China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Expo shows resolve to widen opening-up

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Editor’s note: How will the ongoing China Internatio­nal Import Expo in Shanghai affect China’s trade pattern and why it symbolizes further opening-up? Two experts share their views on the issue with China Daily’s Yao Yuxin. Excerpts follow:

Expo expected to help restructur­e economy

Sang Baichuan, director of the Institute of Internatio­nal Business at the University of Internatio­nal Business and Economics

This year marks the 40th anniversar­y of reform and opening-up, which have brought significan­t benefits to China, regardless of the change in the global business environmen­t. China is committed to further opening up to the world, and the expo will help it fulfill a large part of this commitment.

The “America first” strategy of the United States, marked by its unilateral and protection­ist policies, has disrupted global economic activities. In contrast, as the world’s second-largest economy, China has been trying to boost the world’s confidence by proactivel­y defending economic globalizat­ion and the multilater­al trade system.

China has been the world’s largest exporter for years; but it has also been the world’s second- largest importer for eight consecutiv­e years. And instead of pursuing trade surplus with its trade partners, it has tried to maintain a trade balance, by further expanding imports and thus providing more opportunit­ies for other countries to increase their exports and vitalize the world economy. Which is in accordance with China’s efforts to build a community with a shared future for mankind.

Some fear higher imports mean more severe competitio­n for Chinese enterprise­s, which could harm China’s economic growth. This is a misunderst­anding.

If the expanded imports include high-tech and high-qualimand ty products, which are in short supply in China, they can narrow the supply gap and help meet domestic consumers’ demands for luxury and fashion goods while promoting a greener consumptio­n pattern, which in turn will promote consumptio­n and boost the economy.

Besides, the resulting competitio­n will put pressure on domestic enterprise­s to improve the quality of their products to survive in the market, which is expected to accelerate supply-side structural reform and upgrade the economic structure.

The expo offers foreign companies a platform to showcase their commoditie­s and directly connect sellers with buyers, reducing their transactio­n costs and promoting imports. But the expo is just a start; the import volume will depend also on tariff reduction, a favorable trade environmen­t and actual domestic consumptio­n.

Import fair to yield concrete economic fruits

With the focus on the trade frictions triggered by the US, the fact investment­s in agricultur­al modernizat­ion and environmen­tal improvemen­t initiative­s up to 2020. Rural vitalizati­on also presents an excellent opportunit­y to integrate innovative technologi­es, such as the “internet plus agricultur­e” model, blockchain technologi­es, and new decentrali­zed rural wastewater and sanitation treatment systems.

Cooperatio­n and planning with and between provinces and across different sectors will also ensure a fully integrated approach to the many common problems suffered in the Yangtze River basin and in Zhang Monan, a researcher at the China Center for Internatio­nal Economic Exchanges that China is the world’s secondlarg­est importer is often neglected. Actually, China’s imports have grown at a faster pace than its exports in recent years. That China is holding the import expo despite this fact shows it is willing to continue to open up its markets to the world.

China’s resolution to pursue opening-up on all fronts is not empty talk, but an effective package of policies and actions. Apart from holding the expo, China has given greater access to foreign enterprise­s in the financial and services sectors, and high-end manufactur­ing including the auto industry, which will expedite the process of enacting laws to further strengthen intellectu­al property rights protection.

Expanding imports will not only boost economic growth but also deepen reform and openingup, allowing Chinese enterprise­s to more confidentl­y compete in the global markets and gradually integrate with the global high-end industrial chains. And Chinese consumers will surely benefit from the upgrading, as they will have easier access to high-end products.

China’s market of more than 1.3 billion consumers is attractive for global businesses as reflected in more than 3,600 enterprise­s from across the world taking part in the expo.

Many Western government­s have not sent their representa­tives to the expo, showing their wait-and-see approach — which they had also adopted toward the Belt and Road Initiative when it was proposed in 2013.

But the participat­ion of a large number of enterprise­s from those countries in the expo shows the expo will yield concrete economic fruits. And aside from commoditie­s trading, the expo will also demonstrat­e China’s determinat­ion to intensify market-oriented reform and opening-up.

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