recent months.
For
decades, Hong Kong played the role of safe haven for mainland entrepreneurs
because of its autonomy from China. That crumbled after Beijing introduced a
national security law in the territory in 2020, ushering in the arrest of
activists, the seizure of assets, the detention of newspaper editors, the
rewriting of school curriculums and what many see as the compromising of
judicial independence.
Mr. Chen
moved to Singapore because crypto trading, his industry, is banned in China. He
kept some developers in the country, but most of his operations are outside it.
He said being in Singapore helped him to think more globally. And he was
skeptical that Hong Kong could separate its crypto policies from Beijing’s.
“When
entrepreneurs chose to move to Singapore, it means they have chosen to leave
China,” he said. Hong Kong is not attractive to people who have made that
choice, he added.
Singapore
has become a strong rival to Hong Kong as a place for China’s superrich to park
their wealth. Four of the 10 wealthiest Singaporeans on Forbes’s billionaire
list are recent Chinese immigrants. So many people arrived last year that a
start-up founder told me he had put on weight from all the welcome dinners.
The rush of
elite Chinese businesspeople to Singapore has contributed to a rise in the cost
of living here. Average rent for a 1,000-square-foot condo apartment was about
$3,500 a month at the end of September, up more than one-fifth from the start
of 2022, according to 99.co, a property portal. The cost of a license to own a
vehicle rose nearly 40 percent last year.
Singapore
is also competing with Hong Kong as a place for mainland Chinese companies to
register separate entities for their international operations. Some
entrepreneurs want to build up their global brands by identifying as
Singaporean companies.
To the
outside world, “Hong Kong is part of China while Singapore is not,” said
Yu-Ning Liu, the founder of Karma Games in Beijing, which develops games played
by people around the world.
Mr. Liu is
moving his Hong Kong operations to the city-state. He said he would start using
his Singapore entity to release and market games for international markets.
Singapore
has also emerged as something of a buffer zone as geopolitical tensions between
China and the United States escalate. For some, a passport from Singapore is
attractive because it has good relations with both countries.
Governments
around the world are increasingly wary of Beijing’s influence on Chinese
businesses. Many want to know whether those companies are keeping their
citizens’ personal data safe, and whether investments by Chinese entities have
implications for national security.
Such
scrutiny has led some Chinese entrepreneurs to seek foreign passports, or at
least permanent resident status in other countries. A few told me that they
feared their Chinese passports could leave them vulnerable if China should
invade Taiwan, provoking the kind of sanctions imposed on Russia and its
businesses since the war in Ukraine began.
Entrepreneurs
in Singapore admit that it has its limitations. It’s small, it’s expensive and
the talent pool is shallow. It’s an easy place to enjoy life but not ideal for
starting, say, an ambitious tech company, many of them say. Some wealthy,
relatively young Chinese who have moved here don’t have much to do but drink a
lot of Moutai, the Chinese liquor.
Nearly all
would have preferred to stay in China, if the circumstances had been different.
It is a colossal market with great infrastructure, the best supply chain in the
world and an abundant supply of programmers willing to work overtime.
Most of
them still maintain some business operations there. But they’re not going to
rush back, invest more and open new businesses just because the government
cajoled them.
“The
entrepreneurs don’t dare to take risks anymore,” said Mr. Huo, the business
adviser. “They have to think twice before doing anything — whether they’ll put
their safety into jeopardy.”
Li Yuan
writes the New New World column, which focuses on the intersection of
technology, business and politics in China and across Asia. More about Li Yuan
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