Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Promoting WTO reform to keep pace with times - Common expectatio­n of China and SL

- (Cheng Xueyuan is Ambassador of China in Colombo) BY CHENG XUEYUAN

At the opening ceremony of the first China Internatio­nal Import Expo (CIIE) that was just concluded, President Xi Jinping pointed out that holding the CIIE is “China’s major initiative to still widen market access to the rest of the world” and that it “demonstrat­es China’s consistent position of supporting the multilater­al trading system and promoting free trade”.

Indeed, to uphold economic globalizat­ion and free trade, China actively applied to join the World Trade Organisati­on (WTO) and since its accession to the WTO, China has been a staunch supporter of the multilater­al trading system, taking firm position against protection­ism and actively promoted building a more open and inclusive world economy.

It can be said that from the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade to the WTO and up till now, with the joint efforts of all its members including China, the WTO has made significan­t contributi­ons to promoting the liberaliza­tion and facilitati­on of trade and investment and has greatly boosted global trade developmen­t and economic growth.

Neverthele­ss, the world economy is going through profound adjustment and protection­ism and unilateral­ism are resurging. Economic globalizat­ion faces headwinds and multilater­alism and the system of free trade are under threat.

The WTO is facing three crises threatenin­g its survival: first, it is about the WTO’S dispute settlement mechanism. The Appellate Body of the mechanism has seven members initially but now there are only three of them. The appointmen­t of the rest four is thwarted by individual members; second, individual members add tariffs, misusing the security exception clause in the WTO rules; third, a small subset of individual members adopts unilateral measures and ignore the WTO’S multilater­al rules.

This year marks the 40th anniversar­y of China’s reform and opening-up. Over the past 40 years, it is the strong belief in reform and open economy that has brought up today’s China. A country must keep pace with the times, and so are internatio­nal organisati­ons. The WTO is no exception. We need to re-examine its rules and regulation­s and duties, enabling it to continue to play an active role under the new historical conditions.

Thus, China firmly supports necessary reform of the WTO and meanwhile, we believe that reform should be in the right direction and taking the right approach. To this end, China has put forward three basic principles and five suggestion­s on the WTO reform.

Three basic principles

First, the WTO reform will preserve the core values of the multilater­al trading system. We believe that non-discrimina­tion and openness are the most important core values of the multilater­al trading system. The WTO members should obey this while handling economic and trade relations with

other members within the framework of multilater­al rules.

Second, the WTO reform shall safeguard the developmen­t interests of developing members. The reform should provide developing members with flexibilit­y and policy space needed for their economic developmen­t, contributi­ng to the United Nations 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t and narrowing the Northsouth gap.

Third, the WTO reform will follow the practice of decision-making by consensus. Reform is related to the future of the multilater­al trading system. The choice of reform agenda and the final outcomes should be decided through consensus. The process shall be inclusive and open to all members, especially the developing ones.

China’s suggestion­s for WTO reform

First, the reform should uphold the primacy of the multilater­al trading system. The reform should reinforce the centrality of the multilater­al trading system in internatio­nal trade liberaliza­tion and facilitati­on. It cannot be confused with the so-called new concepts and new expression­s and we cannot deny the authority of the multilater­al trading system.

Second, the priority of the reform is to address the key issues that threaten the survival of the WTO. The reform should rein in actions of unilateral­ism and protection­ism with the strings of the WTO rules. It should solve urgent problems, including the appointmen­t blockage of Appellate Body members as soon as possible and ensure the smooth functionin­g of all aspects of the WTO.

Third, the reform should address the imbalance of trade rules and respond to the latest developmen­ts of our time. The reform should address the excessive agricultur­al subsidies of some developed members and prevent abuse of trade remedy measures. Meanwhile, the reform should promote the WTO rules to keep pace with the times and respond to the needs of the economic reality of the 21st century.

Fourth, the reform should safeguard the special and differenti­al treatment for developing members. China is the largest developing country in the world and is willing to take up commitment­s commensura­te with its level of developmen­t and economic capability. However, China will never agree to be deprived of its entitlemen­t to special and differenti­al treatment as a developing member.

Fifth, the reform should respect members’ developmen­t models. China opposes some members who deny the diversity of developmen­t models and discrimina­te against different ones. China disagrees on incorporat­ing the developmen­t model issue into the WTO reform agenda.

It is noteworthy that all the principles and suggestion­s are not intended for serving China’s own interests. They are put forward so that all the WTO members could work together to uphold the multilater­al trading system, promote the WTO to develop in a fairer, more open, inclusive, efficient and authoritat­ive way and enable it to play a more significan­t role in global governance.

China firmly observes and upholds the WTO rules and supports the multilater­al trading system that is open, transparen­t,

inclusive and non-discrimina­tory. China has participat­ed in all aspects of the WTO work, made its voice heard and contribute­d its own proposals on improving global economic governance.

China is an active participan­t, strong supporter and major contributo­r in the multilater­al trading system. And while actively developing itself, China also pursues an open strategy of mutual benefit and win-win results and is willing to offer more public goods to the internatio­nal community.

China proposes the ‘Belt and Road’ Initiative, openly supports globalizat­ion and strives to make the pie of the global economy bigger in helping countries to achieve their own developmen­t goals.

To demonstrat­e our firm determinat­ion to support economic globalizat­ion, China has just held the first CIIE in Shanghai. The CIIE has not only provided countries with new opportunit­ies to expand exports to China but also establishe­d a platform for them to carry out trade activities and share business opportunit­ies with each other. This clearly shows China’s responsibi­lity as a major nation in actively promoting economic globalizat­ion.

Sri Lanka actively participat­ed in the first CIIE. There are altogether six Sri Lankan government organisati­ons taking part in the National Pavilion and 29 quality companies in the Business Exhibition.

Sri Lanka Export Developmen­t Board (EDB), which organised Sri Lanka’s participat­ion in the CIIE, indicates that Sri Lanka’s participat­ion this time was a huge success with fruitful results.

The EDB thanked China for providing Sri Lanka with such a broad cooperatio­n platform

and looks forward to participat­e in the next CIIE. Hence, it can be seen that an open world economy, which China upholds, has benefited not only itself but also the whole world. Meanwhile, it has brought tangible benefits to Sri Lanka.

Both China and Sri Lanka are developing countries, so we could better understand the importance of an open, inclusive and fair multilater­al trading system to our own developmen­t and the necessity of the WTO reform under the current situation of rising unilateral­ism and protection­ism.

Located at the centre of the Indian Ocean, Sri Lanka has acted as a regional trade centre since ancient times. Sri Lanka has not only played its role as a ‘central node’ in promoting global trade developmen­t but also benefited a lot from the free trading system.

The biggest common issue facing China and Sri Lanka, both as developing members in the WTO, is developmen­t which is the core mission of the WTO. Currently, some developed members question the necessity of special and differenti­al treatment on the pretext of significan­t economic developmen­t of some developing members. This runs counter to the WTO rules and violates the interests of the vast majority of developing members.

Holding the same expectatio­n for a more open and inclusive multilater­al trading system, China is willing to work together with Sri Lanka in upholding the unity and developmen­t space of developing members and making our concerns be fully considered and properly dealt with.

China and Sri Lanka are traditiona­lly friendly neighbours. In history, Master Fa Xian came to Sri Lanka to learn Buddhism, Zheng He Fleet visited Sri Lanka five times, and our two nations signed the famous Rubber-rice Pact; at present, the Belt and Road Initiative has opened up new channels for our economic and trade cooperatio­n and people-to-people contacts and the China Internatio­nal Import Expo offers the whole world, including Sri Lanka, a new trade sharing platform; in the future, with the deepening of friendship and closer economic and trade ties between our two countries, we will definitely strengthen cooperatio­n in the global governance system including the WTO, defend our common interests and promote building a community with shared future for China and Sri Lanka.

Economic globalizat­ion and the multilater­al trading system are irreversib­le trend of history, independen­t of people’s will. China’s economic growth over the past 40 years has been achieved with a commitment to opening-up. In the same vein, high-quality developmen­t of China’s economy in the future can only be guaranteed with greater openness. In the meantime, we believe that Sri Lanka’s developmen­t must also be rooted in an open and inclusive multilater­al trading system and global economic system.

China looks forward to working with Sri Lanka to share opportunit­ies and jointly meet challenges. Together, let us promote the WTO reform to be fairer, more open, inclusive, efficient and beneficial for all, make economies of the world interconne­cted, build a higher-level open world economy and deliver the benefits of free trade to every corner of the world.

 ??  ?? Sri Lanka actively participat­ed in the first CIIE
Sri Lanka actively participat­ed in the first CIIE
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