Bay Area competes for business
Updated: 2013-05-01 11:30
By Chen Jia in San Francisco (China Daily)
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When it comes to attracting Chinese tech companies to the Bay Area, San Francisco is giving Silicon Valley a run for its money.
"So far, we have seen about eight Chinese tech companies choose to set up a presence in San Francisco or are here already, with more in the pipeline," said Zhang Xintong, a program manager for economic development with China SF, the go-to support organization created by the San Francisco mayor's office dedicated to encouraging Chinese companies to take root in San Francisco.
"When talking about high-tech jobs, San Jose, with its more affordable cost of living, might be still considered as the Silicon Valley capital," Zhang said. "But in recent years, San Francisco has been gaining on them."
China's Deputy Consul General Song Ru'an said: "The relative low cost of office space has always been an important factor for Chinese companies choosing Silicon Valley over San Francisco."
This year, real estate in the Bay Area has seen price increases from an overall recovery in leasing and purchasing.
"My apartment in Silicon Valley's Burlingame will cost me an increase of $300 a month this year," said Liu Qiang, a Chinese IT engineer. "An equivalent apartment in San Francisco's SoMa District has gone up only $150 a month."
"Neither location has great deals," Liu added. "But in SoMa, more things are within walking distance. I stumble upon lots of hidden treasures and funky urban charm exploring San Francisco on foot."
As the hub of Google, Twitter and Zynga, SoMa (shorthand for South of Market) is a patchwork of warehouses, parks, shopping malls, upscale superarkets, loft apartments, and tenacious start-ups that survived the tech market meltdown.
Though San Francisco's technology sector is much smaller than Silicon Valley's, its tech employment market has come roaring back since the region's economic recovery that began in late 2009.
Silicon Valley's innovation engine may be driving a recovery that leads the nation, but, according to the 2012 Silicon Valley Index, the persistent public sector fiscal crisis and other factors continue to drag on widespread economic gains.
"San Francisco is catching up and may overtake San Jose," Janice Shriver, a labor-market consultant at the Employment Development Department, told the Wall Street Journal in 2012. "San Jose had been in the lead for information jobs and software publishing and all that kind of activity for so long."
"San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee has been pushing for business friendly policies to lure and keep new tech companies, including Chinese companies," Zhang Xintong said.
"And these companies, in turn, are a magnet to increasing numbers of young tech workers who enjoy the San Francisco lifestyle."
UCWeb, a leading China-based developer of mobile Internet browsers with 400 million active users, set up its first US office in Silicon Valley's Sunnyvale last year.
But Rick Chen, a director with UCWeb's team in Sunnyvale, told China Daily he is already shopping for new office space in San Francisco. Why? He's doing for the pool of young tech talent.
"The cost of office space is much higher in San Francisco," Chen said. "But it's an urban, thriving, dynamic city with a younger population, and young tech talent wants to live and play in the city."
chenjia@chinadailyusa.com
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