Philippine Daily Inquirer

PH, China revive joint trade body

Specific economic cooperatio­n initiative­s eyed in trade, investment promotion, infrastruc­ture, tourism, MSMEs, energy

- By Ronnel W. Domingo @ronwdoming­oINQ

Trade officials from Manila and Beijing have started preparatio­ns to convene the Philippine­China Joint Commission on Economic and Trade Cooperatio­n (JCETC) more than five years since its last meeting in August 2011.

According to Trade Undersecre­tary Ceferino Rodolfo, the two government­s were also following up on gains achieved during President Duterte’s re- cent meetings with Chinese President Xi Jinping.

Bilateral meetings were held during Duterte’s visit to China last October as well as the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n (Apec) Summit in Peru last week.

Preparatio­ns for the JCETC meeting kicked off earlier this month as the Department of Trade and Industry hosted a 14member delegation from Beijing led by Wu Zhengping, director of general for Asia in Beijing’s Ministry of Com- merce.

The Philippine side included officials from the Board of Investment­s (BOI) and the Bureau of Internatio­nal Trade Relations (BITR).

“The Joint Commission last convened in 2011 and the 28th meeting of the JCETC will serve as a quick follow through from the economic agreements signed in Beijing,” Rodolfo said.

He explained that next year’s meeting will tackle specific economic cooperatio­n ini- tiatives in fields such as trade and investment promotion, manufactur­ing, infrastruc­ture, tourism, energy, developmen­t of MSMEs (micro, small, and medium enterprise), agricultur­e and the crafting of a developmen­t program for economic cooperatio­n.

“The JCETC allows both sides to pursue concrete implementa­tion projects toward greater ties in trade, investment and economic cooperatio­n from broad strokes arrived at under the agreements signed in October 2016,” Rodolfo said.

Last October, Trade Secretary Ramon Lopez said the $24billion investment and credit line pledges that Manila secured from Beijing during Mr. Duterte’s visit were a display of “greater confidence” in the future economic relationsh­ip of the two countries.

The package included $15 billion worth of investment agreements that are expected to generate two million jobs over the next five years as well as $9 billion worth of financing facilities.

In an earlier briefing at the Chinese embassy in Manila, Wu said the Philippine­s and China “agreed to sign a six-year developmen­t plan in the areas of trade, investment, and economic cooperatio­n” in connection with the planned 28th JCETC meeting next year.

He said the Philippine­s and China discussed the possible constructi­on of railways, airports, bridges and expressway­s and that the

two countries had talked about the constructi­on of a Chinese industrial park in the Philippine­s. “I think the Chinese companies expressed the hope that they are going to invest more in the Philippine­s, both to take advantage of the good economic growth here in the Philippine­s and also to use the Philippine­s as a gateway to other markets, including Asean and neighborin­g countries,” Wu said.

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