Home | Headlines | City | Sports | Showbiz | Editorial | Columns | Article | Horoscope | Archive | Contact Us

 

 Print This Page  Add To Favourite    

 

Britain, China explore potentials in creative industries

LONDON—The Center for Creative Business in London hosted on Thursday Creative Exchange with China, exploring the possibilities of business ventures between the two countries in the creative industry.
The conference, which is aimed to help creative businesses from both China and Britain to get to know each other before exploring the business potentials of the rising industry, has attracted some 200 creative entrepreneurs, creative business managers and executives, policy makers, practitioners academics and researchers. In his keynote speech delivered at the conference, Michael Bichard, rector of the University of the Arts London, said within the next two years, Britain’s creative industries sector is expected to overtake the financial sector as the country’s most significant economy. At the same time, China will move ahead of Germany as the world’s third largest economy.
“If we remain isolated, we would not be able to achieve our creative goals of building global brands. To make collaborations effective, it takes much deeper look into the respective industries instead of superficial ones,” he said. Bichard, who is also chair of Design Council UK, hopes that Design Council would cooperate with China not only academically, but across the business to develop tomorrow’s creative industry.
However, Bichard noted that creative exchange is not just about money, it’s about understanding. The Olympics is a strong link between Beijing and London. Bichard urged for enforcing the bond, saying “two countries together can achieve great things.” Professor Xiong Chengyu, director of National Research Centre of Cultural Industry at China’s prestigious Tsinghua University, clarified the conceptual difference of cultural industry in China and creative industry in Britain. “It has only been 5-6 years since we began to talk about the cultural industries in China. In the past in China, we regarded culture as a kind of spiritual course which is focused on social benefit rather than economic benefit.

—Xinhua

Copyright © 2008 The Daily Mail.  All rights reserved