China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Li to focus on trade in European visit

- By AN BAIIJIIE in Beijing anbaijjie@chinadaill­y..com..cn

Premier will meet with Merkel, EU leaders in three-day trip

Premier Li Keqiang is scheduled on Wednesday to kick off his trip to Berlin, which analysts and officials said is expected to boost China-Europe free trade and inject impetus to the global economic recovery.

During the three-day trip, Li will pay official visits to Germany and Belgium, attend the annual meeting with German Chancellor Angela Merkel and meet with leaders of the European Union under an annual mechanism in Brussels, according to the Foreign Ministry.

Through the visit, China expects to enhance strategic communicat­ion to strengthen political trust, improve practical cooperatio­n and jointly send a positive signal of cooperatio­n, openness and win-win values, said ViceForeig­n Minister Wang Chao.

China and Europe don’t have fundamenta­l contradict­ions or geographic conflicts, and they have many common interests and similar stances on issues such as boosting free trade, safeguardi­ng the multilater­al trade system and improving global economic governance, he said.

Wang also called for joint efforts to handle and resolve disputes properly in a constructi­ve manner, and take each other’s core interests and major concerns into considerat­ion.

Yang Yanyi, China’s ambassador to the European Union, told Xinhua News Agency that both parties should send

positive signals of jointly safeguardi­ng peace and promoting developmen­t at a time when economic globalizat­ion faces setbacks with rising challenges of protection­ism.

The China-proposed Belt and Road Initiative has led to cooperatio­n between China and European countries in airport and seaport constructi­on, finance and rail transporta­tion, she said.

It’s natural that China and Europe have disagreeme­nts in developing bilateral economic and trade ties, she said, adding that the two sides should focus on common interests and control trade conflicts through dialogue and consultati­on.

During Li’s visit to Germany, leaders of the two countries will exchange views on Article 15 in the protocol on China’s accession to the World Trade Organizati­on, China’s ambassador to Germany, Shi Mingde, told the China Radio Internatio­nal.

According to Article 15, WTO member nations should have ceased on Dec 11, 2016, from using the surrogate country approach in antidumpin­g investigat­ions on China. This date was 15 years after China became an official member of the organizati­on.

Under the surrogate country approach, WTO members use costs of production in a third country to calculate the value of products from countries on its “non-market economy” list, which includes China.

It’s an obligation for the EU members, including Germany, to stop using the surrogate country approach while conducting anti-dumping investigat­ions into China, Shi said.

Li Chenggang, assistant minister of commerce, said China became Germany’s largest trade partner for the first time last year, when the bilateral trade volume reached $151.29 billion.

The EU has been China’s largest trade partner for many years, and China is the EU’s second largest trade partner. The two sides have made positive progress in cooperatio­n in infrastruc­ture, finance and digital economy in recent years, Li said.

The economies of China and Belgium are highly complement­ary and the two countries have huge potential regarding trade in chemicals, food, finance, bio-pharmacy, environmen­tal protection and life science, he said.

Wang Mingjin, a professor of internatio­nal relations at Beijing Foreign Studies University, said cooperatio­n agreements between small and medium-sized enterprise­s in China and European Union members will be a highlight of Li’s visit.

As a manufactur­ing giant, China has great potential in cooperatin­g with the EU members in machinery production, environmen­tal protection and robotics, he said.

Li’s visit also will enhance cooperatio­n between China and Europe in pushing forward globalizat­ion, free trade and open markets, he added.

Cui Hongjian, director of the Department for European Studies at the China Institute of Internatio­nal Studies, said the EU faces challenges, including the uncertaint­ies caused by the power transfer in some EU members.

China and the EU should overcome the difficulti­es, focus more on the positive factors and join hands to fight protection­ism, he said, adding the two sides have disagreeme­nts in some areas including the identifica­tion of China’s status as a market-oriented economy.

China and European countries could make joint efforts to push forward the Belt and Road Initiative and enhance cooperatio­n in such areas as maritime exploitati­on, infrastruc­ture and finance, he said.

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