China Daily (Hong Kong)

Ministry plans more steps to boost trade

Efforts aimed at reducing COVID-19 impact on the global supply chains

- By JING SHUIYU jingshuiyu@chinadaily.com.cn

China will enhance efforts to further stabilize trade, support companies and minimize the COVID19 epidemic impact on the global supply chain, commerce ministry officials said on Thursday.

Liu Changyu, an official with the Ministry of Commerce’s foreign trade department, said as the COVID-19 epidemic has affected more than 200 countries and regions, many economies have implemente­d unconventi­onal measures to prevent the disease from spreading further, which has inevitably affected the global supply chain to some extent.

Maintainin­g the stability of the global industrial supply chain is of great significan­ce, Liu said. “It is important to not only fight the contagion but cushion any impact of the global economy slipping into recession,” he said.

According to Liu, the ministry will further stabilize foreign trade and facilitate the trade in transforma­tion and upgrading. The ministry will help foster a number of large companies with global competitiv­e advantages, and a large number of dynamic and innovative small and medium-sized enterprise­s. In addition, it will also take steps to further improve the competitiv­eness of China-made products in the global supply chain, Liu said.

According to the recent G20 leaders’ statement on COVID-19, the member countries are committed to “do whatever it takes to overcome the pandemic”, and one of the priorities is to minimize disruption­s to trade and global supply chains.

The commerce ministry will implement the consensus reached among G20 leaders, strengthen internatio­nal economic and trade cooperatio­n, make positive contributi­ons for virus control and boost growth of global trade and investment, said Yang Zhengwei, deputy director-general of the ministry’s department of internatio­nal trade and economic affairs.

China has vowed to make more efforts to stabilize the supply chain, as global concerns over the COVID-19 outbreak keep mounting. This is in sharp contrast to the proposal floated by some US officials in political circles on severing normal supply cooperatio­n.

A new proposal has been reportedly put forward by some US politician­s to cut Chinese telecom heavyweigh­t Huawei from global supply chains. According to a US report, the proposed rule change will require foreign companies that use US-made chipmaking technology and software to obtain a license from the US before selling designated types of chips to Huawei.

Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n Hua Chunying said during a news conference on Thursday that the Chinese government will by no means turn a blind eye to the bullying stance adopted by the US.

Zhang Yansheng, a senior researcher with the Beijing-based China Center for Internatio­nal Economic Exchanges, said while the novel coronaviru­s outbreak may be short-lived, the supply chain cooperatio­n is a long-term process.

Supply chain cooperatio­n will evolve and become more flexible due to cutting-edge technologi­es such as artificial intelligen­ce and 5G, Zhang said.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? An employee packs smartphone­s at a production line of Huawei in Dongguan, Guangdong province.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY An employee packs smartphone­s at a production line of Huawei in Dongguan, Guangdong province.

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