e-Hong Kong
Issue 50
Financial Secretary: Global Competition Shifts to Creativity and Innovation

Hong Kong Financial Secretary, Mr. John Tsang, said that global competition had shifted from a situation where price was the major determinant, to a world where creativity and innovation take the lead.

Officiating at the Workshop on Disruptive Innovation in the Hong Kong Science Park, Mr. Tsang pointed out that the innovation required to transform an economy, or even an enterprise, required highly focused and disciplined thinking as well as meticulous implementation skills.

He noted that the Disruptive Innovation theory, the work of Professor Clayton Christensen of the Harvard Business School, applied not only to the traditional way enterprises chase after technological superiority, but also to the provision of public services such as education and health care.

Essentially the theory means delivering relatively simple, convenient and low-cost innovations to customers who do not necessarily need the latest technology to, for example, make a phone call or take a photograph.

Mr. Tsang said, “Hong Kong as we all know has transformed itself in the early part of the last century from a fishing village into an economy based on light industry. From there, we have continued to develop, such that today we can lay claim to be a world-class business, logistics and financial center.”

Noting that Hong Kong now faces many challenges, Mr. Tsang said, “Some of these challenges are universal, such as rising commodities prices and energy costs, environmental pollution and competition posed by emerging economies, and some others are more local, such as an ageing population compounded by a low birth rate.

“I look forward to Professor Christensen sharing his ideas on how we might use his theory to tackle these challenges.”

The Financial Secretary thanked the Chairman of the Applied Science and Technology Institute, Dr Patrick Wang, for inviting Professor Christensen to run the workshop.

The workshop’s participants included members of the most senior echelons of Hong Kong's academic, commercial and industrial sectors as well as representatives from public and private organizations involved in promoting innovation and technology, and operating education and public health services.

 


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ã 2008, Hong Kong Economic & Trade Office in San Francisco
 


 
Hong Kong Economic and Trade Office, San Francisco Issue 50