China Daily

New Zealand, China back rule-based trading system

- By HU YONGQI huyongqi@chinadaily.com.cn

New Zealand will work with China in upholding the multilater­al trading system and rulebased free trade amid rising protection­ism, the country’s new ambassador to Beijing, Clare Fearnley, said.

“We hear more voices questionin­g the benefits of economic integratio­n and the rulebased trading system,” Fearnley told China Daily in her first interview with Chinese media. “We are a trading nation and want to see our region stable, prosperous and economical­ly integrated.”

New Zealand attaches great importance to the role China plays globally and the priority placed by China’s leadership on supporting an internatio­nally open trading system, she said.

New Zealand is also dedicated to breaking down trade and other economic barriers by participat­ing in regional cooperatio­n mechanisms, such as the Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank and negotiatio­ns on the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p. Fearnley said she hopes to see a high-quality RCEP agreement reached.

This year marks the 40th anniversar­y of China’s reform and opening-up and the 10th anniversar­y of the free-trade agreement between the two countries.

Fearnley said she had good learning and working experience­s in China and East Asia. “When I look at the changes in daily life and the living standards of ordinary people, I don’t think that my Chinese friends and I could have imagined in the 1980s what has been achieved in today’s China,” she said.

Changes in China had roots in the reform and opening-up policy framed in 1978, Fearnley said.

New Zealand was the first developed economy to recognize China’s market economy status in 2004 and sign a freetrade agreement with China in 2008, said the Ministry of Commerce. Bilateral trade has triFearnle­y pled since 2007 from around $8 billion to more than $26 billion last year.

The agreement has benefitted both sides, and there is a lot more both countries can do in the services sector and new areas like e-commerce, said.

The fourth round of negotiatio­ns on upgrading the agreement will take place in Beijing in two weeks, she said.

At the China Business Summit in early May, New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said China is one of the most important and far-reaching internatio­nal relationsh­ips for her country.

Ardern has received an invitation from the Chinese leadership and her visit will take place possibly this year, Fearnley said.

 ??  ?? Clare Fearnley,
New Zealand ambassador to Beijing
Clare Fearnley, New Zealand ambassador to Beijing

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