China Daily

Li’s Australia visit to deepen bilateral ties

- Pan Chengxin The author is an associate professor of internatio­nal relations at Deakin University, Australia.

On Wednesday, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang will begin a visit to Australia. Heist he most senior Chinese official to visit Australia since President Xi J in ping visited in 2014.

The significan­ce of this visit has been highlighte­d by former Australian ambassador to China Frances Adamson, now secretary of the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, who noted that this would be the first Australia visit by a Chinese premier in about 11 years.

China is Australia’s largest trading partner, both as its largest export market and its largest source of imports. In 2016, the two-way trade reached 150 billion Australian dollars ($115.78 billion). Entering into force at the end of 2015, the China-Australia Free Trade Agreement recently celebrated its first anniversar­y. Also, this year marks the ChinaAustr­alia Year of Tourism, a booming sector which saw 2 million visitors travelling between the two countries last year.

However, while the Asia-Pacific remains the most vibrant economic region in the world, ongoing tensions on the Korean Peninsula and the Trump administra­tion in the United States have cast shadows on regional stability and prosperity. In particular, Trump’s anti-globalizat­ion stance and “America First” policy have unsettled trading nations such as Australia by raising the specter of protection­ism and even the possibilit­y of an internatio­nal trade war.

Both common economic interests and regional and global uncertaint­ies have brought Australia and China closer together than ever before, providing Beijing and Canberra with solid foundation­s for continued and sustained economic cooperatio­n.

So it is widely anticipate­d that in the leaders’ meeting both Premier Li Keqiang and Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull will spend much time on trade and economic cooperatio­n and developmen­t.

Indeed, the complement­arity of the two economies goes beyond China’s strong demand for Australian resources, which has underpinne­d a decade-long mining boom in Australia and helped Australia weather the global financial crisis. With China’s vision for connectivi­ty in the region and its steadfast support for open and inclusive economic globalizat­ion and free trade, along with Australia’s increasing need for investment in infrastruc­ture, China-Australian cooperatio­n has plenty of potential left to tap. The Australian government’s recent pledge of 2 billion Australian dollars to upgrade the country’s Snowy Mountains Hydroelect­ric complex testifies to this potential convergenc­e of interests. With the Beijing-led Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank aiming to support such projects across the region, China’s role is crucial to the success of Malcolm Turnbull’s performanc­e as “an infrastruc­ture prime minister”.

But trade and broader economic cooperatio­n is just one big-ticket item on a long list of common concerns on the leaders’ meeting agenda, which will also feature cooperatio­n on energy, education, science and research, innovation, law enforcemen­t and tourism.

Beyond pushing their bilateral trade relationsh­ip forward, the two leaders will likely call for redoubling region-wide free trade efforts, especially now that the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p agreement has been officially abandoned by Washington. However, in areas of multilater­al trade initiative­s and regional security relations, difference­s continue to exist between Australia and China.

In a meeting with his Australian counterpar­t in February, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi emphasised the need for more mutual trust between the two countries. Premier Li’s visit will no doubt help enhance such trust, but Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop’s recent remarks about China’s role in the world highlights that there is still considerab­le trust deficit among the Australian political elite towards China.

As the first Australian ambassador to China, Stephen FitzGerald has advised, Australian leaders should show the vision and courage to “seek a relationsh­ip with China based on friendship, cooperatio­n and mutual trust, comparable with that which we have, or seek, with other major powers”. Such vision and courage helped bridge the seemingly insurmount­able gap between the two nations during the Cold War, much to each other’s long-term benefits. Premier Li’s visit presents a great opportunit­y for the Australian leaders to demonstrat­e such vision again.

Australian leaders should show the vision and courage to “seek a relationsh­ip with China based on friendship, cooperatio­n and mutual trust ...”

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