China Daily

Bright prospects ahead for ASEAN, China

- The views expressed are those of the author’s and do not necessaril­y reflect the views of China Daily.

The year 2022 is special for ASEAN-China relations. It is the first year for building the ASEAN-China comprehens­ive strategic partnershi­p, establishe­d exactly one year ago by the leaders of ASEAN member states and President Xi Jinping at the special summit to commemorat­e the 30th anniversar­y of ASEAN-China dialogue relations.

This year also marks the entry into force of the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p agreement. Looking back over the years, the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations and China have managed to overcome various challenges both within and beyond the region. We are pleased to see that the ASEAN-China comprehens­ive strategic partnershi­p has got off to a good start, and ASEAN-China relations have entered the “fast lane”.

Since the establishm­ent of dialogue relations, the two sides have developed all-round, multi-level and wide-ranging cooperatio­n.

The Five Principles of Peaceful Co-existence

The two sides adhere to the Five Principles of Peaceful Co-existence, continue to uphold ASEAN centrality and practice open regionalis­m. They persist on solving difference­s and problems through friendly consultati­on and dialogue on an equal footing. In such a spirit, they have maintained peace and stability in the region. Especially on the South China Sea issue, ASEAN member states and China have followed the principles underlined by the Declaratio­n on the Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea, implemente­d it over the past 20 years, and continued their efforts to make the South China Sea a sea of peace, friendship and cooperatio­n.

The two sides have also bolstered economic ties and expedited regional economic integratio­n. While two-way trade has grown by 85 times from 1991 to 2021, maintainin­g a robust growth momentum, China has been ASEAN’s largest trading partner for 13 consecutiv­e years, and ASEAN’s position as China’s largest trading partner has further consolidat­ed.

Also, bilateral trade increased by 15.8 percent yearon-year in the first 10 months of this year to 5.26 trillion yuan ($737.6 billion), accounting for 15.2 percent of China’s foreign trade. And China has become the second-largest investor in ASEAN, with its investment in 2021 touching $14 billion, up 96 percent year-on-year.

The two sides have also maintained frequent people-to-people exchanges. Before the COVID-19 pandemic, ASEAN and China were important sources of inbound tourists and travel destinatio­ns for each other, with mutual visits exceeding 65 million and the total number of flights between the two sides being more than 4,500 a week in 2019.

Besides, Chinese universiti­es are offering majors in the official languages of all the ASEAN member states, and the two-way flow of students was more than 200,000 a year before the pandemic broke out.

At the just-concluded 25th ASEAN-China Summit in Phnom Penh, the leaders of the ASEAN members and China met face-to-face for the first time since the COVID-19 outbreak, and applauded the achievemen­ts made by ASEAN and China over the past more than 30 years. They also discussed ways to expand cooperatio­n in areas such as trade, the digital economy, infrastruc­ture building, the environmen­t and ecology, and education and culture.

Among other things, the summit declared 2023 as the ASEAN-China year of agricultur­e and food security cooperatio­n, and approved the action plan on advancing the ASEAN-China comprehens­ive strategic partnershi­p, in an effort to jointly build a peaceful, secure, prosperous, beautiful and amicable home.

The RCEP and the ASEAN-China Free Trade Agreement 3.0 have given the region another chance to boost economic developmen­t. So the two sides should use the advantage to further raise the twoway trade and investment, as well as strengthen the industry and supply chains.

Moreover, since ensuring food security is a challenge for all countries, ASEAN and China should enhance cooperatio­n on agricultur­al studies, digital agricultur­e and eco-agricultur­e, and present to the world our solutions to the problems faced on the road to agricultur­al modernizat­ion and food security.

And we should work together to increase peopleto-people exchanges. For example, we should use the increase in the number of direct flights between the two sides to help the tourism industry recover faster, and enable more students to resume classes in universiti­es in China as well as ASEAN states.

Eleven years ago, leaders of all the 10 ASEAN member states and China, as well as the then

ASEAN secretary-general inaugurate­d the ASEAN-China Centre in Beijing as an internatio­nal organizati­on, setting a mission to work as a one-stop informatio­n and activity center to promote ASEAN-China cooperatio­n in trade, investment, education, culture, tourism and the media. The establishm­ent of the ACC reflects the importance the two sides attach to their relations and their eagerness to deepen cooperatio­n.

Over the years, the ACC participat­ed in the process of the ASEANChina relationsh­ip growing from strategic partnershi­p to comprehens­ive strategic partnershi­p, during which the all-round, multi-level and wide-range cooperatio­n has become deeper and more substantia­l. The positive role the ACC has played was highlighte­d in the joint statement issued at the special commemorat­ive summit last year and in the speech Premier Li Keqiang gave at the ASEAN-China Summit earlier this month. This also reflects the two sides are satisfied with the ACC’s work in the six priority cooperatio­n areas. Under the guidance of the government­s, the ACC will focus on implementi­ng the action plan to advance the ASEAN-China comprehens­ive strategic partnershi­p, including deepening policy exchanges and coordinati­on to meet the needs of both sides; promoting the Belt and Road Initiative, the RCEP, the CAFTA 3.0 and synergizin­g the government­s’ developmen­t policies; helping Chinese enterprise­s to fulfill their “going ASEAN” policy and ASEAN companies to invest in China; organizing more visits and businessma­tching activities for local government­s and enterprise­s from the two sides; harnessing the advantages of networking in facilitati­ng lectures, training programs, workshops and exchanges in education, culture and tourism; and strengthen­ing practical cooperatio­n and mechanism building to prepare for the rebound of the travel and people-to-people exchanges.

I am confident that ASEAN-China relations have a brighter future. The leaders of the ASEAN member states have committed to working with China to further unleash the cooperatio­n potential and bolster two-way ties. China, on its part, has made its relations with neighborin­g countries a top priority of its overall diplomacy, with ASEAN being high on that agenda. China stands ready to work with ASEAN to deepen mutual trust and friendship, achieve high-level developmen­t and stride toward modernizat­ion together. The stable ties between the two sides have become the stabilizer, ballast and propeller for the region and the world, as they have set a fine example of common developmen­t and internatio­nal collaborat­ion.

 ?? ?? The author is secretary-general of the ASEAN-China Centre.
The author is secretary-general of the ASEAN-China Centre.
 ?? MA XUEJING / CHINA DAILY ??
MA XUEJING / CHINA DAILY

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