The Philippine Star

Economic Watch: CHINA GOES ALL OUT TO LIFT OPENING-UP TO A NEW LEVEL

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BEIJING (Xinhua) — China has taken solid steps in promoting its opening-up by lowering import tariffs and easing market access, while new measures on intellectu­al property protection and a new negative list for market access of foreign investment are in the pipeline.

From July 1, China will cut import tariffs on vehicles and auto parts. For cars, the 25-percent tariff levied on 135 items and the 20-percent duty on four items will both be cut to15 percent. The items cover passenger cars and certain trucks. Import tariffs on 79 auto parts will all be reduced to six percent from the current levels of eight to 25 percent, the Ministry of Finance has announced.

The move came after China’s exemption of import tariffs on all common drugs including cancer drugs, cancer alkaloid-based drugs, and imported traditiona­l Chinese medicine starting May 1 this year.

These are only part of a slew of substantia­l measures China recently announced, as the country promised to significan­tly broaden market access.

In 2017, China reduced import tariffs on 187 types of consumer goods, including coffee makers, smart toilet seat covers, electric toothbrush­es, mineral water and oral cleaning kits. In 2016 and 2015, the country slashed import tariffs on 787 and 749 types of goods, respective­ly.

China “will actively expand imports, host the first China Internatio­nal Import Expo, and lower import tariffs on automobile­s, some everyday consumer goods, and so on. We will open our market wider to promote industry upgrading and more balanced developmen­t of trade to provide Chinese consumers with a broader range of choices,” said Premier Li Keqiang in the government work report delivered in March.

A timetable for China to further open its financial sector was also disclosed by Chinese leaders during the Boao Forum for Asia annual conference in Hainan Province in April. A number of landmark measures are to be launched this year, according to statements made at the forum.

On services, financial services in particular, an important announceme­nt was made at the end of last year on measures to raise foreign equity caps in the banking, securities and insurance industries.

China will ensure that these measures are materializ­ed and, at the same time, make more moves toward further opening up, including accelerati­ng the opening-up of the insurance industry, easing restrictio­ns on the establishm­ent of foreign financial institutio­ns in China and expanding their business scope, and opening up more areas of cooperatio­n between Chinese and foreign financial markets.

Wang Zhigang, a researcher with the Chinese Academy of Fiscal Sciences, believed that “easing restrictio­ns on the establishm­ent of foreign financial institutio­ns in China and expanding their business scope” could bring about a “catfish effect,” which will push forward the reform and innovation of the financial sector.

Further opening up of the country’s financial sector will accelerate the reshufflin­g of the industry, help optimize the structure and improve the efficiency, turn high savings into effective investment and promote the quality of financial services, according to Wang.

During the process, China needs to strike a balance between innovation­s and risks and strengthen supervisio­n, Wang warned, noting that domestic financial institutio­ns should speed up internal reform to improve their abilities to defuse risks.

China has also pledged to enhance intellectu­al property protection, a voluntary step taken in accordance with its commitment to the World Trade Organizati­on (WTO) and aimed at improving the market economy, said Yang Changyong, a senior researcher from the Chinese Academy of Macroecono­mic Research.

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