The EU Calls on Chinese President Xi Jinping to Put His Words into Action
Jan 25, 2017
The
European Union urged China on Wednesday to make "concrete progress" in
opening its markets to global investment, after Chinese President Xi
Jinping decried protectionism in a speech at the recent World Economic
Forum in Davos, Switzerland.
"A
speech is a speech and actions are actions," said Hans Dietmar
Schweisgut, EU Ambassador to China, adding that he would be "surprised"
if Xi was unable to translate words into action.
At
Davos last week, Xi called for "inclusive globalization" and for global
unity, saying "self-isolation will benefit no-one," two days before the
inauguration of U.S. President Donald Trump.
During
that week, China's cabinet issued measures to further open the economy
to foreign investment, including easing limits on investment in banks
and other financial institutions. No further details were provided, nor a
timetable for their implementation.
So
far, the EU has not seen "sufficient signs that China will be willing
to grant reciprocity of market access to European companies," Schweisgut
told reporters in Beijing.
In
June 2016, the European Chamber of Commerce in China warned that
foreign companies face an increasingly hostile environment in China,
with fewer than half its members saying they planned to expand
operations in the world's second-largest economy.
Billionaire
investor Wilbur Ross, Trump's choice for commerce secretary, has called
China the "most protectionist" country in the world, and said China's
officials "talk much more about free trade than they actually practice."
Trump
has previously criticized China's trade practices and threatened to
impose punitive tariffs on Chinese imports, and while he did not mention
China at his inauguration, he pledged to put "America first" in a
nationalist speech.
Schweisgut
played down chances of a trade war between China and the United States,
saying it would be "self-defeating" and that to speculate about the
risk is to "look too far down the road."
China
has said it is confident it can resolve trade disputes with the new
U.S. government, though some state media and government advisors have
warned that U.S. aircraft manufacturers, automobile companies and
agricultural products could be caught in the cross-fire of increased
trade tensions.
When
asked whether Europe saw any opportunities in China's warnings of
punitive measures against the U.S., Schweisgut said this was
"interesting speculation" but that he did not know enough about Trump's
trade policy plans to comment.
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