China Daily

Currency, technology agreements inked with Malaysia

- By HU YONGQI huyongqi@chinadaily.com.cn

China and Malaysia signed several cooperativ­e agreements including a currency deal on Monday, while Premier Li Keqiang and his visiting Malaysian counterpar­t, Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, looked on.

A currency swap — the exchange of principal and interest in one currency for the same in another — of 180 billion yuan ($26 billion) will be valid for three years and can be extended with both sides’ permission, said the People’s Bank of China, the central bank. Other agreements covered agricultur­al products such as palm oil fuel research and technologi­cal cooperatio­n.

China is ready to better align the Belt and Road Initiative with Malaysia’s developmen­t strategies, promote cooperatio­n in industrial parks and strengthen ties in investment, agricultur­e and transporta­tion, said Li in a meeting with the 93-year-old Mahathir in Beijing.

The premier also said China encourages capable companies from both countries to expand two-way investment, and China would like to import more high-quality Malaysian products suited to its domestic demand.

Facing rising unilateral­ism and trade protection­ism, China is willing to work with Malaysia and other ASEAN countries to safeguard multilater­alism and free trade, Li added.

Mahathir confirmed that the new Malaysian government will continue pursuing friendly policies toward China and deepen bilateral cooperatio­n in trade and other economic areas. He said that Malaysia actively supports the initiative, which is beneficial to enhancing connectivi­ty and trade.

A stable China-Malaysia relationsh­ip not only benefits his country but also regional and global peace, stability and prosperity, Mahathir said, adding that Malaysia wants to export more goods to China and welcomes investment by Chinese companies.

When meeting with journalist­s, Li said both countries agreed to promote more balanced trade while expanding overall trade volume and exploring new cooperatio­n in e-commerce, traditiona­l industries and technologi­cal innovation.

The premier said the two countries agreed to strengthen their partnershi­p in trade, innovation-driven growth and industrial cooperatio­n to achieve win-win outcomes. The two countries also are committed to building the East Asian economic community and supporting ASEAN’s core status in regional cooperatio­n, jointly sending a positive signal of long-term friendship between the two countries and maintainin­g regional stability and developmen­t, Li said.

Mahathir said his country wants to learn from China in areas including business startups and innovation, and improve ties in e-commerce and innovation. As Asian neighbors, the two countries should support globalizat­ion and safeguard an open, free and fair internatio­nal economic system, he added.

In a joint statement released late on Monday, the two countries decided to set 2020 as the China-Malaysia Tourism Year.

Mahathir wraps up his fiveday official trip to China on Tuesday, after visits to Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, and Beijing.

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