The New Zealand Herald

PM secures upgrade on China trade deal

Ardern says agreement will remain best Beijing has with anyone

- Audrey Young in Bangkok

New Zealand has secured an upgrade in its free trade agreement with China. The deal was announced in Bangkok yesterday by Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern and China’s Premier, Li Keqiang.

“This ensures our upgraded free trade agreement will remain the best that China has with any country,” Ardern said.

The original trade deal was signed in 2008 and negotiatio­ns for the upgrade began in November 2016 under the National Government.

The pair were meeting on the sidelines of the East Asia Summit.

Ardern was to speak at the East Asia Summit in Thailand following her bilateral meeting with Li.

“[The deal] reflects the importance both countries place on our relationsh­ip and builds on the significan­t mutual benefits both countries have enjoyed as a result of our excellent existing FTA,” Ardern said.

The Government says the key outcomes of the upgrade include:

● New rules that will make exporting to China easier and reduce compliance costs for NZ exports by millions of dollars each year, such as faster border release of fresh food products, and other products that may have to go through other countries en route to China.

● The most ambitious environmen­t chapter and the highest level of commitment that China has agreed in any FTA. It includes commitment­s to promote environmen­t protection and ensure environmen­tal standards are not used for trade protection­ism.

● Giving 99 per cent of NZ’s $3 billion wood and paper trade to China preferenti­al access, with tariff eliminatio­n over a 10-year period on 12 extra wood and paper products worth $36 million in trade to China.

The only change identified for China by New Zealand was in greater flexibilit­y for visa allocation­s under the “iconic Chinese occupation­s”.

The overall allocation of 800 will be unchanged but Chinese tour guides will increase from 100 to 200 places and be broadened to include Chinese tourism specialist­s; and Mandarin teaching aides will be increased from 150 to 300 places by a redistribu­tion from under-used categories.

Trade Minister David Parker is in Shanghai for talks on improving the World Trade Organisati­on but he said in a statement that while New Zealand was the first developed country to sign a free trade agreement with China in 2008, its other free trade agreements had evolved since then.

“This is why we entered into upgrade negotiatio­ns: To ensure our agreement is modern and deepens our relationsh­ip further, and to ensure that New Zealand’s exporters have a deal as good as, if not better than, their competitor­s.”

In dairy, existing conditions had been maintained, with all safeguard tariffs to be eliminated within just over two years for most products, and four years for milk powder.

Ardern said: “This means that by January 2024, New Zealand will have the best access to China for dairy products of any country.

“Protection­s in the existing agreement that are important to New Zealanders such as New Zealand’s rules on overseas investment and the Treaty of Waitangi exception remain secure.”

Next steps included legal verificati­on of the draft text, with the signing and release of the text expected in early 2020.

China is New Zealand’s largest trading partner, with two-way trade recently exceeding $32 billion.

 ?? Photo / Asean ?? Jacinda Ardern was to speak at the East Asia Summit in Bangkok after she met the Chinese Premier.
Photo / Asean Jacinda Ardern was to speak at the East Asia Summit in Bangkok after she met the Chinese Premier.
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