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Officials silent as logistics business sails across border

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Why you can trust SCMP

'We all know the logistics sector has enormous potential ... we will take nothing for granted and will work doubly hard to ensure those prospects become reality.'

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Stephen Ip Shu-kwan

Secretary for Economic Development and Labour

July 22, 2003, at the opening ceremony for Container Terminal 9

Maybe memory fails, but it seems to have been a long time since the venerable Mr Ip or any of his senior government colleagues have uttered anything bullish about Hong Kong's logistics industry.

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Granted, the volume of high-value trade moving through the cargo terminals at the airport is growing at a healthy rate. But the maritime trade - the foundation on which this city's economy initially was built - looks set to migrate across the border, fulfilling the predictions of a series of reports over the past five years.

Judging by the goods and services tax proposal and the action of officials, the Tsang administration appears to have resigned itself to a diminished contribution from the logistics industry, dubbed not so long ago by the then chief executive Tung Chee-hwa as 'one of the four pillars of our economy'.

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