Bangkok Post

China, EU close ranks against protection­ism

Major powers urged to avert trade wars

- CHRISTIAN SHEPHERD MICHAEL MARTINA

BEIJING: China could open its economy if it so wished, European Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker said yesterday, with the European Union calling on countries to avoid a trade war even as pressure mounts on Beijing over its industrial policies.

Playing host to Juncker and European Council president Donald Tusk, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang stressed the need to uphold free trade and multilater­alism as the United States and China become increasing­ly mired in a trade dispute, with no sign of negotiatio­ns on the horizon.

US President Donald Trump has warned he may ultimately impose tariffs on more than $500 billion worth of Chinese goods — nearly the total amount of US imports from China last year — to combat what the US says are Beijing’s trade abuses. China has sworn to retaliate at each step.

Long accused of protection­ist tactics that make it a difficult place for foreign firms to operate, China is trying to reverse that narrative amid the escalating trade war by approving huge investment­s, such as a $10 billion petrochemi­cals project by Germany’s BASF SE.

Juncker, speaking at a joint news briefing with Li and Tusk at Beijing’s Great Hall of the People, said that move showed “if China wishes to open up it can do so. It knows how to open up”.

“We need just and fair multilater­al rules. The EU is open but it is not naive,” he said later at a business forum.

Chinese companies are the chief target of EU measures to counter dumping and unfair subsidies, and the European Commission last year proposed that it should be

allowed to scrutinise foreign investment­s amid rising concern about Chinese acquisitio­ns on the continent.

Tusk called on China, the United States and other countries to avoid trade wars and to reform the World Trade Organizati­on so it is equipped to combat forced technology transfers and government subsidies, complaints underpinni­ng Trump’s tariffs.

“It is the common duty of Europe and China, but also America and Russia, not to destroy this order but to improve it, not to start trade wars, which turned into hot conflicts so often in our history, but to bravely and responsibl­y reform the rules based internatio­nal order,” he said at a meeting with Li. “There is still time to prevent conflict and chaos.”

Critics of Beijing’s policies say foreign firms are competing with Chinese rivals backed by massive, market-distorting subsidies and government support, issues not sufficient­ly addressed under WTO rules.

Both China and Europe have stressed the need for trade difference­s to be addressed through the WTO, but the United States has said China’s unfair policies are too urgent and too big for the trade body to handle.

The China-EU meeting produced a communique affirming the commitment of both sides to the multilater­al trading system. Leaders failed to find sufficient consensus for such a joint statement after meetings in 2016 and 2017.

The statement said Beijing and Brussels had submitted market access offers for the first time as part of ongoing investment treaty talks, adding that the exchange should open a “new phase” in the negotiatio­ns that both sides viewed as “a top priority”.

“The EU took note of China’s recent commitment­s to improving market access and the investment environmen­t, strengthen­ing intellectu­al property rights and expanding imports, and looks forward to their full implementa­tion as well as further measures,” the statement said.

The two sides also agreed to establish a working group on WTO reforms.

European envoys say they have sensed a greater urgency from China since last year to find like-minded countries willing to stand up against Trump’s “America First” policies.

China’s ambassador to the EU on Sunday wrote in Chinese state media that the focus of the annual China-EU leaders meeting would be on how the two sides could become a “standard of stability” amid the “din of unilateral­ism and protection­ism”.

Li said China wanted to improve the authority of the WTO, but did not elaborate. He reiterated pledges that China would significan­tly improve market access for foreign companies, reduce tariffs and seek more balanced trade with the EU.

“Together speaking out to protect free trade will send a positive signal to the world,” Li said.

The EU, while sharing Trump’s concern over Chinese trade abuses if not his prescripti­on of tariffs, has largely rebuffed efforts by China to pressure it into a strong stance against Trump.

There is deep scepticism in the EU about China’s actual commitment to opening its market further, as well as concern that it seeks to divide the world’s largest trading bloc with its economic influence in Eastern Europe.

Nonetheles­s, European officials suggest that Trump, who has also targeted Europe with tariffs, has created a window of opportunit­y to show that EU-China relations can be a bulwark for global trade.

 ?? AP ?? Observing from the rear; left to right, European Council president Donald Tusk, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang and European Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker applaud as Chinese and European officials exchange documents at a signing ceremony held in...
AP Observing from the rear; left to right, European Council president Donald Tusk, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang and European Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker applaud as Chinese and European officials exchange documents at a signing ceremony held in...

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