China Daily

Li, Scholz vow to strengthen ties

China, Germany to pursue more vibrant trade links

- By MO JINGXI mojingxi@chinadaily.com.cn

The advantages of China’s new energy industry are shaped through sound market competitio­n rather than relying on government subsidies, Premier Li Qiang said on Tuesday, reiteratin­g China’s willingnes­s to work with all parties to uphold fair competitio­n and open cooperatio­n for win-win results.

Li made the remarks when jointly meeting the media with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz in Beijing, after they held a bilateral meeting and attended a symposium of the China-Germany Economic Advisory Committee on the last day of Scholz’s visit to China.

Li responded at the joint news conference to the recent hyping up of China’s “overcapaci­ty”, saying that countries tend to have higher production capacity in their competitiv­e industries but lower capacity in other sectors, and this is determined by their individual comparativ­e advantages.

“The strong market competitiv­eness of China’s new energy products was a result of multiple factors, including their accumulate­d technologi­cal superiorit­y establishe­d through long-term research and developmen­t investment, as well as a complete industrial support capacity, an ultra-large market and rich human resources in the country,” Li said.

According to the premier, the two sides have agreed to pursue further efforts to make the China-Germany dialogue more effective, trade more vibrant, cooperatio­n closer and friendship more solid.

Li noted that strengthen­ing strategic communicat­ion and deepening mutually beneficial cooperatio­n between the world’s second- and third-largest economies is not only crucial for the developmen­t of the two countries, but is also important for the peace, stability and prosperity of the Eurasian region and the whole world.

As China is ready to import more quality products from Germany and has lifted restrictio­ns on German goods such as beef and apples, “we also hope the German side will reduce its restrictio­ns on the exports of high-technology equipment and high value-added products to China”, he said, adding that this will help facilitate the trade balance between the two countries.

Li said that China and Germany will further tap the potential of service trade cooperatio­n. “We expect German enterprise­s in such sectors as education, finance, tourism and culture to provide more high-quality services for Chinese consumers.”

Germany is among the six countries that enjoy a unilateral visa-free policy extended by China since late last year to facilitate cross-border travel. According to Li, the policy has so far enabled 90,000 visits by Germans to China.

He also called for the two sides to work together to provide more convenienc­e for personnel exchanges and support communicat­ions between the two countries’ arts, sports and education sectors, thus consolidat­ing the foundation of public opinion.

Scholz reiterated that Germany does not seek to decouple from China, its most important trading partner, but rather hopes to deepen their economic ties, which benefit both sides.

Germany is ready to work with China to strengthen dialogue and communicat­ion, deepen practical cooperatio­n, advance people-topeople exchanges and jointly address climate change and other global challenges, in order to push for greater developmen­t of the China-Germany comprehens­ive strategic partnershi­p, he said.

He also expressed Germany’s opposition to trade protection­ism and said his country is willing to work with China to create a level playing field.

The two leaders witnessed the signing of multiple cooperatio­n documents after their meeting.

Roland Busch, CEO of Siemens and a member of the high-level delegation that accompanie­d Scholz to China, said he would give the trip a very high score because “we are bringing our collaborat­ion to the next level”.

“I hope this dialogue will give us more tail wind in the market,” he said.

 ?? WANG ZHUANGFEI / CHINA DAILY ?? Premier Li Qiang (right) and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz attend a joint news conference in Beijing on Tuesday after they held talks and met with Chinese and German entreprene­urs at a symposium.
WANG ZHUANGFEI / CHINA DAILY Premier Li Qiang (right) and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz attend a joint news conference in Beijing on Tuesday after they held talks and met with Chinese and German entreprene­urs at a symposium.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong