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Oct 23, 2025

Greater Bay Area Conference Highlights Cross-Border Talent Mobility and Legal Connectivity

Greater Bay Area Conference Highlights Cross-Border Talent Mobility and Legal Connectivity
At the 2025 Greater Bay Area (GBA) Conference held in Hong Kong on 23 October, policymakers and business leaders put human capital mobility at the centre of their blueprint for deeper integration between Hong Kong, Macao and nine Guangdong cities. In keynote remarks, Acting Secretary for Justice Cheung Kwok-kwan said the city’s bilingual common-law system and its new talent admission schemes make Hong Kong the “gateway for finance, business and people” within the region.

Speakers from HashKey Capital, the Hong Kong Law Society and Guangdong officials outlined how the recently expanded “northbound” multi-entry permit and the e-Channel age-limit reduction are already shortening clearance times for professionals commuting daily between Shenzhen, Zhuhai and Hong Kong. They also previewed a forthcoming fast-track visa for foreign tech founders who establish a GBA entity—a proposal now before Beijing’s immigration administration.

For multinational corporations the message is clear: cross-border commuting in the Pearl River Delta is becoming as routine as an intra-city cab ride. Firms operating shared-service centres in Shenzhen can second staff to Hong Kong for same-day client meetings without triggering additional paperwork, while manufacturers in Dongguan gain easier access to the SAR’s arbitration and banking services. Legal experts nevertheless cautioned that payroll sourcing and permanent-establishment rules lag behind mobility facilitation, advising companies to review shadow-payroll and IIT exposure.

The conference coincided with new data showing that GBA border crossings have rebounded to 92 percent of 2019 levels, buoyed by the re-launch of multiple-entry permits for Zhuhai and a pilot “one-stamp” customs and immigration channel at the Qianhai checkpoint. Participants urged authorities to standardise QR-code health declarations and to extend Hong Kong’s Capital Investment Entrant Scheme to tech entrepreneurs relocating to the mainland side of the zone.

Looking ahead, the organisers announced a working group to draft a GBA “Mobility Charter,” aiming to harmonise professional-qualification recognition, social-security portability and digital-identity authentication by 2027. If adopted, it would form Asia’s most advanced sub-regional mobility framework—second only to the EU’s Schengen rules—offering companies unprecedented agility in deploying teams across the delta.
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