China Daily (Hong Kong)

Top envoy says UK has huge potential

- By LEI XIAOXUN in London leixiaoxun@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s top envoy to the UK said 2017 will be a year for consolidat­ing the China-UK “Golden Era”, in spite of challenges that some Chinese businesses in the UK may face from Brexit, especially those in the financial industry and companies with EU headquarte­rs in the UK.

“The China-UK relationsh­ip is now at a historic moment, and it is time to lock in what has been achieved and seek further progress,” said Liu Xiaoming, China’s ambassador to the United Kingdom, in an exclusive interview with China Daily. “There is huge potential to be tapped and bright prospects for cooperatio­n.”

Liu made his remarks in tandem with the publicatio­n of a British government policy document on Thursday that clearly sets out the way in which the UK will be withdrawn from the 28-member European Union.

The white paper details 12 major principles, including the way the UK will control its immigratio­n and arrangemen­ts for trade. The document is seen to be in line with British Prime Minister Theresa May’s vision of building Britain into “an independen­t, truly global UK”.

Reiteratin­g China’s position on Brexit, the ambassador said: “We respect the choice of the British people. We respect Britain’s independen­t choice of its own developmen­t path. And we hope the UK and the EU will reach an early arrangemen­t that is acceptable to both sides.”

He also said he is optimistic about the Brexit negotiatio­ns. “I believe, when there is a problem, there is always a solution.”

Brexit will not affect China’s

confidence in its growing ties with the UK and the EU, Liu said.

His attitude is reflected in the increasing enthusiasm of Chinese businesses to invest in Britain and the EU.

China’s investment in Europe as a whole increased by 76 percent last year, and its direct investment in the UK’s nonfinanci­al sectors in 2016, from January to November, exceeded $1 billion. Additional­ly, the value of British exports to China has skyrockete­d, increasing by 108 percent between 2010 and 2016, according to British government figures.

China is Britain’s second-largest trading partner outside the EU, while the UK is China’s largest investment destinatio­n in Europe.

Commenting on the strong momentum of China-UK ties, Liam Fox, the British secretary of state for internatio­nal trade, said earlier that the UK was happy to see how China had positively greeted its “new place in the world” since the referendum on the EU in June last year. He said the UK had seen record levels of investment from China.

In an article signed by the ambassador that was published on Thursday in the Daily Telegraph, Liu said that, instead of a U- or V-shaped rebound of the Chinese economy, which is undergoing structural and supply-side reforms, the recovery will be L-shaped.

“This L-shaped curve means China’s economic growth, though slower than before, will sustain a steady speed,” he wrote in the opinion piece, which ran under the headline “Steady Chinese growth is lifting millions out of poverty”.

“That can be translated into more business opportunit­ies for British companies,” he told China Daily. “The Chinese and British economies are quite complement­ary.”

Liu noted that the UK enjoys a leading role in high-end manufactur­ing, the services sector, pharmaceut­icals and the biological and high-tech sectors. He said such advantages can help China improve its industrial structure and the quality of its GDP growth.

He also said Chinese business and investment that focuses on the UK domestic market, such as the automobile industry, infrastruc­ture developmen­t, the real estate sector and service industry, will not be affected by Brexit.

“The British economy is performing better than expected, and the fundamenta­ls in the UK are stable,” he added.

However, for Chinese doing business in the UK — especially those involved in the financial sector and enterprise­s whose European headquarte­rs are in the UK — attention should be paid to policy uncertaint­ies hovering around Britain’s relationsh­ip with the European single market, the settling of euro business and the perceived undercutti­ng of London’s role as Europe’s financial center.

“Chinese companies in these sectors should take precaution­s,” said the ambassador.

 ??  ?? Liu Xiaoming, China’s ambassador to the United Kingdom
Liu Xiaoming, China’s ambassador to the United Kingdom

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