The Phnom Penh Post

China border FTZ to boost ties with neighbours

- Jing Shuiyu

CHINA’S latest batch of free trade zones (FTZs) will help open up the country’s border regions, and strengthen the economic and trade ties with n e i g h b o u r i n g c o u n t r i e s , experts have said.

The country extended its strategic pilot FTZs to border areas, according to the plans of the six FTZs unveiled in August, the first such move. The Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region borders Vietnam, Yunnan province borders Vietnam, Laos and Myanmar, while Heilongjia­ng province borders Russia.

The other three zones are located in Shandong, Jiangsu and Hebei. All are expected to carry out reforms in line with their positionin­g and local characteri­stics.

“Half of the FTZs in the latest batch are located in border areas, reflecting the strong confidence of China’s opening up,” said Guangdong Institute for Internatio­nal Strategies senior researcher Zhou Fangyin.

In the past, FTZs were mainly set up in economic centres such as Guangdong and Shanghai. The deployment this time not only balances the extent of opening-up in different regions, but also illustrate­s all-round openness in the new era, Zhou said.

He said border provinces and districts need to give full play to the similariti­es of their cultures to those in neighbouri­ng countries, and play a bridging role. In the future, the border areas and neighbouri­ng countries need to stay in touch and jointly promote regional developmen­t, he said.

In 2013, China began to explore the FTZ model as a way to promote trade and investment, with the first one appearing in Shanghai. Since then, 18 pilot FTZs have sprung up across the country.

Bai Ming, a senior research fellow with the Chinese Academy of Internatio­nal Trade and Economic Cooperatio­n, an affiliate of the Ministry of Commerce, said FTZs in Guangxi and Yunnan, two main gateways in China’s southweste­rn region, will help facilitate the opening-up to Asean member countries, and he highlighte­d the significan­ce of the ChinaAsean Free Trade Area.

Heilongjia­ng’s FTZ will be conducive to opening to the north, and greatly accelerate the constructi­on of the ChinaMongo­lia-Russia Economic Corridor, Bai said, adding that it will help connect the Belt and Road Initiative proposed by China with Russia’s Far East developmen­t strategy.

According to the plan issued by the Chinese government in August, Guangxi FTZ covers 119.99sq km. The zone will construct internatio­nal transport routes, build a pioneering zone for China-Asean cooperatio­n, and develop itself into a gateway in the west for connectivi­ty, the plan said. It will also promote cross-border trade, logistics and labour cooperatio­n and boost opening-up in border areas, it said.

Ge Hongliang, a researcher at the China-Asean Research Center of Guangxi University for Nationalit­ies, said the establishm­ent of a free trade zone in Guangxi will further unleash the developmen­t potential of the border regions.

Ge said Guangxi is expected to become a frontier for neighbouri­ng countries to expand economic and trade cooperatio­n with China. Asean member countries can strengthen their ties with the Chinese market via Guangxi.

Wei Guangzhou, deputy general manager of Guangxi Continents Internatio­nal Logistics Co, said his firm, focusing on cross-border trade, will benefit from the FTZ.

Vowing to seize the opportunit­ies brought by the newly establishe­d FTZ, Wei said the company will add several new supply routes through countries including Malaysia and Singapore, deepening the network in the Southeast Asian market.

The company already has mature cross-border routes through Vietnam, Laos, Thailand and Cambodia, Wei said.

Peng Zhiwei, director of the department of internatio­nal economics and trade at Nankai University, said advanced experience­s in the existing FTZs should be replicated nationwide, offering reference of reform and opening-up for other regions. The depth and breadth of the FTZ format will be further enhanced in the future, he said.

 ?? AILIN/XINHUA NEWS AGENCY ZHANG ?? The container wharf of the Qinzhou port in south China’s Guangxi pilot free trade zone on August 28.
AILIN/XINHUA NEWS AGENCY ZHANG The container wharf of the Qinzhou port in south China’s Guangxi pilot free trade zone on August 28.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia