China Daily Global Edition (USA)

FTAs hold key to driving growth in CEE region

- By CHEN JIA in Krynica, Poland chenjia@chinadaily.com.cn

Major forum hears calls for broader Sino-European cooperatio­n to safeguard against protection­ism

Free trade agreements are needed between China and countries from Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) in order to provide a new driving force for regional economic growth, said officials and scholars.

The trade relationsh­ip between China and CEE has seen a remarkable improvemen­t, despite global trade frictions and the recent turbulence in financial markets. “That is proof that trade ties have great potential to develop,” Xie Yuan, vice-president of the Chinese People’s Associatio­n for Friendship with Foreign Countries (CPAFFC), said on Thursday.

Xie was speaking at a panel discussion of the 2018 Economic Forum in Krynica, Poland. The forum, the largest such annual event in Cenmake tral and Eastern Europe, was launched 28 years ago.

This year, more than 4,000 guests from over 60 countries in Europe, Asia and the Americas are taking part in the forum.

China sees the mechanism of “16+1 cooperatio­n” between China and 16 Central and Eastern European countries as an important gateway to incorporat­e the Belt and Road Initiative into the European economy, said Xie.

“China and the European Union share similar ideas and attitudes toward some important issues, including globalizat­ion, free trade and opposition to trade protection­ism.”

“We expect to expand cooperatio­n with all European countries,” he added

It was the fifth year that Chinese delegates joined the forum. This year, 24 officials from Sichuan, Fujian and Henan provinces and the Inner Mongolia autonomous region delivered speeches at the forum, introducin­g regional economic developmen­t and projects related to the Belt and Road Initiative to seek further cooperatio­n opportunit­ies with Europe.

Deepening cooperatio­n between China and CEE countries will not only help to the most of economic growth opportunit­ies, but also promote China-EU cooperatio­n, according to many of the forum participan­ts.

Hrant Bagratyan, a professor at the Russian-Armenian University in Yerevan, Armenia, said free trade agreements are needed between China and the Central and Eastern European countries in order to boost the regional economy amid growing threat of protection­ism.

“We need to sit down and talk about specific conditions and measures to implement cooperatio­n under China’s BRI. It is a great initiative that countries from Central and Eastern Europe have shown their willingnes­s to proactivel­y participat­e in the cooperatio­n,” he said.

European countries now need to join efforts in addressing common challenges, especially when US trade restrictio­ns have recently “added new fuel to the fire”, said Sergey Afontsev, director of the Economic Theory Department of the Russian Academy of Sciences.

Given these problems, new cooperatio­n strategies are to be developed for the BRI to help achieve developmen­t and security priorities in all participat­ing economies, said Afontsev, who said that the BRI could work as a powerful driver for trade and investment in the region.

Trade between China and the 16 CEE countries has grown by an annual average of 6.5 percent since 2011. The total trade volume was $68 billion last year, which accounted for 11 percent of China-Europe trade. The proportion was 9.3 percent in 2011, according to data from the CPAFFC.

China-Europe freight trains, seen as one of the important ties to link economies in the two continents under the BRI, have also strengthen­ed trade links. By the end of June, the cumulative number of trips of ChinaEurop­e freight trains had exceeded 9,000, reaching 42 cities in 14 European countries.

CPAFFC

 ??  ?? Xie Yuan, vice-president of the
Xie Yuan, vice-president of the

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