President Xi Jinping of China has urged Asian economies to join its proposed free trade agreement, saying that rival pacts risked causing “fragmentation” among regional nations.
“With various new regional free trade arrangements cropping up, there have been worries about the potential of fragmentation. We, therefore, need to accelerate the realization of FTAAP (Free Trade Area of the Asia-Pacific) and take regional economic integration forward,” Xi said on Wednesday.
He issued the call in his keynote address at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) summit in Manila.
China and the United States are pushing their own free trade visions for the economically vibrant and populous region.
Last month, 12 Pacific nations reached an agreement on the US-led Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) pact, a major diplomatic coup for Washington.
China is pointedly excluded from the TPP, part of Washington’s attempt to ramp up influence in the region with its “pivot” to Asia. (The Philippines, host of the Apec summit, is neither a member of TPP nor FTAAP.)
Beijing has instead pushed its own agreement, the FTAAP.
Xi said free trade agreements should facilitate economic openness.
“We need to encourage equal footing participation and extensive consultation, and make free trade arrangements open and inclusive to the extent possible, with the view of enhancing the economic openness in our region and upholding the multilateral trading regime,” Xi said.
Win-win cooperation
“We must commit ourselves to win-win cooperation, oppose protectionism and promote fair competition,” he added.
Apec members first broached the idea of FTAAP in 2006. It could add about $2.5 trillion to the world economy by 2025, according to the Pacific Economic Cooperation Council.
The 21-member Apec bloc itself accounts for about 60 percent of the global economy. It groups the United States and China with middle powers such as Australia as well as developing nations in Asia and South America.
Opening to outside world
Xi said China would pay more attention to opening to the outside world and would work for a better environment for investors.
“We will step up reforms of the foreign investor management system, substantially cut restrictions on market access to foreign investments, improve IPR (intellectual property rights) protection and foster open, transparent, fair and highly efficient market environment,” he said.
China’s policy of welcoming foreign investments would not change, nor would its protection of the legitimate rights and interests of foreign investment companies or its commitment to provide better services for them, he added.
Forever open
“China’s door to the outside world will forever stay open,” Xi said.
He also said that with global growth slowing down, China was working “vigorously” to overcome difficulties and meet challenges by strengthening macro regulations and advancing reforms.
While economic regulators have fluctuated, its economy has maintained steady and fairly rapid growth, he said.
China’s economy grew 6.9 percent in the first three quarters of the year, contributing about 30 percent to global economic growth, Xi said.
“In general China’s positive economic fundamentals and long-term trajectory remain unchanged. Also remained unchanged are the basic facts that China’s economy has a strong resilience, great potential and ample room for maneuver,” he said.
He said the strong support and conditions favorable for continued growth had not changed, along with the forward movement of the country’s economic restructuring and upgrading.
Slowdown
In the latest quarter, China’s growth fell to a six-year low of 6.8 percent, as Beijing tries to shift the economy away from reliance on trade and investment.
The slowdown, which has been unfolding for several years, has rippled around the world, crimping growth in countries, such as South Korea and Australia that were big exporters to China.
Xi also said Beijing was stepping up efforts to counter climate change and clean up its environment, which has been heavily polluted by years of breakneck economic growth.
“We will make ecological progress part and parcel of the entire process of our economic and social development,” he said.
US President Barack Obama said on Wednesday work toward the final stage of getting the TPP deal off the ground was not easy, even as he reiterated the pact was a good deal economically.
“Execution is critical after we arrived at the text,” Obama said at a meeting with leaders of 11 other TPP member countries on the sidelines of the annual Apec summit.
“It is not only a good deal economically but also reflects our common values,” Obama said. “TPP is at the heart of our shared vision for the future of this dynamic region.” With reports from the wires