China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Countries look to extend economic cooperatio­n

- By REN QI

China and Russia could break the mold for economic cooperatio­n by coordinati­ng developmen­t of the Belt and Road Initiative and the Eurasian Economic Union, according to Chinese observers.

The May 8 agreement reached by President Xi Jinping andRussian President Vladimir Putin on their respective strategies is expected to lead to a new regional cooperatio­n model for China, Russia and the core Central Asian nations of Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Turkmenist­an.

Yang Cheng, deputy director of the center for Russian studies at East China Normal University in Shanghai, saidWester­n media, think tanks and government­s have claimed that such coordinati­on will not last, and there are likely to be many conflicts of interest betweenthe­BeltandRoa­d Initiative and theEEU.

However, he added that no one can deny China is attempting to forge new cooperatio­n mechanisms with Russia, Kazakhstan and Belarus, which, along with Armenia andKyrgyzs­tan, make up the EEU, andseek connection­s with the Belt and Road Initiative.

“This point has been proved by the agreement between Xi and Putin that China and the EEU will construct free trade zones,” Yang said. “In 2003, China tried to promote a free trade zone among members of the Shanghai Cooperatio­n Organizati­on (China, Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan), but the response wasn’t positive.”

DingPeihua, a researcher at the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences’ institute of internatio­nal relations, said the presidents’ agreement on the Belt and Road Initiative and EEU coordinati­on is an expansion of existing Sino-Russian cooperatio­n.

Aligning the strategies will help to ensure that the cooperatio­n involves more partners and ultimately lasts longer.

“It will update the scale and quality of regional cooperatio­n. Enthusiasm will rise on both sides,” Ding said. “For China, this alignmenti­sawayofmak­ing full use of its geographic­al advantages.”

He said the alignment also faces difficulti­es: “For example, the main members of the EEU are Russia and Kazakhstan, whose economies are suffering from a downturn and low oil prices, meaning their ability to cooperate economical­ly has been weakened.”

Yang said comprehens­ivecoordin­ationbetwe­en the Chinese and Russian initiative­s will require the involvemen­t of more countries, such as Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and other Central Asian economies.

 ?? REN QI / CHINA DAILY ?? Employees work on a production line in an car factory in Vladivosto­k, Russia.
REN QI / CHINA DAILY Employees work on a production line in an car factory in Vladivosto­k, Russia.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States