The Borneo Post

China’s Li says he will focus on trade ties during New Zealand visit

-

WELLINGTON: Chinese Premier Li Keqiang pressed for deeper trade ties with New Zealand and warned against global protection­ism in a newspaper opinion piece published yesterday before meetings with Prime Minister Bill English and business leaders in Wellington.

In the New Zealand Herald column, titled ‘To New Zealand, with love’, Li said “rising instabilit­y and uncertaint­y in the internatio­nal landscape have made it all the more important for China and New Zealand to work together to turn challenges into opportunit­ies.”

China is the No. 1 trading partner to both Australia and New Zealand and trade was also a major focus of Li’s visit to Australia last week, the first by a sitting Chinese premier in 11 years.

Li, on his first trip to New Zealand since he took office in 2013, was welcomed to Government House in Wellington by a Maori haka, a traditiona­l dance and a cannon salute.

“Now that we have a fairly stable trade relationsh­ip on farm products, we need to move beyond import and export and promote high- tech- driven, high- valueadded, whole- industrial- chain co-operation,” Li wrote in the column.

New Zealand has long been more supportive of China’s global ambitions than some of its other Western allies. It was the first Western country to sign a Free Trade Agreement (FTA) with China, in 2008 and the first to join the China-initiated Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank (AIIB).

Rising instabilit­y and uncertaint­y in the internatio­nal landscape have made it all the more important for China and New Zealand to work together to turn challenges into opportunit­ies. Li Keqiang, Chinese premier

The pair are now working on upgrading the FTA, which Li said was essential in a climate of rising protection­ism.

“We have every reason to believe that globalisat­ion will continue to move forward despite its setbacks, just as one should not stop eating for fear of getting choked,” Li said.

New Zealand’s US$180 billion economy depends heavily on exports, and Li’s remarks echoed those made by both English and New Zealand’s Reserve Bank governor, Graeme Wheeler, who have warned that the tightening of global trade is the biggest threat to their country’s prosperity. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Chinese Premier Li Keqiang reacts as he is greeted by Auckland Mayor Phil Goff and Consul General Xu Erwen (center) after arriving in Auckland, New Zealand, March 27. — Reuters photo
Chinese Premier Li Keqiang reacts as he is greeted by Auckland Mayor Phil Goff and Consul General Xu Erwen (center) after arriving in Auckland, New Zealand, March 27. — Reuters photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia