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Economy

China urges U.S. to wrap up trade pact before election

1
2016-03-24 08:55China Daily Editor: Qian Ruisha
A worker looks closely as containers are unloaded in Qingdao Port, Shandong province. China is eager to create a fair investment environment for foreign businesses. (Photo/China Daily)

A worker looks closely as containers are unloaded in Qingdao Port, Shandong province. China is eager to create a fair investment environment for foreign businesses. (Photo/China Daily)

Negotiators have already completed 24 rounds of talks

China and the United States should complete negotiations on the bilateral investment treaty before November's U.S. presidential election to prevent potential political intervention, former commerce minister Chen Deming said on Wednesday.

His comments came after the U.S. Republican presidential frontrunner Donald Trump pledged to impose tariffs on Chinese products to "level the playing field", even though this would be contrary to the rules of the World Trade Organization.

Speaking at the annual Boao Forum for Asia in Boao, Hainan province, Chen said China and the U.S. have completed text negotiations on the bilateral investment treaty, or BIT. Both sides are now exploring ways of further shrinking the so-called negative lists before moving on to talks on market access, he said.[Special coverage]

A "negative list" specifies any bans or limits on foreign investment.

Businesses not on such a list are presumed to be unrestricted. This system has been adopted in China's four pilot free trade zones in Shanghai, Tianjin, Guangdong and Fujian, which opened in the past two years.

But negotiators have yet to decide on the negative lists in the China-U.S. talks.

Eager to create a fair investment environment for foreign businesses, China has urged the U.S. to exchange views on the negative lists to conclude the talks.

Reuben Jeffery, president of Rockefeller and Co, said the validation of BIT can help both Chinese and U.S. companies operate business in each other's market independently in the long term, instead of looking for local partners to form joint ventures. This would be fairly flexible for them to control their finance operation and make investment decisions.

U.S. companies had invested $77.5 billion in China by the end of 2015 and China had invested $46.6 billion in the U.S. during the same period, data from the Ministry of Commerce showed.

Bilateral trade reached $558.39 billion last year, up 0.6 percent year-on-year from 2014.

"The bilateral investment treaty certainly can provide one of the best opportunities to cut investment barriers and increase transparency level in both countries and ensure a level playing field among all companies, as well as improving protections for Chinese and U.S. investors in each other's markets," said Merit Janow, dean of the School of Management and Public Affairs at Columbia University.

Talks on the investment treaty began in 2008 as both countries sought to increase mutual investment, which only accounted for a tiny share of their overseas investment. They have completed 24 rounds of negotiations by January of this year.

"Reinforcing the relationship between China and the U.S. will be more challenging and even more important now as the presidential election campaign creates a tendency among leaders running for office to blame U.S. economic problems on other countries," said Yao Zhizhong, deputy director of the Beijing-based Institute of World Economics and Politics at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

  

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