China Daily (Hong Kong)

Protection­ist call rings in EU

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France, Germany and Italy recently submitted a joint petition to the European Commission asking it to more tightly scrutinize foreign bids to acquire major European companies and prevent foreign takeovers of key European technology enterprise­s. Many in the European Union believe the move is targeted at Chinese enterprise­s whose investment in the EU has been increasing rapidly. Not only the EU but also the United States has made such moves. Washington recently launched an investigat­ion to determine whether China’s laws, policies and practices were violating the US’ intellectu­al property rights. Such European and US measures have raised concerns over growing protection­ism in the Western world.

By pointing their protection­ist finger at China, the EU and the US have resorted to a seemingly reasonable excuse, fair trade, saying it is unfair that Chinese goods and investment­s have easy access to their markets while theirs face severe obstacles to the Chinese market.

This is not the first time Western countries are wielding the “fair trade” weapon against their foreign competitor­s. Way back in the 1880s when, as emerging industrial­ized countries, the US and Germany together offered fierce competitio­n to industrial­ized Britain, several industrial associatio­ns and organizati­ons were set up in Britain to lobby the government to work out protection­ist measures against foreign competitor­s. A century later, the US, a long-time advocate of “free trade” changed its tone and began imposing sanctions on Japan and some European countries on the pretext of “fair competitio­n” and “mutual reciprocit­y”.

According to Jagdish Bhagwati, a professor at Columbia University, such protection­ist practices under the garb of “fair trade” show that certain countries are afraid of losing their establishe­d economic dominance. Bhagwati says it is such kind of sentiment that seriously hurts global economic growth.

Globalizat­ion has prompted countries across the world to say no to protection­ism, because they have realized that common prosperity hinges on abandoning “mutual trade suspicion”. If the EU countries and the US do not shed their unjustifie­d fear of China, they will not only thwart their much-needed economic recovery, but also spread mistrust across countries and become the largest obstacle to global economic growth. — BEIJING NEWS

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