China's development an opportunity, not a threat to EU, says China's Minister of Commerce

China’s development offers an opportunity, and not a challenge or “threat”, to the European Union, and the two sides share more for cooperation than competition, China’s Commerce Minister Wang Wentao said. Wang told a media briefing in Beijing that China is willing to join hands with the EU to promote the Belt and Road Initiative and align with the EU’s Global Gateway, an infrastructure initiative announced last year, while expanding cooperation and deepening related mechanisms. “It is normal for the two sides to have differences and disputes due to different histories and cultures, social systems and development stages, but the two sides could strengthen communication to promote healthy competition,” he said, adding China and the EU are partners, not rivals. The two sides could have pragmatic cooperation in Covid-19 containment, green, digital, financial and technology areas among many others, and should jointly advance the ratification and entry into force of the EU-China Comprehensive Agreement on Investment (CAI), to inject more stability and positive energy for bilateral relations, Wang said.

They could step up coordination and cooperation under multilateral frameworks such as the G20, the United Nations, and the World Trade Organization (WTO), to promote the implementation of global development initiatives, maintain the multilateral trading system with the WTO at the core, and promote the WTO reforms in the right direction, he added. “We must adhere to openness and inclusiveness, abandon the zero-sum mindset, oppose protectionism, and deepen market opening-up,” Wang said. “China and the EU could strengthen bilateral cooperation, as well as cooperation in third-party markets, which will not only contribute to the economic development of both sides, but also the recovery and stable development of the world economy.”

Cui Fan, Professor of International Trade at the University of International Business and Economics in Beijing, said China and the EU should enhance communication to remove obstacles to the implementation of their bilateral investment agreement. According to Zhou Mi, Senior Researcher at the Chinese Academy of International Trade and Economic Cooperation, China and the EU already have a solid basis for cooperation that has huge potential for growth, especially because the global supply chain is being disrupted and the two sides share broad common interests in multilateral economic and trade rules, including under the WTO.

“The EU and China should take more initiatives to jointly promote pragmatic cooperation,” Zhou said. The two sides, he said, are expected to advance long-term economic and trade cooperation, including mechanism-based cooperation arrangements, which will reduce uncertainties for enterprises seeking to grow. Based on shared interests and the world economic development trend, the two sides should also strengthen cooperation and coordination in new areas that have no widely established rules, like e-commerce and anti-trust regulation in the digital economy, he said, as reported by the China Daily.

China will proactively align with high-level international economic and trade rules, to further deepen reform and expand institutional opening-up. To that end, the country has been communicating and negotiating with the members of the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement on Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP), and the Digital Economy Partnership Agreement (DEPA). Minister Wang Wentao said that China is willing to negotiate and sign free trade agreements with more economies and countries. China’s official applications to join the CPTPP and the DEPA last year have demonstrated the nation’s determination to deepen reforms and expand opening-up, while also showing its sincere willingness to strengthen cooperation in the international digital economy, and promote innovation and sustainable development, he said. The CPTPP is widely considered to have the highest standards for trade rules and market access. The DEPA is a new type of trade partnership agreement on digital trade signed in 2020 by New Zealand, Chile and Singapore. “To join the CPTPP, China will make openness commitments exceeding all those in its existing free trade agreements for market access,” said Vice Minister of Commerce and Deputy China International Trade Representative Wang Shouwen.

Finally, Minister Wang said China would promote normal trade with Russia and Ukraine and not help implement Western sanctions on Russia. Guo Shuqing, Chairman of the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission (CBIRC) added that the impact the sanctions will have on the Chinese economy, and its financial sector, was not entirely clear. “But on the whole, we don’t think it will have much of an impact in the future, since our economy and finances are very sound and resilient,” he said. Wang Wenbin, Spokesman for China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, also reaffirmed that the country “firmly opposes any illegal unilateral sanctions”, the South China Morning Post reports.