Global Times

Import expo to improve trade balance

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The China Internatio­nal Import Expo (CIIE), the world's first import-themed national expo, kicks off on Monday. More than 3,000 enterprise­s from some 130 countries and regions will exhibit their products, taking this as a premier opportunit­y to enter or expand their presence on the Chinese market.

But there are still fault-finding reports about the event. Some say sarcastica­lly that no state leader or government head from the G7 will attend the expo. Some even link the CIIE with the China-US trade war in spite of the fact that China announced the CIIE in May 2017 at the Belt and Road Initiative on Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n, before the trade war hadn't started.

Why do these media always want to dig out some political ends from the CIIE, which is in any way a good thing for global trade as well as the exports of Western countries?

CIIE is being held to serve enterprise­s and exporters worldwide, not Western leaders. Japan ranks first in terms of the number of participat­ing companies, followed by South Korea, the US, Australia, Germany and Italy. This fully demonstrat­es how much passion companies from developed countries hold toward the expo and heralds the expo's success.

If more countries and regions with a trade surplus can host import expos, that will promote global trade balance. Those with a trade deficit should not blame others, but encourage their enterprise­s to grasp every opportunit­y to promote their products. Sometimes the problem lies in informatio­n asymmetry and an import expo can provide a platform for suppliers and buyers to communicat­e at a low cost.

China has long had a trade surplus and too much of it is not helpful for the country. More imports of high-quality products can help Chinese to upgrade their consumptio­n and advance the production. The inherent drive for hosting CIIE is to translate part of China's foreign exchange reserve into social progress.

China started very early by holding trade fairs in Guangzhou and later became a leading exporter in the world. Now we are holding the import expo in the hope of promoting our imports.

Tangled in a trade war with the US, China could have shut US companies out of the expo as a way of pressuring, but it has acted the other way around. By contrast, the US now thinks everything about the Chinese economy is wrong and whatever China does is a trick. The two countries differ in their visions.

We believe that the CIIE, if held regularly, will help China enhance the quality of its imports and balance its imports and exports. China doesn't need to care what the outside world thinks of the expo, nor should it intentiona­lly enhance the volume of transactio­ns as a proof of kindness.

As long as the Chinese market grows larger, CIIE will attract more attention and will be remembered in world trade history as a positive event.

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