Global Times

China, EU complete talks over investment deal as scheduled

Two powers together offer fresh start for 2021: Xi

- By GT staff reporters

China and the EU have completed negotiatio­ns over an epic bilateral investment treaty ( BIT), signaling that the top agenda for bilateral economic and trade relations has run its planned course for the world’s top developed economy and the largest developing economy. A comprehens­ive, balanced and high- level investment deal is expected to be reached soon.

When President Xi Jinping held a conference via video link on Wednesday night with leaders of Germany and France, President of the European Council Charles Michel and EU President Ursula von der Leyen, the two sides jointly announced that the negotiatio­ns on the China- EU bilateral investment treaty have been completed as scheduled.

Xi stressed during the video conference that the “balanced, high- level, and mutually beneficial” pact demonstrat­es China’s determinat­ion and confidence to open up on a higher level, and it will provide broader market access, a better business environmen­t, stronger institutio­nal guarantees and brighter prospects for bilateral cooperatio­n.

The BIT will push the postCOVID- 19 global economic recovery, promote global trade, investment liberaliza­tion and facilitati­on, enhance the internatio­nal community’s confidence in economic globalizat­ion and free trade so as to con

tribute to China and the EU’s efforts to build an open global economy, Xi said.

Xi vowed that China and the EU – two of the world’s major powers, civilizati­ons and markets – will enhance mutual trust, properly manage difference­s and join hands together to kick off a new start in 2021. Xinhua reported

Long- awaited progress

The hard- won achievemen­t has taken enormous efforts from both sides, especially during 2020 when the COVID- 19 pandemic battered the whole world.

Based on mutual respect, open and practical cooperativ­e attitudes, the talks have been finalized by the end of the year as scheduled, and follow- up works will be started immediatel­y, including making the legal text of the treaty available for signing, promoting the early inking and entry into force of the treaty which will benefit both coun, experts said on Wednesday.

The announceme­nt topped off a seven- year endeavor to forge greater closeness between two of the world’s largest economies, in another major win for multilater­alism after a mammoth trade deal having been inked by China and 14 other Asia- Pacific economies.

Wednesday’s feat surmounted ideologica­l and political discrepanc­ies, ironed out the sticking points in some sensitive areas and brushed aside thinly veiled obstructio­n by the US, experts said, lauding it as an extraordin­ary boost for pragmatic cooperatio­n between the EU and its largest trading partner China, despite lingering reservatio­ns among some EU member states over some issues.

The announceme­nt clears up concerns over the remaining reservatio­ns and starts a new chapter in China- EU ties, experts said.

“Companies in Europe and China still have concerns about investing in the other’s market, with European firms worrying about Chinese policies not being transparen­t enough, and Chinese companies worrying about legal pathways should they face problems in their investment in Europe,” said Gao Lingyun from the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

Deal benefits all

The completion of the BIT talks, apparently a piece of uplifting news for both China and the EU, sets the course for the global economy to emerge from the still ravaging COVID- 19 pandemic and the US- inflicted unilateral hegemony, observers noted.

The latest achievemen­t signals a “brand new cooperativ­e model” between the world’s largest emerging economy and the world’s largest group of developed countries, said Zhao Junjie, a research fellow at the Institute of European Studies of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

It would be of great significan­ce to Europe at a time when its efforts to stimulate economic developmen­t is restrained by the persisting pandemic, as Europe needs a lot of capital to fight the disease, and what is left to revitalize the economy is not adequate, Zhao said, while noting that the would- be deal will help channel external investment capital from China to European countries, which will help their economies recover as soon as possible.

For China, trade relations with Europe have developed fast in recent years, but bilateral investment has lagged seriously behind, with investment to and from Europe only accounting for a tiny proportion of the two sides’ overall foreign investment, Zhao said.

The soon- to- be- concluded BIT treaty will set a record in the scale of industries and investment volume involved, compared with similar agreements, according to Zhao.

When the agreement is signed, it will facilitate investment flow from Europe to China, while Chinese companies will enjoy a more standardiz­ed legal framework to do businesses in the huge European markets, with little chance of massive trade frictions, regional affairs observers said. They stressed that it is beneficial to Chinese firms, considerin­g the safety and stability of European markets, which provide many good investment assets.

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