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Economy

Boao Forum to offer world an Asian vision for shared prosperity(2)

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2018-04-08 13:53Xinhua Editor: Gu Liping ECNS App Download

China has reiterated its commitment to further opening up as well as its support for economic globalization.

At this year's annual session of China's top legislative body last month, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang said in a government work report that China will open its doors wider to foreign investors and further liberalize and facilitate trade and investment.

"We will strengthen alignment with international business rules, and foster a world-class business environment," Li said.

Warning that protectionism is mounting, the premier also voiced China's support for promoting economic globalization and protecting free trade.

"China calls for trade disputes to be settled through discussion as equals, opposes trade protectionism, and will resolutely safeguard its lawful rights," Li said, noting that the country is ready to work with all parties to advance multilateral trade negotiations.

Reform and opening-up was "a game-changing move in making China what it is today," and "it now remains a game-changing move for us to achieve China's two centenary goals," said the premier.

The two goals are to build China into a moderately prosperous society in all respects by the time the ruling Communist Party of China celebrates its centennial anniversary in 2021, and into a great modern socialist country that is prosperous, strong, democratic, culturally advanced, harmonious and beautiful by the time the People's Republic of China celebrates its centennial anniversary in 2049.

Later this year, the country will host the first China International Import Expo to help more foreign goods enter China. It is one of a series of major events China will host in 2018 to promote win-win international cooperation.

Liu He, a senior Chinese official, said at the World Economic Forum in Davos earlier this year that China "has to advance reform and open up at a faster pace" to accomplish its development goals.

"In the face of both the opportunities and challenges of economic globalization," Xi said in Davos a year ago, "the right thing to do is to seize every opportunity, jointly meet challenges and chart the right course for economic globalization."

SHARED FUTURE OF COMMON PROSPERITY

The Chinese president has laid out and championed the vision of building "a community with a shared future for mankind," which stresses making economic globalization more open, inclusive and balanced so that its benefits are shared by all.

As China's major proposal for realizing the grand vision, the Belt and Road Initiative, put forward by Xi in 2013, has offered the world a new vision to promote global prosperity.

Last May, representatives of more than 140 countries participated in the Belt and Road Forum for International Cooperation, a clear vote of confidence from the international community. To date, more than 80 countries and international organizations have signed cooperation agreements with China within this framework.

According to China's Ministry of Commerce, Chinese enterprises made 14.36 billion U.S. dollars of non-financial direct investment in 59 countries along the Belt and Road in 2017, much of which went to Singapore, Malaysia, Laos, Indonesia and Pakistan among other Asian countries.

The Belt and Road Initiative is "the best public goods" that China has offered the world, said Bambang Suryono, chairman of the Asia Innovation Study Center in Indonesia. It also embodies a bit of Chinese wisdom: harmony and co-existence, he added.

Another China-initiated platform, the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), has been emerging as a key source of investment in Asia and beyond. The 84-member multilateral development bank, dedicated to supporting regional development, has in the past two years funded more than 20 sustainable infrastructure and other productive projects to the benefit of tens of millions of people.

A large number of China-funded projects are well underway, boosting the economic and social development of the participating Asian members.

For example, the AIIB has approved funding for a flood management project in drainage areas in Metro Manila in the Philippines. The project will construct new and modernize existing pumping stations and their supporting infrastructure to ensure millions of residents are less vulnerable to floods.

China is also building more than a dozen power stations for Pakistan, the largest of which is supplying electricity to tens of millions of Pakistanis. When all of them are completed, power cuts and shortages are expected to be a thing of the past in the South Asian country.

  

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