2010年8月5日星期四

'likely next year'

A top South Korean diplomat to China has said that Beijing and Seoul are likely to launch negotiations on a free trade agreement (FTA) next year, a move Chinese analysts said will help reshape trade in East Asia.

Yu Woo-ik, South Korea's ambassador to China, told China Daily in an exclusive interview that the two Asian nations "are expected to initiate official FTA talks in 2011", after a four-year feasibility study among governments, industrial associations and academies from the two countries was wrapped up recently.

Japan, China and South Korea have the largest, second-largest and fourth-largest economies in Asia, accounting for about 70 percent of the Asian economy and 18.6 percent of the global economy.

The free trade zone, if established, will hold a consumer population of 1.5 billion. It will be the third-largest economic area in the world, only after the North American Free Trade Agreement and the European Union.

China has reached free trade deals with Pakistan, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, Iceland, Chile, Peru, Costa Rica and New Zealand. It is also in talks with Australia and Mongolia over similar agreements.

Zhan Xiaohong, an analyst on China-South Korea issues from the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said progress on the China-South Korea FTA will act as a catalyst for East Asian trade.

Long Guoqiang, a top trade policy researcher in China with the Development Research Center of the State Council, which was involved in the feasibility study, said: "It is really worth anticipating and good news for both, especially for the South Korean economy."

The Ministry of Commerce did not comment on the FTA issue.

The Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement (ECFA) signed by the Chinese mainland and Taiwan in June also gave impetus to progress on the China-South Korea negotiations, analysts said. Under the ECFA, the Chinese mainland and Taiwan will remove tariffs on close to 1,000 categories of goods to each other.

The ECFA will stimulate South Korea to accelerate the process of the FTA negotiations with Beijing, as Taiwan is a major competitor with South Korea in areas such as electronics and chemicals, according to Nomura International.

The trade agreement across the Taiwan Straits will also threaten exporters from South Korea, which have relied much on the Chinese market, analysts said.

Yu admitted that South Korea has "a bit of concern" over the ECFA. He also said that the ECFA could enhance cross-Straits economic cooperation.

From the long-term perspective, China and South Korea should sign an FTA "to avoid unfair trade cooperation", Yu said.

China is South Korea's largest trade partner, followed by the United States. Last year, China-South Korea trade accounted for 21 percent of South Korea's foreign trade.

Early in 2004, nongovernmental organizations from China and South Korea initiated feasibility studies and in November 2006, the two sides launched a feasibility study among governments, industrial associations and academies. The studies showed that the FTA would benefit both economies.

Still, official negotiations cannot start as China and South Korea stakeholders have concerns over the implementation of the FTA.

In South Korea, industrial groups from the agriculture, forestry and fishing sectors are deeply concerned that the local industries will be hurt when the market is open to each other under the FTA framework, Yu said.

But Long Guoqiang from the Development Research Center of the State Council said the FTA will still help South Korea take advantage of the high growth of the Chinese economy.

2010年8月1日星期日

shift Eastward'

Editor's note: At a joint news conference with Mexican Secretary of Foreign Affairs Patricia Espinosa in Mexico City on July 30, China's Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi was asked whether he agreed with the view that world power is shifting from the West to the East. The following are excerpts from Yang's take on the matter:

T here has been an argument that the gravity of world power is shifting from the West to the East, but it is a view hard to be subscribed.

The emerging trend in the world today is the gradual evolution of world power towards relative equilibrium. It is an inevitable outcome of the growing move toward multi-polarity and of deepening economic globalization and rapid revolution in science and technology.

The process toward multi-polarity includes not just faster growth of major emerging countries but also rising regional power of developing countries in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. Developing countries, like their developed counterparts, have become a force to reckon with on the world stage.

People from all over the world are calling for greater democracy in international relations. This is in keeping with the trend of globalization and the move toward multi-polarity (in world affairs). It is also a specific reflection of such development. The G20 is a case in point. In the face of complicated global issues and challenges, the interests of all countries are closely intertwined.

Major issues that have a bearing on world peace and development need to be addressed through discussion among the countries concerned. They should not, and cannot, be handled by a dominant few nations. Countries should and must strengthen dialogue and cooperation to achieve win-win progress and common development.

An outstanding issue right now is that the reasonable positions, propositions, interests and demands of a vast number of developing countries have not received adequate respect and attention.

Developing countries need to strengthen cooperation, enhance solidarity and work to seek an equal voice and increased representation in international organizations, as well as equal rights and interests, in the global community. This will be a long and arduous process. Yet, it is an inevitable trend in the development of history.

Therefore for the purpose of safeguarding and promoting the common interests of developing countries and the fundamental interests of people across the world, China will work with the international community to actively promote South-South cooperation and North-South dialogue and cooperation, and to facilitate a fairer and more equitable development of the international political and economic order.


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