China Daily Global Weekly

China-Singapore FTA sees upgrade

Talks indicate deepening economic cooperatio­n amid global challenges

- By ZHONG NAN zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

The upgrade of the China-Singapore Free Trade Agreement will further improve the level of services and investment, and create a better business environmen­t for companies from both countries, the Ministry of Commerce said on Dec 10.

The ministry’s comments came after China and Singapore said earlier that week that they would start follow-up talks for an upgrade of the FTA between the two sides. It was also an indication that the two sides are keen to deepen economic and trade cooperatio­n, jointly respond to challenges brought by factors such as the COVID-19 pandemic, and promote regional economic growth.

The two countries will adopt a negative list system to conduct followup negotiatio­ns on the FTA upgrade, aiming to increase policy transparen­cy in bilateral services and investment, said Gao Feng, a spokesman for the ministry.

Negative lists indicate sectors in which cooperatio­n is restricted, while all others are considered permissibl­e.

The China-Singapore FTA, which took effect in 2009, was designed to accelerate the liberaliza­tion of trade in goods on the basis of the Agreement on Trade in Goods of the ChinaASEAN (the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations) FTA more than a decade ago.

The official said the two sides have carried out in-depth cooperatio­n in medical and anti-contagion materials, establishe­d “fast-track channels” for necessary personnel exchanges, and jointly maintained the stability of the regional industrial and supply chains, after the outbreak of COVID-19 this year.

China is Singapore’s largest trading partner, and Singapore is China’s largest newly-emerged source of foreign investment, and the main destinatio­n of overseas investment, said Gao, adding that bilateral economic and trade cooperatio­n has resumed in an orderly manner.

The value of trade between the two countries amounted to $71.56 billion between January and October, up 0.5 percent on a yearly basis. In the meantime, China’s direct investment grew by nearly 1.3 times on a yearly basis in Singapore, while Singapore’s direct investment jumped by 7 percent in China, according to data released by the commerce ministry.

The contract value of newly signed projects between the two sides reached $3.75 billion in the first 10 months, up by 10.6 percent on a yearly basis, reflecting strong resilience and huge potential for cooperatio­n between the two nations.

The follow- up talks and their growing trade volume will not only give full play to the two countries’ respective strengths but also help them to respond tangibly to the growth of the Belt and Road Initiative and the recently signed Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p trade deal, said Zhang Jianping, director-general of the Beijing-based

China Center for Regional Economic Cooperatio­n.

“Singapore has certain practical business experience in Southeast Asian and South Asian countries,” he said. “The joint developmen­t of Chinese and Singaporea­n companies will be a win-win situation, using China’s capital and technology and Singapore’s local experience and business connection­s.”

“Companies are market-oriented,” the commerce ministry’s Gao said. “China has a large-scale market, complete industry-supporting capabiliti­es, sufficient human resources and well-developed infrastruc­ture. The so-called ‘reducing dependence on China’ does not conform to market rules and will not become the basis for corporate investment decisions.”

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