Macao in southern China-renowned as Asia’s Las Vegas-has tabled plans to become a hub to make traditional Chinese medicine more standardized and scientific and to further develop it to enable its products to be sold around the world.
Those ambitions were formally unveiled recently in the special administrative region’s (SAR) first all-encompassing five-year plan. After a year of preparation, the proposals identified Chinese medicine as one of the key emerging sectors in the city-followed by the events and cultural and creative industries-that are targeting creating new employment opportunities to further diversify its economy.
The aim is not only to wean Macao off its heavy reliance on gambling, but also to take advantage of the city’s long tradition in Chinese medical treatment and the growing trend in health tourism.
Liu Liang, dean of Faculty of Chinese Medicine and president of the Macao University of Science and Technology, said the city’s state-of-the-art facilities coupled with the Guangdong-Macao Traditional Chinese Medicine Scientific Industrial Park, gave it a strong competitive edge in developing the science of Chinese medicine.
Built on 500,000 square meters of land in Hengqin-the peninsula in Zhuhai that is the closest part of the Chinese mainland to Macao-the park is targeting winning international recognition for traditional Chinese medicine so its products can be sold internationally.
Liu added that innovation and the development of Chinese medical science was a major strategy for China, as well as for the SAR. That was despite the fact that many scholars and western medical experts still believed its remedies contradicted some key western medical theories.
“It is key that we go out and earn world recognition of traditional Chinese medicine, although many still regard it as alternative medicine,” said the professor, who is also a veteran Chinese medical doctor.