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在线翻译:
szdaily -> Business_Markets -> 
China seals free trade deals with 21 nations
    2018-01-26  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

JUST as the United States throws up new barriers to cross-border commerce, its largest trading partner China is redoubling its efforts to seal free trade agreements (FTAs).

From deals with blocs including the Association of Southeast Asian Nations to bilaterals with tiny countries like the Maldives, China’s FTAs already cover 21 countries. That compares with the 20 countries covered by U.S. agreements. More than a dozen additional pacts are being negotiated or studied, according to China’s Ministry of Commerce.

While U.S. President Donald Trump this week imposed tariffs on solar panels and washing machines, underscoring his “America first” outlook, China is hoping for a “bumper year” for new trade deals, according to the Ministry of Commerce.

China’s FTA approach is also tied to broader goals such as the Belt and Road Initiative to build new trade and infrastructure links across Eurasia, said He Weiwen, deputy director of the Center for China and Globalization in Beijing and a former Ministry of Commerce official.

“That would offer some help for China to counter the shockwave from trade frictions with the United States, but that’s not the purpose,” He said. “China wants to be more open, and 2018 is important as it marks the 40th anniversary of the historic reform and opening-up.”

Meanwhile, 11 nations are planning to save the Trans-Pacific Partnership Trump abandoned. That may spur China, which isn’t part of that deal, to pursue its own agreements such as the proposed Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership, which potentially will bind China to its strategic rival India as well as to diverse partners from Australia to Cambodia.

“As the United States is retreating from economic engagement in Asia, the rest of Asia is moving forward aggressively to conclude deals among themselves,” said Wendy Cutler, a former U.S. trade negotiator who’s now vice president at the Asia Society Policy Institute in Washington.

Such progress could help fortify China’s ambitions to put itself at the heart of globalization — outlined in President Xi Jinping’s speech to the World Economic Forum in Davos a year ago — particularly if Trump follows his dropping the Trans Pacific Partnership with dismantling the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). NAFTA talks are continuing this week.

China already dominates global trade with almost 14 percent of world exports, data compiled by Bloomberg show. (SD-Agencies)

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