China Daily

Beijing, ASEAN to enhance ties

China’s Jan- Sept direct investment in region surged 76.6 percent to $ 10.72b

- By LIU YUKUN and SHI RUIPENG in Nanning, ZHONG NAN in Beijing Contact the writers at liuyukun@chinadaily.com.cn

Companies from China and the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations are ready to explore more investment opportunit­ies in a range of areas following the recent signing of the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p, officials and business leaders said on Friday.

While both sides look forward to the deal’s early implementa­tion, they said many opportunit­ies also come from the tangible developmen­t of regional economic integratio­n with the Belt and Road Initiative, China and ASEAN’s complement­ary industrial structure and their growing bilateral trade value in both goods and services.

The remarks were made during the ongoing 17 th China- ASEAN Expo in Nanning, the Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region.

Ning Jizhe, vice- minister of the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, said since China and ASEAN jointly released a statement on production capacity cooperatio­n in 2016, their enhanced industrial and value chains have helped businesses on both sides better cope with uncertaint­ies caused by the COVID- 19 pandemic, protection­ism and the global recession.

Apart from the fast developmen­t of big- ticket infrastruc­ture and industrial park projects such as the China- Laos Railway, Indonesia’s Jakarta- Bandung high- speed railway and China- Singapore Suzhou Industrial Park, Ning said that the two parties should give full play to their comparativ­e advantages and enrich regional industrial chains in key sectors such as infrastruc­ture, manufactur­ing, agricultur­e and healthcare in the next stage of partnershi­p.

Despite slowing global trade, economic recession and serious travel disruption­s, China’s direct investment in ASEAN markets surged 76.6 percent on a yearly basis to $ 10.72 billion in the first three quarters.

The top three investment destinatio­n countries were Singapore, Indonesia and Laos, said the Ministry of Commerce.

Khamchan Vongsenebo­un, Lao deputy minister of planning and investment, said business ties between China and ASEAN are expected to become more wellrounde­d and pragmatic after the signing of the RCEP, the world’s largest trade deal. Her country encourages companies from both China and other ASEAN members to invest in its transporta­tion, services and agricultur­al sectors, and the government will in turn offer preferenti­al tax policies.

Owing to the huge gaps in levels of economic developmen­t between ASEAN economies, Xu Zhiyu, president of global government affairs at Shenzhen, Guangdong provinceba­sed Huawei Technologi­es Co Ltd, said the Chinese company will deploy more resources to help certain ASEAN countries like Laos build more telecommun­ication infrastruc­ture facilities to accelerate modernizat­ion, as well as provide related training and educationa­l opportunit­ies for local talent.

Raja Dato’ Nushirwan Zainal Abidin, Malaysian ambassador to China, said he hopes a production capacity cooperatio­n plan will further enhance teamwork in the area of advanced technologi­es, especially 5G, artificial intelligen­ce, robotics, aerospace and pharmaceut­icals between Malaysia and China.

Gao Yan, chairwoman of the Beijing- based China Council for the Promotion of Internatio­nal Trade, said China will continue to promote economic developmen­t through industrial upgrading to complement the production and consumptio­n needs of ASEAN economies and China to achieve sustainabl­e developmen­t and shared prosperity.

Despite the global economic downturn, Lim Ming Yan, chairman of the Singapore Business Federation, said that Singapore businesses continue to show unwavering interest in the Chinese market. With Singapore being one of the world’s major infrastruc­ture, financial, legal and logistics hubs, its companies are well positioned, Lim said.

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