China’s FTAs cover 24 countries and regions

By Wang Yunsong from People’s Daily

 

China has inked 16 free trade agreements, or FTAs, with 24 countries and regions so far, forming a network that is rooted in neighboring countries, radiating Belt and Road nations and open to the globe, said Vice Minister of Commerce Wang Shouwen on March 11.

 

The FTAs not only involve China’s neighbors, but also countries along the Belt and Road, such as Pakistan, Georgia, Peru and Chile, Wang told a press conference during the first session of the 13th National People’s Congress, adding that the FTA network covers both developed and developing countries.

 

The trade and investment relations between China and its free trade partners develop faster than those with non-free trade partners, said the minister, citing China’s trade with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) as an example.

 

China-ASEAN trade surpassed $500 billion last year, six times the volume of trade when the two sides just signed FTA. China, once the fifth-largest trading partner of the ASEAN, has now leaped to the top since the FTA kicked off, he noted.

 

Talks and signing of free trade agreement remain an important part of China’s efforts in opening wider to the outside world, and a major path for China to expand international exchanges and cooperation, said Wang, adding that China will further speed up the construction of the FTA network.

 

Test run of trains for foreign trade between Luzhou in southwest China’s Sichuan province and Guangzhou, capital city of south China’s Guangdong province is launched at the South Sichuan Port Area of China (Sichuan) Pilot Free Trade Zone, Dec. 21, 2017. (Photo from CFP)

A staff from a local industry and commerce administration in Hubei province shows the province’s first business licenses that combine nine certificates into one at an administrative service center in China (Hubei) Pilot Free Trade Zone, May 12, 2017. (Photo from CFP)

 

 

New administration service center of Shenyang Area of China (Liaoning) Pilot Free Trade Zone in northeastern China, Dec. 13, 2017. (Photo from CFP)

 

 

 

 

 

 

Thanks to simplified administrative procedures in China’s free trade zones, fewer people now come to the customs for on-site clearance. (Photo from CFP)

 

Imported cars are parked at Qingdao Qianwan Free Trade Port Zone, east China’s Shandong province. (Photo from CFP)