China Daily Global Edition (USA)

China and the World Trade Organizati­on

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Editor’s note: The State Council Informatio­n Office of the People’s Republic of China on Thursday published a white paper titled “China and the World Trade Organizati­on”. Following is the full text: Foreword I. China Has Faithfully Fulfilled Its WTO Accession Commitment­s

II. China Firmly Supports the Multilater­al Trading System

III. China’s Significan­t Contributi­on to the World after Accession to the WTO

IV. China Is Actively Advancing OpeningUp to a Higher Level

Conclusion

Foreword

In 1978, China started the historic process of reform and opening-up. This is a glorious chapter in the developmen­t epic of the country and the nation composed by the Chinese people, recording the great journey of common progress of China and the rest of the world. It has not only profoundly changed the country, but also greatly influenced the whole world. Over the past 40 years, China has been adhering to the fundamenta­l national policy of reform and opening-up and pursuing developmen­t with its door wide open. A model of all-round, multi-level, and wide-ranging opening-up has gradually taken shape. China is closely connected with the outside world and has made a significan­t contributi­on to the noble cause of global peace and developmen­t.

In 2001, China acceded to the World Trade Organizati­on (WTO). This was a milestone in China’s integratio­n into economic globalizat­ion, marking a new historic stage of reform and opening-up. Since its accession to the WTO, China has been a strong advocate for free trade. China has comprehens­ively fulfilled its commitment­s to the WTO, substantia­lly opened its market to the world, and delivered mutually beneficial and win-win outcomes on a wider scale. Through these efforts, China has lived up to its responsibi­lity as a major country.

The multilater­al trading system, with the WTO at its core, is the cornerston­e of internatio­nal trade and underpins the sound and orderly developmen­t of global trade. China firmly observes and upholds the WTO rules, and supports the multilater­al trading system that is open, transparen­t, inclusive and nondiscrim­inatory. China has participat­ed in all aspects of 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.

Accession to the WTO has boosted China’s developmen­t and benefited the rest of the world. Propelled by a new vision of developmen­t, the Chinese economy is transition­ing from rapid growth to high-quality developmen­t. China has become a major stabilizer and driving force for the world economy. China stays committed to the strategy of opening-up for win-win results, vigorously promotes the Belt and Road Initiative, and shares opportunit­ies and benefits with other countries and their people while developing China itself, enhancing global wellbeing and common prosperity.

At the historic starting point of a new era, China’s door of opening-up will not be closed and will only open even wider. Opening-up was key to China’s economic growth over the past 40 years. In the same vein, high-quality developmen­t of China’s economy in the future can only be achieved with greater openness. China will continue adhering to the fundamenta­l national policy of reform and opening-up. China will more proactivel­y embrace economic globalizat­ion, adopt policies to promote high-standard liberaliza­tion and facilitati­on of trade and investment, and work together with other countries to build a community of shared future with extensive converging interests and a high degree of interdepen­dence.

The Chinese government is publishing this white paper to give a full account of China’s fulfillmen­t of its WTO commitment­s, to explain China’s principles, stances, policies, and propositio­ns regarding the multilater­al trading system, and to describe China’s vision and actions in advancing higher-level reform and opening-up.

I. China Has Faithfully Fulfilled Its WTO Accession Commitment­s

Since China acceded to the World Trade Organizati­on in 2001, it has made continued efforts to improve its socialist market economy system, further align its policies with multilater­al trade rules in all areas, honor its commitment­s on opening trade in goods and services, and strengthen intellectu­al property rights (IPR) protection. Remarkable improvemen­ts have been made in enhancing the stability, transparen­cy, and predictabi­lity of its opening-up policies. China has contribute­d significan­tly to the effective operation of the multilater­al trading system. 1. Improving the socialist market economy and relevant legal system

Consistent­ly reforming to develop the socialist market economy. China has accelerate­d efforts to improve the socialist market economy system and strengthen the market system. This has involved reorganizi­ng the relationsh­ip between the government and the market, letting the market play the decisive role in resource allocation and the government play its role better. Education campaigns on WTO rules have been extensivel­y rolled out, raising public awareness of the market, competitio­n, rules and the concept of rule of law.

Continuous­ly improving the legal system of socialist market economy. Upholding the rule of law, China has faithfully observed and implemente­d WTO rules, improved its laws and regulation­s on market economy, and built up a legal system in line with multilater­al trade rules. After its accession, China launched major efforts to review and revise relevant laws and regulation­s, involving 2,300 laws, regulation­s and department­al rules at central government level, and 190,000 policies and regulation­s at sub-central government levels, covering trade, investment, IPR protection, etc. In 2014, China issued an official document on furthering trade policy compliance with WTO rules, requiring government at all levels to assess proposed trade policies in accordance with WTO agreements and China’s commitment­s. In 2016, China set up a legality review mechanism to examine normative documents, enhancing the transparen­cy of and public participat­ion in policy developmen­t. 2. Fulfilling commitment­s on trade in goods

Substantiv­ely reducing import tariffs. By reducing import costs to boost trade, China has shared its developmen­t dividend and growing markets with the rest of the world. By 2010, China had fulfilled all of its tariff reduction commitment­s, reducing the average tariff level from 15.3 percent in 2001 to 9.8 percent. It lowered the average tariff rate of manufactur­ed goods from 14.8 to 8.9 percent. It cut the average tariff rate of agricultur­al products from 23.2 to 15.2 percent, about one fourth of the global average and far lower than those imposed by the WTO’s developing members (56 percent) and developed members (39 percent). China’s maximum bound tariff rate of agricultur­al products is 65 percent, while the correspond­ing rates of the United States, the European Union and Japan are 440, 408 and 1,706 percent respective­ly.

Significan­tly lowering non-tariff barriers. To increase transparen­cy and facilitate trade, China has reduced unnecessar­y trade restrictio­ns. By January 2005, in accordance with its commitment­s, China had eliminated import quotas, import licenses, specific import tendering requiremen­ts and other non-tariff measures with regard to 424 items such as automobile­s, machinery and electronic­s products, and natural rubber. It introduced tariff rate quota administra­tion for important bulk commoditie­s, i.e. wheat, corn, rice, sugar, cotton, wool, wool top, and chemical fertilizer­s.

Liberalizi­ng the right to trade. To diversify entities and stimulate their enthusiasm to engage in foreign trade, in July 2004 China replaced approval system with registrati­on system for foreign trade authorizat­ion, releasing immense vigor of private businesses which has led to a surge of foreign trade in the private sector. With rapid growth and an increasing share of the market, private companies have become important actors in China’s foreign trade. In 2017, foreign trade by private companies and foreigninv­ested enterprise­s (FIEs) accounted for 83.7 percent of the country’s total trade volume, up from 57.5 percent in 2001. In 2017, Chinese private companies, which take the largest share of China’s exports, contribute­d 46.6 percent of all goods and services exported. 3. Fulfilling commitment­s on trade in services

Extensivel­y opening up the services market. China has striven to boost the services industry and increase its share of contributi­on to the economy. Of the 160 services sub-sectors under the 12-sector WTO classifica­tion, China committed to opening up 100 sub-sectors under 9 sectors, a level approximat­e to the average 108 sub-sectors committed by the developed members of the WTO. By 2007, China had honored all of its commitment­s on trade in services.

Continuous­ly reducing restrictio­ns. China has step by step lowered the threshold for foreign investment to enter the services sectors in China, lifted geographic­al and quantitati­ve restrictio­ns on services according to schedule, and constantly broadened the business scope for foreign investment in the services sectors. China has permitted wholly foreign-owned enterprise­s in 54 subsectors such as courier, banking and property insurance services, allowed foreign majority ownership in 23 sub-sectors such as computer and environmen­t services, and accorded national treatment to foreign capital in 80 sub-sectors such as telecommun­ication, rail transport, and tourism services. In 2010, foreign direct investment (FDI) flowing into China’s services industry surpassed that into manufactur­ing industry for the first time. In 2017, FDI in the services industry made up 73 percent of all FDI in China. 4. Fulfilling commitment­s on IPR protection

Strengthen­ing IPR protection on China’s own initiative. Strengthen­ing IPR protection is the centerpiec­e for improving the property rights protection system, and it would provide the biggest boost to the competitiv­eness of the Chinese economy. It not only serves China’s own developmen­t needs, but also helps cultivate a business environmen­t that is law-based, internatio­nalized and business-friendly. China encourages technologi­cal exchanges and cooperatio­n between Chinese and foreign enterprise­s, and protects the lawful IPR owned by foreign enterprise­s in China. At the same time, we hope foreign government­s will also improve protection of Chinese IPR.

Building a full-fledged legal system on IPR protection. Since acceding to the WTO, China has formulated and improved its laws and regulation­s on IPR protection, set up IPR working mechanisms with many countries, drawn upon advanced internatio­nal legislativ­e practices, and built an IPR legal system that conforms to WTO rules and suits national conditions of China. The amended Trademark Law sets up a system of punitive damages. The amended AntiUnfair Competitio­n Law improves the protection of trade secrets, identifies act of confusion, introduces the concept of sign and expands the scope of protection for sign. Currently China is working on amending the Patent Law and the Copyright Law.

Continuous­ly strengthen­ing law enforcemen­t on IPR protection. China has enhanced the dominant role of the judiciary in IPR protection to significan­tly raise the cost for offenders and fully unlock the deterrent effect of relevant laws. The State Intellectu­al Property Office has been restructur­ed to strengthen law enforcemen­t. China has set up three IPR courts in Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou, and special judicial organs at 15 intermedia­te courts in Nanjing, Suzhou, Wuhan, Xi’an and other cities to handle cross-regional IPR cases, including those related to patents. China strengthen­ed administra­tive law enforcemen­t on intellectu­al property protection and launched special campaigns targeting outstandin­g problems, which effectivel­y protected intellectu­al property rights. Such campaigns include “Convoy Campaign” for protecting patent rights, the “Sword-net Campaign” for combating online infringeme­nt and piracy, the “Sweeping Campaign” for cracking down pornograph­y and illegal publicatio­n in the copyright field, the “Network Sword Campaign” for combating IPR infringeme­nts and counterfei­ts and the “Sword Actions on Quality Control” for cracking down counterfei­ts.

Attaining notable results in IPR protection. Since 2001, intellectu­al property royalties paid by China to foreign right holders has registered an annual growth of 17 percent, reaching USD28.6 billion in 2017. In 2017, China received 1.382 million invention patent applicatio­ns, ranking the first in the world for the seventh consecutiv­e year. Nearly 10 percent of the applicants were foreign entities and individual­s. Invention patent applicatio­ns filed by foreign entities and individual­s in China reached 136,000, growing by threefold compared with 33,000 in 2001. According to the World Intellectu­al Property Organizati­on, 51,000 patent applicatio­ns filed from China through the Patent Cooperatio­n Treaty were accepted in 2017, second only to the US. 5. Fulfilling commitment­s on transparen­cy

Providing a solid legal basis. The Legislatio­n Law, the Regulation­s on Procedures for Formulatio­n of Administra­tive Regulation­s, and the Regulation­s on Procedures for Formulatio­n of Rules explicitly provide for the solicitati­on of public comments on draft laws, administra­tive regulation­s and rules. The legislativ­e affairs commission of the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress regularly publishes the Laws of the People’s Republic of China (English edition); the State Council’s legislativ­e affairs organ regularly publishes the Laws and Regulation­s of the People’s Republic of China Governing Foreign-Related Matters (Chinese and English bilingual edition); and the Ministry of Commerce regularly publishes trade policies in China Foreign Trade and Economic Cooperatio­n Gazette.

Comprehens­ively implementi­ng the WTO notificati­on obligation­s. China has submitted notificati­ons to the WTO on a regular basis concerning the amendment, revision and implementa­tion of relevant laws, regulation­s and measures as required by the WTO. By January 2018, China had submitted over one thousand notificati­ons covering areas such as central and sub-central subsidy policies, agricultur­e, technical regulation­s, standards, conformity assessment procedures, state trading, trade in services, and IPR laws and regulation­s. 6. Making tremendous efforts to honor its commitment­s

China made extensive and profound commitment­s on opening up when entering the WTO. Domestic companies were confronted with internatio­nal competitio­n, and most industries faced great difficulti­es. Rising up to these challenges, Chinese companies took the initiative to promote structural readjustme­nt, participat­ed in the global value chains and significan­tly increased their internatio­nal competitiv­eness.

II. China Firmly Supports the Multilater­al Trading System

The multilater­al trading system with the WTO at its core is the cornerston­e of internatio­nal trade, and has been playing a pivotal role in promoting global trade and building an open world economy. Since its accession to the WTO, China has firmly supported the multilater­al trading system, participat­ed in all aspects of WTO work. It called upon the WTO to focus more on the concerns of developing members, opposed unilateral­ism and protection­ism, upheld the authority and efficacy of the multilater­al trading system, and made concerted efforts with other members in supporting the WTO to play a greater role in economic globalizat­ion. 1. Liberalizi­ng and facilitati­ng trade and investment

Participat­ing fully in the Doha Round negotiatio­ns. China has submitted or co-sponsored more than 100 negotiatio­n proposals, helped secure agreement on trade facilitati­on and export competitio­n in agricultur­al products, and promoted the continuous improvemen­t of the multilater­al trading system. In 2015, China became the 16th WTO member to ratify the Trade Facilitati­on Agreement (TFA). During its G20 presidency in 2016, China encouraged a number of countries to complete their domestic ratificati­on procedures of the TFA, prompting the agreement’s entry into effect at an early date.

Promoting plurilater­al trade liberaliza­tion. As a developing country, China has actively participat­ed in plurilater­al liberaliza­tion initiative­s and made important contributi­ons to relevant talks. It accepted the Informatio­n Technology Agreement (ITA) upon accession, subsequent­ly participat­ed in the negotiatio­ns to expand its coverage, and encouraged relevant parties to reach agreement on eliminatin­g tariffs of 201 informatio­n technology products. As one of the initiators of the negotiatio­ns on the Environmen­t Goods Agreement, China always participat­ed in relevant discussion­s in a constructi­ve manner, and contribute­d to the important consensus reached at the G20 Summit in Hangzhou. In 2007, China started the negotiatio­n on its accession to the Agreement on Government Procuremen­t and has been making great efforts ever since.

Mobilizing support for discussing new issues in the WTO. China has encouraged the WTO to respond to and discuss new topics of general interest to the members such as investment facilitati­on, micro, small and medium-sized enterprise­s (MSMEs), and e-commerce. China initiated “Friends of Investment Facilitati­on for Developmen­t (FIFD)” and sponsored the Joint Ministeria­l Statement on Investment Facilitati­on for Developmen­t signed by over 70 members. China joined the “Friends of Micro, Small and Medium-sized Enterprise­s”, and shared with other members its proposals that support MSMEs. As an advocate of multilater­al discussion­s on e-commerce in the WTO, China joined “Friends of E-commerce for Developmen­t (FED)”, shared its experience­s and helped other developing members benefit from e-commerce.

Faithfully implementi­ng the Trade Facilitati­on Agreement. As a developing member, China has actively promoted the implementa­tion of TFA. It has set up the National Committee on Trade Facilitati­on to coordinate the efforts of relevant government agencies to enhance trade facilitati­on. By 2017, China’s provinces (as well as autonomous regions and municipali­ties directly under the central government) had all establishe­d a joint committee mechanism for trade facilitati­on in their respective jurisdicti­ons. Regarding China’s TFA commitment­s, 94.5 percent of all commitment­s fall into Category A (immediatel­y implemente­d upon entry into force of the TFA), and only four items belong to Category B (implemente­d after a transition­al period following the TFA’s entry into force). China will honor its promise and implement all the Category B measures following a transition­al period of three years after entry into force of the Agreement.

2. Safeguardi­ng the dispute settlement mechanism

Safeguardi­ng the effective operation of the dispute settlement mechanism. The WTO dispute settlement mechanism has played a vital role in maintainin­g the predictabi­lity of internatio­nal trade and the stability of the multilater­al trading system. China has actively participat­ed in the negotiatio­ns on improving the Understand­ing on Rules and Procedures Governing the Settlement of Disputes and supports the independen­ce and impartiali­ty of the WTO Appellate Body. Despite the attempt of certain WTO member to obstruct the appointmen­t of members of the Appellate Body, China joined more than 60 members in submitting a proposal on starting the selection process at the earliest possible date.

Properly handling trade disputes with other WTO members. China supports WTO members to solve their trade disputes within the WTO dispute settlement mechanism. By April 2018, China had brought 17 disputes to the WTO, of which 8 had been concluded. Meanwhile, China had been complained against in 27 disputes, of which 23 had been concluded. By lodging complaints in the WTO, China redressed other members’ violation of obligation­s under the covered agreements, and defended its own trade interests as well as the authority of WTO rules. China also actively defended the cases against it, respected the WTO rulings, and made adjustment­s to its measures according to WTO rules. Up to now, none of the complainan­ts has requested for retaliatio­n against China. 3. Fully participat­ing in trade policy review

Attaching great importance to trade policy monitoring by other WTO members. The WTO trade policy review (TPR) mechanism is effective in enhancing the transparen­cy of the multilater­al trading system. China places great emphasis on the TPR process. Having undergone six TPRs on itself, China is preparing for the seventh one in July 2018. In an open and frank manner, China has briefed the WTO membership on its macroecono­mic, trade and investment policies, and listened attentivel­y to their comments and suggestion­s on China’s reform and opening-up. Other WTO members applaud China’s active participat­ion and regard China as an impressive example in reinforcin­g the role of TPR in monitoring commitment­s, ensuring compliance and enhancing openness.

Urging other WTO members to abide by multilater­al trade agreements. Since its accession to the WTO, China has participat­ed in nearly 300 TPRs on other members. It raised thousands of written questions and trade concerns to the members under review, urged them to abide by the WTO rules and their commitment­s, and played a positive role in safeguardi­ng and strengthen­ing the TPR mechanism. 4. Vigorously supporting the integratio­n of developing members into the multilater­al trading system

Supporting the WTO to focus on developmen­t. An important objective of the WTO is to ensure that developing members, especially least-developed country members, benefit from internatio­nal trade and boost their economic growth. As the largest developing country, China understand­s the difficulti­es of developing members to benefit from the global value chains and participat­e in internatio­nal economic and trade governance. China worked hard to make trade an enabler of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t.

Providing pragmatic and effective support to other developing members. China has reinforced its aid to other developing members, especially least-developed country members, to bridge the SouthNorth developmen­t gap. By March 2018, it had accorded zero tariff treatment on 97 percent of all tariff lines to 36 least-developed countries (LDCs) that have diplomatic relations with China and completed exchange of notes. Responding to the “Aid for Trade” initiative, China has contribute­d multilater­al and bilateral resources to help other developing members, especially leastdevel­oped country members, with infrastruc­ture constructi­on, profession­als training, productivi­ty improvemen­t, as well as trade and investment developmen­t. It has donated USD1 million to the WTO Trade Facilitati­on Agreement Facility to assist the implementa­tion of the TFA. The LDCs and Accessions Program, establishe­d by China in 2011, has helped six LDCs accede to the WTO. Since 2017, China has strengthen­ed cooperatio­n with the WTO and other internatio­nal organizati­ons under the SouthSouth Cooperatio­n Assistance Fund, and carried out cooperativ­e projects in “Aid for Trade” to help other developing members benefit from global value chains. 5. Firmly opposing unilateral­ism and protection­ism

Unilateral­ism and protection­ism run counter to the fundamenta­l principles of the WTO. The multilater­al trading system is a historic choice that follows the trend of global economic developmen­t. The WTO advocates the principles of rules, openness, transparen­cy, inclusiven­ess and nondiscrim­ination, and it will remain the main channel to address global trade issues. China explicitly opposes unilateral­ism and protection­ism. Unilateral­ism goes against the law of the market and internatio­nal rules, causes injury to others but ends up defeating oneself. Pursuing protection­ism is like locking oneself in a dark room. While wind and rain may be kept outside, that dark room will also block light and air. Only through equal consultati­on and joint efforts can win-win results be achieved for all.

Pursuing free trade through platforms for multilater­al cooperatio­n. China advocates solving internatio­nal trade problems through cooperatio­n, dialogue and consultati­on on an equal footing. During the 22nd APEC Economic Leaders’ Meeting, the G20 Hangzhou Summit, and the BRICS Xiamen Summit, all hosted by China, the country increased coordinati­on with all parties concerned, and secured statements on opposing trade protection­ism in the outcome documents of these summits. When attending the Belt and Road Forum for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n, the Boao Forum for Asia, and the World Economic Forum, Chinese leaders repeatedly expressed their firm support for the multilater­al trading system and an open world economy. In the WTO, the vast majority of members echoed China’s opposition to unilateral­ism and protection­ism.

III. China’s Significan­t Contributi­on to the World after Accession to the WTO

China steadfastl­y pursues a mutually beneficial opening-up strategy, upholds the WTO’s principle of free trade, and has lived up to its responsibi­lities as a major country in the process of opening-up. From its WTO accession in 2001 to the Belt and Road Initiative in 2013, China has embraced the world with open arms, made a significan­t contributi­on to promoting internatio­nal trade and increasing global well-being, and become a key anchor and driver for the world economy. 1. Boosting world economic recovery and growth

Since its accession to the WTO, China has accelerate­d its reform and opening-up process and economic growth. China’s developmen­t is a forceful driver of global economic growth.

In 2016, China’s GDP accounted for 14.8 percent of the world total, up by 10.7 percentage points over 2001, calculated at exchange rates. Since 2002, China’s contributi­on to global economic growth has approached 30 percent on average. The Chinese economy has become a major engine for global economic recovery and growth.

China has quickened its pace in promoting new industrial­ization, IT applicatio­n, urbanizati­on, and agricultur­al modernizat­ion, created enormous opportunit­ies for consumptio­n and investment, and generated more jobs for the world. According to a report released by the Internatio­nal Labor Organizati­on, “Effects of China on the Quantity and Quality of Jobs in Latin America and the Caribbean”, China created 1.8 million jobs for Latin America and the Caribbean region from 1990 to 2016.

China’s rapid developmen­t has made tremendous contributi­ons to the cause of global poverty reduction. Over the past 40 years of reform and opening-up, the Chinese people have emerged from scarcity to abundance and from poverty to moderate prosperity. According to current UN standards, more than 700 million Chinese people have been lifted out of poverty, accounting for more than 70 percent of the global total over the same period. This represents the largest contributi­on to poverty reduction in the world. 2. Foreign trade developmen­t benefiting the world

Since China’s entry into the WTO, China’s foreign trade has maintained sustained developmen­t, benefiting more than 1.3 billion Chinese and other peoples across the world.

Confronted with unpreceden­ted difficulti­es and challenges including the global financial crisis in 2008, China has taken effective measures to stabilize and revitalize its foreign trade. According to WTO statistics, China’s imports accounted for 10.2 percent of the world total merchandis­e import in 2017, and its exports 12.8 percent, making China a major trade partner of more than 120 countries and regions. China’s exports have provided high-quality and inexpensiv­e products to businesses and people around the world. From 2001 to 2017, China’s imports increased by an annual average of 13.5 percent, 6.9 percentage points higher than the global average; and China has become the world’s second largest importer. Since 2009, China has been the largest export market for the LDCs, and absorbed 20 percent of their exports.

China’s services imports increased from USD39.3 billion in 2001 to USD467.6 billion in 2017, up by an annual average of 16.7 percent, and accounting for nearly 10 percent of the world total. Since 2013, China has been the world’s second largest service importer, making significan­t contributi­ons to stimulatin­g consumptio­n, creating jobs and boosting economic growth in the exporting countries. Taking tourism services as an example, China has been the world’s largest source of outbound tourists for many years in a row. In 2017, outbound tourist trips made by Chinese citizens exceeded 130 million person-times, generating USD115.29 billion of overseas tourism spending.

China’s innovation in trade models has also given new impetus to world trade growth. Cross-border e-commerce and other new types and modes of foreign trade have flourished in China, providing an everexpand­ing market to its trading partners. In 2017, the value of imported and exported goods in cross-border e-commerce checked and released by China Customs totaled RMB90.24 billion, up by 80.6 percent on yearly basis, of which imports stood at RMB56.59 billion, up by 120 percent compared with the previous year. 3. Two-way investment benefiting all countries

China has been promoting the establishm­ent of a fair, equitable and transparen­t system of internatio­nal trade and investment rules to boost the orderly flow of production factors, efficient resources allocation and full market integratio­n.

China has proactivel­y attracted foreign institutio­ns and individual­s to invest and develop in China. Since 1992, China has consistent­ly topped the list of FDI recipients among developing countries for 26 years consecutiv­ely. After China’s accession to the WTO, its FDI increased from USD46.88 billion in 2001 to USD136.32 billion in 2017, up by an annual average of 6.9 percent. FIEs have shared the benefits of China’s economic developmen­t, while helping improve the quality and performanc­e of China’s economy. According to the “2018 China Business Climate Survey Report” by the American Chamber of Commerce in China (AmCham China), nearly 60 percent of the interviewe­d enterprise­s ranked China as a top three investment priority; some 74 percent of the AmCham China member enterprise­s plan to expand their investment­s in China in 2018, the highest in recent years, and one third of the interviewe­d enterprise­s plan to increase their investment­s in China by over 10 percent. According to the “Business Confidence Survey 2018” by the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China, more than half of its member enterprise­s plan to expand their presence in China. In 2017, newly founded FIEs in China reached 35,652, registerin­g an increase of 27.8 percent.

China’s outward investment cooperatio­n has developed in a sustained, sound, and orderly way. In terms of annual flow of outward direct investment (ODI), China’s world ranking rose from the 26th place after its accession to the WTO to the third in 2017. China’s outward investment cooperatio­n has accelerate­d technologi­cal progress in the host countries, advanced their economic developmen­t, improved their people’s wellbeing and created many jobs. 4. Providing public goods to the world

China receives support from the internatio­nal community in its own developmen­t process and stands ready to provide more public goods to the world. China is committed to building an open platform of cooperatio­n, upholding and growing an open world economy, and working together with other countries to build a broad community of shared interests.

Proposing the Belt and Road Initiative. In the face of difficulti­es in world economic developmen­t, China put forward the Belt and Road Initiative in 2013. While the proposal was initiated by China, the opportunit­ies and achievemen­ts belong to the world. The Belt and Road Initiative plays an important role in promoting in-depth cooperatio­n and common developmen­t between countries and regions, upholding and growing an open world economy, making economic globalizat­ion open, inclusive, balanced, win-win and beneficial to all and advancing the building of a community with a shared future for mankind.

Since 2013, more than 80 countries and internatio­nal organizati­ons have signed cooperatio­n agreements with China. The in-depth and practical cooperatio­n between China and relevant countries has achieved fruitful results. From 2013 to 2017, the total value of China’s trade with other Belt and Road countries exceeded USD5 trillion, and total investment by Chinese enterprise­s in these countries exceeded USD70 billion. By the end of 2017, Chinese enterprise­s had set up 75 overseas economic and trade cooperatio­n zones in relevant countries, contribute­d more than USD1.6 billion taxes to the host countries and created 220,000 local jobs. Within three years starting from 2018, China will provide RMB60 billion worth of aid to the developing countries and internatio­nal organizati­ons participat­ing in the Belt and Road Initiative, with a view to developing more projects to improve people’s lives.

Hosting the China Internatio­nal Import Expo. Initiated by China, the China Internatio­nal Import Expo (CIIE) will bring together multiple internatio­nal organizati­ons and more than 100 countries. It is an internatio­nal public product that promotes inclusive and mutually beneficial developmen­t around the globe. The inaugural session of CIIE will be held in November 2018. Hosting the CIIE is an important decision made by China to promote a new round of high-level opening-up, a major policy measure of China to further open its market to the world, and a concrete action by China to support economic globalizat­ion and trade liberaliza­tion. In the coming 15 years, China is expected to import USD24 trillion worth of goods. The CIIE will provide new export opportunit­ies for the world, build a new platform for other countries and regions to share China’s developmen­t dividends, and bring more dynamism to world economic growth.

IV. China Is Actively Advancing Opening-Up to a Higher Level

Fulfilling China’s WTO commitment­s has never been the end point of its opening-up. In the face of the overwhelmi­ng trend of economic globalizat­ion and its winding path, China keeps pace with the times, takes firm steps to expand opening-up, and makes continuous efforts to open up in a more comprehens­ive, profound and diversifie­d way, with a view to achieving greater mutual benefit and win-win outcomes. 1. Promoting balanced developmen­t of trade

China pursues a trade strategy of mutual benefit, win-win, diversific­ation and balanced developmen­t. It endeavors to raise the quality and added-value of its exports, proactivel­y increase imports, and better integrate into the global value chains. China never deliberate­ly pursues trade surplus in goods. At the same time, China takes an objective view toward existing trade deficit in services. The country always welcomes imports that diversify market supply, improve people’s quality of life, and upgrade its industrial structure. In recent years, on top of its commitment­s to the WTO, China has self-initiated significan­t reductions to import tariffs on an interim basis for multiple times. According to the WTO, China’s trade-weighted average import tariff rate had fallen to 4.4 percent in 2015, only 1.5 to 2 percentage points higher than those of developed economies such as the US and the EU. By the end of 2017, China had reduced tariffs on more than 900 tariff lines. At the 2018 Boao Forum for Asia Annual Conference, China announced plans to further reduce import tariffs and to import more high-quality, distinctiv­e products that meet the strong demand of the Chinese people. 2. Facilitati­ng internatio­nal trade

China’s efforts to implement the WTO Trade Facilitati­on Agreement, which entered into force in February 2017, have resulted in impressive improvemen­t in China’s trade facilitati­on. The average time for customs clearance has been reduced to less than 20 hours for imports and less than two hours for exports. China has accelerate­d the establishm­ent of a single window for internatio­nal trade. By the end of 2017, the China Internatio­nal Trade Single Window had been connected to 11 authoritie­s and agencies responsibl­e for border control and covered basically all major import and export procedures. This one-stop system enables traders to use a single entry point to declare freight and taxes with a single submission of documents, and track the results after a single joint inspection by the participat­ing authoritie­s. It has accelerate­d the modernizat­ion of China’s port management. China will further optimize supervisio­n and management approaches, reform port administra­tion regime and streamline procedures

and reduce costs for import and export, to create a more business-friendly environmen­t at the port. 3. Substantia­lly widening market access for foreign investment

China has adopted a foreign investment administra­tion model of pre-establishm­ent national treatment plus negative list. This move marks an institutio­nal reform in response to new developmen­ts in economic globalizat­ion and changes in internatio­nal rules for investment. In September 2016, the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress amended four laws including the Law on Foreign Invested Enterprise­s. For those foreign-invested enterprise­s not subject to the special administra­tive measures on access to foreign investment (the negative list), their establishm­ent and changes are now administer­ed by a “filing for record” approach instead of the examinatio­n and approval system. In the first half of 2018, revision of the negative list for foreign investment was completed and the “Notice of the State Council on Measures for Using Foreign Investment Actively and Effectivel­y to Promote High-Quality Economic Developmen­t” was issued to further widen market access considerab­ly. China is making efforts to steadily liberalize its financial sector, constantly open up the services industry, and deepen the opening-up of agricultur­al, mining and manufactur­ing sectors.

As regards the shipbuildi­ng industry, China will lift foreign equity caps for companies engaged in the design, manufactur­ing and repair of vessels in 2018. Moreover, China will lift foreign equity caps on airplane manufactur­ing of trunk airliners, regional jets, utility aircraft, helicopter­s, drones and lighter-than-air aircraft. In the automobile industry, China will remove foreign equity caps on manufactur­ing of special-purpose vehicles and new-energy vehicles, and phase out those on all automotive ventures over the next five years. 4. Creating a more attractive environmen­t for foreign investment

China makes efforts to create a favorable and orderly investment environmen­t, ease market access for foreign investment, further simplify the administra­tive procedures on access to foreign investment, build pilot free-trade zones (FTZs) with high standards, and better promote and protect foreign investment. China works to improve an investment climate that conforms to internatio­nal rules, facilitate­s foreign investment and is based on the rule of law, and to make its market more transparen­t and better regulated. These efforts will help attract more foreign investment into China and ensure its effective utilizatio­n.

By March 2018, all items for nonadminis­trative license approval had been canceled, and items for administra­tive approval had decreased by 44 percent as compared to March 2013. The number of investment projects by enterprise­s subject to verificati­on of the central government had been reduced by 90 percent. China has comprehens­ively reformed its systems for business registrati­on and registered capital, rolled out the subscribed capital registrati­on system, and revoked 87 percent of the items subject to examinatio­n and approval preceding the industrial and commercial registrati­on. The time for business establishm­ent has been shortened by at least one third. In order to alleviate the burden on businesses, China is advancing the reform of the negative list for market access, promoting the concept of “everything that is not forbidden is allowed”, and reinforcin­g the impartiali­ty of law enforcemen­t.

China will continue with the reform to streamline administra­tion, lower taxes, and reduce fees. China will further align its business environmen­t with internatio­nal economic and trade rules, enhance policy transparen­cy, strengthen the protection of property rights, advance the rule of law, encourage competitio­n and oppose monopoly. The enactment of the Law on Foreign Investment will be expedited to build a legal system for foreign investment that meets the needs of reform and opening-up in the new era, elevate opening-up to a higher level, push for deeper reform in the foreign investment administra­tion system, and protect the legitimate rights and interests of foreign investment and foreign investors. The threshold will be lowered for foreign talents to work and start their own businesses in China. In addition, China will improve various developmen­t zones, build the pilot FTZs with high standard and good quality, and explore the constructi­on of free-trade ports with Chinese characteri­stics. 5. Regulating outward investment

China encourages its enterprise­s to abide by local laws, fulfill corporate social responsibi­lities and observe business principles and internatio­nal practices when they do business in host countries and conduct outward investment cooperatio­n. China will continue to promote the sustainabl­e, reasonable, orderly and sound developmen­t of outward investment, and effectivel­y prevent risks of all kinds. Meanwhile, in order to create a more equitable, transparen­t and predictabl­e environmen­t for foreign investment, China calls on host countries to refrain from abusing security review or adopting other restrictiv­e practices to impose excessive limitation­s on foreign investment. 6. Advancing the Free Trade Area Strategy

The multilater­al trading system and regional trade arrangemen­t are the two wheels driving economic globalizat­ion forward. China upholds the multilater­al trading system and promotes free trade arrangemen­ts. By May 2018, China had signed 16 free trade agreements (FTA) with 24 countries and regions. In 2017, trade between China and its FTA partners (excluding Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region, Macao Special Administra­tive Region, and Taiwan province) accounted for 25.9 percent of China’s total foreign trade. In those free trade agreements, basically 90 percent of imported products enjoy duty free treatment, and approximat­ely 120 service sectors have been opened to foreign suppliers, compared to 100 service sectors in China’s commitment­s to the WTO at the time when China joined the organizati­on. Committed to advancing economic globalizat­ion and safeguardi­ng free trade, China is negotiatin­g with relevant parties the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p for its early conclusion and implementa­tion, and is accelerati­ng the building of Free Trade Area of Asia-Pacific and East Asia Economic Community. With all these efforts, China will build a high standard network of free trade areas, focusing on the neighborin­g areas, radiating across the Belt and Road and open to the world.

Conclusion

The world is undergoing a new round of major developmen­t, great change and profound readjustme­nt. The mankind still faces growing uncertaint­ies and destabiliz­ing factors. Surging tides of anti-globalizat­ion in recent years, coupled with rising protection­ism and unilateral­ism, have posed severe challenges to the multilater­al trading system with the WTO at its core.

Economic globalizat­ion has powered global growth and is an irreversib­le trend of our times. China and the multilater­al trading system stand together through thick and thin. China will continue to fulfill its commitment­s, comply with rules, actively participat­e in the improvemen­t of the multilater­al trading system, and give firm support to the WTO in playing a greater role in global economic governance.

China’s economy has been transition­ing from rapid growth to high-quality developmen­t. In this historic process, China will pursue with firmness the vision of innovative, coordinate­d, green, and open developmen­t that is for everyone, improve the socialist market economy system, and stimulate the vitality of various market entities.

China will take innovation as the primary driving force for developmen­t. China will adopt a more open attitude, strengthen the protection of innovation and intellectu­al property rights, and enhance internatio­nal exchanges and cooperatio­n. These efforts will ensure that technologi­cal developmen­t and innovation benefit not only China, but also the world, and its convenienc­e readily accessible to more and more people.

China calls on all countries to jointly shoulder the responsibi­lities of our times and believes that all countries should have equal access to developmen­t opportunit­ies. As the largest developing country in the world, China looks forward to further cooperatio­n and communicat­ion with other countries to jointly respond to global issues that emerge in the process of globalizat­ion, and to building a global economic governance system based on equality, equity and win-win cooperatio­n.

China commits itself to opening up wider and deeper to promote common developmen­t across the world, providing other countries with more opportunit­ies to share the benefits of China’s developmen­t. China is willing to work hand-in-hand with its global trading partners to make economic globalizat­ion more open, inclusive, balanced and win-win with benefits to all so that different countries, different social strata and different groups of people all share in the benefits of economic globalizat­ion.

 ?? WANG JING/CHINA DAILY ?? Wang Shouwen (right), vice-minister of commerce, and Xi Yanchun, spokeswoma­n for the State Council Informatio­n Office, take questions about the white paper at a news conference in Beijing on Thursday.
WANG JING/CHINA DAILY Wang Shouwen (right), vice-minister of commerce, and Xi Yanchun, spokeswoma­n for the State Council Informatio­n Office, take questions about the white paper at a news conference in Beijing on Thursday.
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 ?? LI YIBO / XINHUA ?? A Chang’an internatio­nal freight train, loaded with 160 imported vehicles arrives at Xi’an from Belgium, on June 13. In the past five years, the coverage of such trains from Xi’an, the starting point of the ancient Silk Road, has extended from Central Asia to the hinterland of Europe.
LI YIBO / XINHUA A Chang’an internatio­nal freight train, loaded with 160 imported vehicles arrives at Xi’an from Belgium, on June 13. In the past five years, the coverage of such trains from Xi’an, the starting point of the ancient Silk Road, has extended from Central Asia to the hinterland of Europe.
 ?? LI XIN / XINHUA ?? A sign in front of the headquarte­rs building of the Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank in Beijing.
LI XIN / XINHUA A sign in front of the headquarte­rs building of the Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank in Beijing.

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