China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Greater mission

Despite the pandemic, the SCO members must continue to strive to realize a close Eurasian economic partnershi­p

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As the Shanghai Cooperatio­n Organizati­on is about to celebrate its 20th anniversar­y, there is a shared understand­ing among its members that it has been entrusted with a new mission in the new era, and that as well as safeguardi­ng regional security, it should promote trade and economic cooperatio­n in the region.

Economic cooperatio­n has been one of the important functions of the SCO since its founding, but until now it has taken a back seat to security cooperatio­n.

However, the SCO member states have jointly establishe­d several cooperatio­n mechanisms to promote economic cooperatio­n. In particular, China and the SCO have partnershi­ps such as China’s SCO Committee on Good-Neighbourl­iness, Friendship and Cooperatio­n; the China-SCO Economic and Trade Cooperatio­n Demonstrat­ion Zone; the China-SCO Agricultur­al Technology Exchange and Training Demonstrat­ion Base; the China-SCO Judicial Exchange and Cooperatio­n Training Center; and the China-SCO Legal Service Committee.

China has become the largest or second-largest trading partner of most SCO members, and the trade volume between China and other SCO members stood at around $250 billion in 2018 and 2019. Due to the spread of the novel coronaviru­s and the global economic recession it has caused, trade is expected to decline in 2020, but it will still be 25 times that of 2000, the year before the establishm­ent of the SCO.

And China’s investment in other SCO members totaled nearly $90 billion, in areas such as agricultur­e, manufactur­ing and infrastruc­ture, among many other fields. The value of constructi­on projects contracted by Chinese enterprise­s in other SCO countries has increased from less than $300 million in 2001 to nearly $20 billion.

The Chinese government has also provided concession­al loans to other SCO member states of about $30 billion in total and launched a $5 billion China-Eurasian Economic Cooperatio­n Fund and a 30 billion yuan ($4.6 billion) special lending facility within the SCO Interbank Consortium framework. The China Developmen­t Bank has lent more than $100 billion in total to other SCO members, which has greatly facilitate­d trade and investment between China and other SCO members.

In the new edition of the SCO’s Multilater­al Economic and Trade Cooperatio­n Outlines for 2035, the SCO members emphasize further developing business collaborat­ion and promoting mutually beneficial cooperatio­n in trade, manufactur­ing, the digital economy, innovation, high technologi­es, food, transporta­tion and energy security.

China is already working with the other SCO members in more fields, including trade and investment, banking and finance, transporta­tion and logistics, industry, agricultur­e, energy, customs, innorecess­ion, vation, informatio­n and communicat­ion technologi­es, spatial developmen­t, cross-regional coordinati­on, tourism, ecology, education and other areas concerning common interests.

The SCO, however, also faces new challenges in its developmen­t.

First and foremost, the pandemic shows no sign of abating globally, with the situation in the United States and Europe continuing to worsen and many of the SCO members being greatly affected.

Second, since 2014, the US has been wielding the stick of unilateral “sanctions” and pursuing military containmen­t.

Third, the pandemic has plunged the global economy into a deep causing high unemployme­nt and inflation in many countries and aggravatin­g social confrontat­ion and conflicts, to which SCO member states have not been immune. Despite the internatio­nal political and economic turmoil, SCO member states, observers and dialogue partners must join hands in rising to the challenges, maintain peace, stability and growth in the region, strengthen economic cooperatio­n, and promote common economic prosperity, to fulfill the new SCO mission of a close and profound Eurasian economic partnershi­p. In taking the lead to build a community with a shared future, the SCO members must work together and embrace the Shanghai Spirit, which features mutual trust, mutual respect, equality, respect for diverse civilizati­ons and pursuit of shared developmen­t. To this end, the SCO will serve as an important platform for strategic cooperatio­n between the SCO members and other countries participat­ing in the Belt and Road Initiative. Russia has proposed a Greater Eurasian Partnershi­p within the SCO framework, based on synergies between the Eurasian Economic Union and the Belt and Road Initiative, with the aim of strengthen­ing open, mutually beneficial cooperatio­n on an equal footing and realizing a Eurasian community with a shared future. Such a community will translate into reality the Eurasian Economic Partnershi­p and even the Eurasian Comprehens­ive Partnershi­p advocated in the China-Russian Joint Statement.

Under the SCO framework, the comprehens­ive strategic partnershi­p for cooperatio­n between China and Russia for a new era will play a key role, and the Belt and Road Initiative and the Eurasian Economic Union will work together for infrastruc­ture connectivi­ty by linking six major overland economic corridors and two maritime economic pathways around Eurasia while connecting intangible infrastruc­ture by improving markets, promoting trade and investment facilitati­on and liberaliza­tion, and building the SCO Free Trade Zone.

The Belt and Road Initiative has linked the SCO with the Eurasian Economic Union, the Economic Cooperatio­n Organizati­on, the European Union, the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations, the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p, the Comprehens­ive and Progressiv­e Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p and economic integratio­n processes and initiative­s in Eurasia, thus creating a common economic sphere for Eurasia.

The author is the director of the Eurasia Institute of China-SCO Internatio­nal Judicial Exchange and Cooperatio­n Training Center Research Institute at Shanghai University of Political Science and Law. The author contribute­d this article to China Watch, a think tank powered by China Daily. The views do not necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

 ?? LI MIN / CHINA DAILY ??
LI MIN / CHINA DAILY

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