“…Over the decades, zonal policies have pursued the goals of economic growth and development in many countries. In some of them, they effectively contributed to the promotion of industrialisation (Zeng, 2015;, the attraction of foreign capital and job creation (Akinci and Crittle, 2008;Ambroziak, 2016;Capik, 2013;Farole, 2011), as well as played a positive role of a catalyst for structural transformations (Ambroziak, 2003;Farole and Moberg, 2014;Hsu and Chu, 2016;Yeung et al, 2009;Zacharias and Tang, 2010), or integration with global trade (Farole, 2011). In others, however, they failed to achieve their goals (Farole and Kweka, 2011), did not create an attractive business environment that would make it competitive for foreign capital, and as a result, did not differ from the rest of the economy (Bernstein et al, 2012;Farole, 2010).…”