Global Times

Beijing, Berlin agree to cooperate in trade

Manufactur­ing-strong China more complement­ary with Germany

- By Yang Sheng

China and Germany have agreed to unequivoca­lly oppose protection­ism and safeguard the free trade system based on multilater­al rules to promote strong, sustainabl­e and balanced global economic growth.

Chinese Premier Li Keqiang and German Chancellor Angela Merkel co-chaired the fifth round of intergover­nmental consultati­ons and made the announceme­nt in Berlin on Monday.

Both leaders of China and Germany agreed to deepen cooperatio­n in finance and economy, make full use of high-level financial dialogue and other mechanisms, strengthen communicat­ion in macroecono­mic policy and build financing platforms concerning bilateral and third-party markets.

“This is a positive signal that Germany will not join the US’ trade war against China and exacerbate a global trade conflict,” Bai Ming, a research fellow at the Chinese Academy of Internatio­nal Trade and Economic Cooperatio­n, told the Global Times on Tuesday.

Germany and the EU still have many divergence­s on trade with China, such as intellectu­al property, but at least they didn’t launch a trade war against China, said Bai.

So compared to the US, who holds strong hostility toward China’s developmen­t, Germany has a better chance to share the benefits from China’s market and developmen­t, according to Bai.

While Germany appreciate­s China’s further measures to open its financial market, China supports the constructi­on of Frankfurt financial center and the offshore renminbi market, according to the announceme­nt jointly made by Li and Merkel.

The two countries also agreed to promote bilateral cooperatio­n in economy, trade and investment, jointly safeguard free trade and an internatio­nal market based on fair and recognized rules and relaxed market access.

China is willing to discuss with the German side to jointly explore the third-party market, and Germany is willing to give full play to its advantages to work with China in Industry 4.0, read the announceme­nt released on Monday.

After the trade war against the world launched by the US, China-Germany cooperatio­n is actually becoming more motivated, according to Wang Yiwei, director of the Institute of Internatio­nal Affairs at Renmin University of China in Beijing.

In the past, Germany worried about competitio­n with China, and thus felt reluctant to engage in technologi­cal cooperatio­n, but the US is now targeting other countries’ future strategies on technology innovation, including “Industry 4.0”, so Germany is starting to realize the necessity and importance of cooperatio­n with China, Wang told the Global Times on Tuesday.

Even without the impact of the trade war, China would prefer cooperatio­n with Germany rather than the US. China’s advantage is manufactur­ing, and that China and Germany are more complement­ary, according to Bai.

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