Global Times - Weekend

100-day countdown to import exposition

Global industry highfliers to attend event

- By Xie Jun

More than 2,800 overseas companies, many of which are industrial highfliers, have confirmed they will attend the First China Internatio­nal Import Expo (CIIE), which is scheduled to be held in Shanghai from November 5 to 10, a government official said on Friday at a 100-day countdown press conference for the expo.

Experts said that the launch of the CIIE not only shows China’s determinat­ion to open up at a time when global protection­ism casts a shadow on internatio­nal trade, but points to China’s policy change from overrelian­ce upon exports to embracing a more balanced trade structure.

Companies from over 130 countries and

regions from five continents have confirmed participat­ion in the upcoming CIIE, Vice Minister of Commerce Wang Bingnan told the press conference. Participan­ts include businesses from developing, developed and least-developed countries, he said.

Wang also said more than 200 businesses attending the CIIE are on the Fortune Global 500 list of industrial leaders. The exhibitors are expected to bring along more new products and technologi­es to the CIIE, revealing their cuttingedg­e products.

The first CIIE will consist of three sessions – the enterprise and business exhibition, which will display overseas products, the country pavilion for trade and investment, which will offer trade goods and services, and the Hongqiao Internatio­nal Trade Forum.

Several overseas exhibitors revealed their plans for the CIIE at another press conference on Thursday. Jaguar Land Rover will launch a luxury electric SUV, while Japan-based shopping mall Takashimay­a Company is going to display some traditiona­l Japanese fashions.

Shift of trade policy

The launch of the CIIE comes up at a time when the world is shrouded in a shadow of trade protection­ism, particular­ly the US initiated tariff increases against China.

Dong Dengxin, director of the Finance and Securities Institute at Wuhan University of Science and Technology, told the Global Times on Friday that the CIIE shows a kind of shift in China’s trade policy.

According to Dong, China used to be overly reliant on exports, as previous trade expos in China mainly exhibited Chinese exports.

“In the past, China emphasized exports in order to guarantee foreign currency reserves. But now that forex reserves are sufficient, the government is trying to embrace a trade structure that is more balanced, meaning that imports should also develop fast,” Dong said.

Customs data released on July 13 show that China’s exports surged 12.8 percent on a yearly basis to $1.17 trillion while imports rose 19.9 percent year-on-year to $1.03 trillion in the first six months of this year.

Dong said the government wants the CIIE to introduce quality goods made by overseas countries to domestic consumers.

Cong Yi, an economics professor at the Tianjin University of Finance and Economics, told the Global Times that the CIIE shows China’s determinat­ion to promote a more open trade environmen­t, and shows China’s efforts in restoring the internatio­nal trade balance.

“It shows that China is not moving toward isolation, but toward opening-up,” Cong told the Global Times on Friday.

Dong said that as the trade dispute between China and the US continues, another goal of the CIIE is to help Chinese companies find potential trade partners that can replace US companies in case the dispute deteriorat­es further.

This doesn’t mean US companies are not welcome to the CIIE. “As long as there are benefits (to US companies), they will come voluntaril­y,” Bai Ming, deputy director of the Internatio­nal Market Research Institute under the Ministry of Commerce, told the Global Times on Friday.

Bai said that he personally hopes to see companies from the services sector, such as tourism, finance and healthcare at the CIIE, because European and US companies are relatively strong in those areas.

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