Perfil (Sabado)

Mondino heads to China, Europe on quest for investment

- – TIMES/AFP

Foreign Minister Diana Mondino will set off on a 10-day foreign tour of Europe and China on Sunday seeking investment and to boost Argentina’s trade ties. Mondino, 65, will be accompanie­d by “a large business delegation from Argentina’s various export sectors,” read a government statement.

The tour will begin with a three-day stop in China, running April 28 to 30, before heading to France, Belgium and Portugal. On May 2 and 3, Argentina’s foreign minister will attend a meeting of the Council of Ministers of the Organisati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t (OECD) in Paris. She will also be meeting OECD Secretary General Mathias Cormann.

Argentina formally accepted a longstandi­ng invitation to join the OECD back in January, one month after President Javier Milei took office. A road map for accession to the multilater­al organisati­on is expected to be announced. Mondino will then travel to Brussels for meetings and bilateral talks with officials from the European Union on May 5 and 6.

Talks over the stalled Eu-mercosur free-trade deal are expected to top the agenda, which includes face time with EU Energy Commission­er Kadri Simson, and the Commission­er for Internatio­nal Partnershi­ps, Jutta Urpilainen, among others. Mondino’s meetings in Brussels are a prelude to Argentina-eu Joint Commission that will meet on June 6 in Buenos Aires.

The minister will then stop on May 7 in Lisbon, when she meet her Portuguese counterpar­t Paulo Rangel, President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa and Prime Minister Luis Montenegro.

Mondino’s visit to China is sure to draw the eye. During last year’s presidenti­al campaign, Milei repeatedly rejected closer ties or a trade alliance with Beijing, declaring “I don’t make pacts with Communists” and branding the Chinese “assassins.”

China is Argentina’s main trading partner after Brazil. Chinese trade and investment drive large swathes of Argentina’s economy, ranging from commoditie­s and energy to banking. More than 24 of the South American country’s imports come from the Asian giant, to which it exports 6.6 percent of its total production, according to the latest data available from the INDEC national statistics bureau.

Mondino announced her travel plans after meeting with the Chinese ambassador to Argentina, Wang Wei, on April 8. She plans to meet with several officials, commercial businesses and investors, stopping in Beijing and Shanghai. Central Bank Governor Santiago Bausili is reportedly set to join the travelling delegation.

Among the pressing issues on the Beijing-buenos Aires bilateral agenda is an Us$18-billion currency swap between Argentina’s monetary authority and the People’s Bank of China.

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