China-EU investment pact likely in 2020
The
negotiations on a China-EU bilateral investment treaty (BIT) are moving forward
and the two sides have made positive headway in the text and an associated
list, according to Chinese officials.
Analysts
said there is a high possibility that the high-level agreement will be signed
next year as scheduled amid the lingering China-US trade war and China's
efforts to further open up its economy.
“China
and EU representatives discussed the agreement text and list of the BIT and
made positive progress” during the five-day, 21st round of China-EU BIT
negotiations in Beijing that ended on June 14, Gao Feng, the spokesperson of
China’s Ministry of Commerce (MOFCOM), told the
Global Times at a press briefing in Beijing on June 20.
The two
sides will adhere to the consensus reached by Chinese and EU leaders during the
21st China-EU leaders’ meeting in April and achieve the target set by the
leaders, Gao said.
China
and the EU agreed in April that negotiations on the BIT should achieve “decisive
progress” in the course of 2019 for the conclusion of a high-level agreement in
2020, according to a joint statement issued after the meeting. Talks on the
BIT, which cover market access and investment protection, started in 2013.
Industry
insiders said that MOFCOM’s response sends a clear signal that both China and
the EU attach great importance to BIT negotiations and are following the
schedule strictly, indicating that an agreement is likely to be reached in
2020.
Wei
Jianguo, a former vice commerce minister and vice secretary general at the
Chinese Center for International Economic Exchanges, told the Global Times on Thursday, June 20 that the smooth talks are “natural”
as risks associated with investing in the US, which traditionally was the
largest destination for the EU, are rising due to policy uncertainties under US
President Donald Trump’s administration.
“The EU
also has large economic volume [which China needs]. The BIT talks are
progressing just as a canal forms when water comes,” Wei said.
In 2018,
China’s investment in the EU rose 3.3 percent year-on-year to $7.82 billion,
making the country the bloc’s eighth-largest source of investment, data from
the MOFCOM showed.
Cui
Hongjian, director of EU Studies at the China Institute of International
Studies, told the Global Times that
the acceleration of BIT talks showed that the EU is willing to work with China “independently”
to jointly cope with the US-led anti-globalization trend.
Further opening-up
Amid an
escalation of China-US trade tensions, some have doubted that whether China was
yielding to US pressure and being forced to open up. Industry observers said
that the China-EU BIT refutes such talk, as it shows that China’s willingness
to open up is based on its own pace rather than a response to US threats.
“China’s
BIT talks with the US, despite an earlier start, are on hold amid the trade
war, but China’s BIT talks with the EU are moving forward. This shows that
China is not opening up to the US under Trump’s hard line - China is opening up
to countries that are willing to open their economies as well and defend free
trade,” Cui said.
Steps
taken by the Chinese government last year have laid a foundation for China-EU
BIT talks and made the country more appealing to foreign investors, analysts
said.
China
passed a new foreign investment law in March 2018 that ensures fair treatment
to both domestic and foreign companies. A revised negative list is expected to
be released by the end of June, Gao said.
Bai
Ming, a deputy director of MOFCOM’s International Market Research Institute,
told the Global Times that a BIT
between China and the EU could attract more foreign investment into the market,
which is crucial to the further opening up of the Chinese economy, especially
amid strained ties with the US.
A
successful BIT with the EU will also give China more bargaining chips at other
negotiating tables, such as with the US.
“As long
as we have an effective mechanism to attract foreign investors and push forward
BIT talks, it does not matter if US companies follow President Donald Trump’s
order and cut ties with the Chinese market,” Bai noted.
Some
analysts pointed out that the standard for 5G market access of Chinese telecom
equipment makers in EU countries may be an area of disagreement that slows the
process of BIT talks. The EU has not adopted a unified stance on Huawei. While
Spain has rolled out its 5G network using Huawei equipment, Czech and Poland
have reportedly taken hostile attitudes.
Source:Global Times
On June 8, 2019, Chinese and
foreign guests exchanged ideas at the first China-CEEC Expo & International
Consumer Goods Fair. (Photo by Hu Xuejun from People’s Daily Online)
China-EU investment pact likely in 2020
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