Kuwait Times

EU Chamber warns China: Open economy faster or risk backlash

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European companies suffer from “promise fatigue” over China’s failure to follow through on pledges to open its market, the EU Chamber of Commerce in China said yesterday. The chamber issued an annual 400-page report detailing the regulatory barriers that continue to hinder investment in the world’s second-largest economy.

European businesses are “suffering from accumulate­d ‘promise fatigue’, having witnessed a litany of assurances over recent years that never quite materializ­ed,” the position paper said.

The chamber urged the ruling Communist Party to “supplant words with concrete actions and provide reciprocal access to its market”. The restrictio­ns imposed on foreign investment­s force companies from abroad to partner with local firms and often share vital technology-if they are not barred altogether from accessing a certain market, the chamber said.

Chinese firms face no such restrictio­ns in EU markets, Chamber president Mats Harborn told reporters prior to the report’s release. “We are now calling for the abolition of foreign investment laws,” he said, stating that they made China’s investment climate too complex, unpredicta­ble and opaque to attract foreign capital. “The numbers speak for themselves: Chinese investment­s in Europe rose 77 percent last year, while EU investment­s in China fell by a quarter,” Harborn said. EU investment fell a further 23 percent in the first quarter of 2017.

A May survey published by the Chamber showed 54 percent of EU companies operating in China felt they were treated worse than local counterpar­ts. A study in January by the American Chamber of Commerce in China found more than four in five US companies feel the country is less welcoming to foreign businesses than in the past.

On Monday, US Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer slammed China’s approach to its economy, calling Beijing’s policies an “unpreceden­ted” trade threat to which the World Trade Organizati­on was not prepared to respond. Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Lu Kang retorted at a regular press briefing Tuesday that “China firmly supports an open world economy and improves its business environmen­t. We are the advocate, contributo­r and architect of the multilater­al trade regime”. Responding to the EU Chamber’s concerns, he praised the country’s “great achievemen­ts” since it began market reforms in the late 70s, stating: “I don’t understand why certain parties would doubt our reform and opening up, which benefits both China and the world.”

The lack of access belies the rhetoric of Chinese leaders. In January, President Xi Jinping hailed globalisat­ion at the World Economic Forum in Davos and insisted that China was committed to “opening up”. Later that month a government circular pledged to “create an environmen­t of fair competitio­n” and “strengthen efforts to attract foreign investment”. — AFP

 ?? — AP ?? BEIJING: A woman looks at a vacant retail space wall displaying the directory of the local and western restaurant­s at a newly opened up-scale shopping mall at the Central Business District in Beijing yesterday.
— AP BEIJING: A woman looks at a vacant retail space wall displaying the directory of the local and western restaurant­s at a newly opened up-scale shopping mall at the Central Business District in Beijing yesterday.

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