Wednesday, September 2, 2009

GOV. PERDUE, SEC. CRISCO TO LEAD N.C. DELEGATION TO ASIA OCT. 14-27

Japan/China Trip Will Focus on Jobs, Trade & Investment Opportunities
RALEIGH
Sep 2, 2009

Gov. Bev Perdue and N.C. Secretary of Commerce Keith Crisco will lead the state’s Asia business development trip in October. Business leaders and regional economic developers will join the two as they meet with trading partners and recruitment prospects in China and Japan, North Carolina’s second- and fourth-largest trading partners. Most of the costs will be paid by non-state funds.

“This trip is about building and sustaining relationships that create jobs for North Carolinians,” said Gov. Perdue. “Doing business with Japan and China results in $3.6 billion a year in trade, jobs for 20,000 North Carolinians and more than $200 million in foreign direct investment.

“Asian trade and investment represent significant growth opportunities for our state – especially in an economic downturn,” Perdue added.

Recent Japan-related economic development announcements in North Carolina include expansions by Toshiba America Nuclear Energy Corp. in Charlotte and GE Hitachi in Wilmington, totaling more than 1,000 new jobs and $708 million in investment. In 2007, Honda Aero and Honda Aerospace announced new projects creating 300 jobs and investing $127 million in the Triad.

In May, the Hamner Institutes for Health Sciences in Research Triangle Park announced an agreement with China Medical City to create the Hamner-China Medical City Institute for International Drug Development. The institute will help produce new biomedical technologies that benefit the U.S. and the People’s Republic of China, as well as the rest of the world. The Hamner Institutes will partner with Commerce to hold life-science business seminars in Beijing and Shanghai.

The Asia trip is timed to coincide with the 33rd annual joint meeting of the Japan-U.S. Southeast Association and the Southeast-Japan Association (SEUS), organizations that promote commerce between the region and Japan. The eight Southeastern member states – Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia -- rotate hosting the event, with North Carolina serving as the current U.S. host. More than 400 Japanese and Southeastern U.S. leaders are expected to attend the event, which returns to Tokyo this year after having met in Raleigh last October.

John L. Atkins III, president and chief executive officer of the multidisciplinary design firm O’Brien/Atkins Associates in Durham, chairs the eight-state organization through the October meeting. Florida was the host state in 2005-2007; the next U.S. host state will be Tennessee.

State costs for the 14-day trip are estimated at $82,000, including travel, seminars, client visits and SEUS-related host state obligations of approximately $20,000. An additional $90,000 in expenses – more than half – will be covered by non-state economic development allies, with additional private-funding commitments expected within the next month, further reducing costs to the state.

Crisco is a veteran visitor to China, having traveled there on business more than a dozen times over the past 25 years. He emphasized the importance of personal outreach to Japan and China, while acknowledging the need to minimize costs in a difficult budget year.

“This trip is about bringing jobs and investment to North Carolina,” Crisco said. “Japan and China share our keen interest in the fast-growing pharmaceutical, biotechnology, energy and automotive sectors, and we will hold at least 20 meetings with current and prospective clients in those sectors, as well as three business-recruitment seminars.

 “At times like these, we have to do more with less,” Crisco said. “Our goal is to keep state expenses down, and I’m pleased that more than $90,000 of the cost will be financed by private entities that share our mission to grow the state’s economy.”

Crisco and the governor will be accompanied by Don Hobart, deputy chief of staff and senior adviser for business and economic affairs, as well as three Commerce staff: Jean Davis, director of International Trade; Steve Brantley, Commerce’s Asia economic developer; and David Rhoades, Commerce’s marketing director, who will manage the SEUS event for the state. North Carolina’s Asia trade/investment representatives in Tokyo, Hong Kong and Shanghai will help coordinate the trip and client meetings.

Representatives of North Carolina businesses, nonprofits and local and regional economic developers will travel with or join the group for events in various cities at no cost to the state. In China, the Hamner Institutes and the N.C. Center for International Understanding will participate in business seminars focused on the life sciences sector, one of the state’s targeted and growing industry sectors.

More than 150 Japanese companies operate in all parts of North Carolina, providing well-paying, sustainable jobs for 18,000 people in the state in a wide range of industry sectors from information technology, telecommunications and electronics to life sciences, chemicals, automotive and aviation, Crisco noted. In 2008, Japan imported $1.7 billion worth of North Carolina goods, making it the state’s fourth-largest trading partner.

A dozen Chinese companies in North Carolina provide jobs for 2,500 people, with many more companies poised to make investment in the U.S. market. China’s rapid growth and desire to invest overseas have prompted many states to compete for this business. In 2008, China imported $1.9 billion worth of North Carolina goods, making it the state’s second-largest trade partner after Canada and representing a 250 percent increase over the past three years.

China has a major presence in the U.S. through the international personal-computer manufacturer Lenovo, with U.S. operations located in the Research Triangle.

Overseas business development activities in Europe and Asia have contributed significantly to North Carolina’s economic growth. In June, Crisco led a business development trip to Europe that included meetings with Deutsche Bank and Continental Teves – both of which have since announced major investments in the state totaling $36.8 million and 600 jobs.

Details for the trip are still being finalized. Following is an overview of the trip’s itinerary:

 

Oct. 14-17                   Travel to Tokyo, Japan

  •     Economic development visits in Nagoya

Oct. 18-20                   SEUS/Japan, Tokyo

  • Economic development visits in Tokyo

 

Oct. 21-27                   Travel to Beijing

  • Meetings with trade and government officials
  • Economic development visits in Beijing
  • Seminars for Chinese businesses on N.C. Life Sciences, Automotive Industries

                                    Travel to Shanghai

  • Meetings with trade and government officials
  • Economic development visits in Shanghai
  • Seminars for Chinese businesses on N.C. Life Sciences Industries–with the Hamner Institutes

 

Oct. 27-28                   Return to North Carolina

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