Britain and China ink deals
British PM and President Xi sign £9.3bil trade agreements.
SHANGHAI: British Prime Minister Theresa May left China with deals worth over £9.3bil (RM51.5bil) at the end of a threeday trade mission where President Xi Jinping pledged to upgrade their “golden era” in relations.
Britain is trying to reinvent itself as a global trading nation after a 2016 referendum decision to leave the European Union and China, the world’s secondlargest economy, is high on the list of countries that Britain wants to sign a free trade agreement with.
Speaking at a business summit in China’s commercial capital Shanghai yesterday, May said Britain was keen to help bring Xi’s vision for globalisation and a more open Chinese economy to life.
“We’re seizing the opportunity to become an ever more outwardlooking Global Britain, deepening our trade relations with nations around the world, including China,” she said.
“Chinese investment is helping Britain develop infrastructure and create jobs, with some 50,000 British businesses importing goods from China and more than 10,000 sell their goods to China, she added.
“We’ve agreed on moves to bring more of the United Kingdom’s internationally renowned food and drink to China, to open up the market to some of Britain’s worldclass financial services providers.”
The £9.3bil in deals would create over 2,500 jobs across the United Kingdom, the British government said.
Britain’s financial services firms alone secured deals worth more than £1bil (RM5.5bil) and market access that would lead to 890 jobs, it said, without giving details.
China sees Britain as a vital ally in its call for more open global markets, despite widespread concerns in the foreign business community about the difficulty of operating in China, and both countries refer to a “golden era” in relations.
Meeting in Beijing on Thursday, Xi told May that the two countries should “add new meaning into the bilateral ties so as to forge an enhanced version of the ‘Golden Era’,” according to staterun media.
China has also been appreciative of Britain’s enthusiasm for the China-backed Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank and Xi’s Belt and Road initiative to build a new Silk Road.
In a front page commentary yesterday, the overseas edition of the People’s Daily said Britain had shown “intelligence and pragmatism” in supporting Belt and Road.
But Brexit has unnerved Beijing, concerned about losing an important voice supporting free trade in the EU and what it may mean for market access to Europe for Chinese firms that have invested in Britain.
Still, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang told May on Wednesday, China’s ties with Britain would stay unchanged through Brexit.