China and New Zealand ramped up their cooperation yesterday, pledging to expand their existing free-trade agreement into what visiting Chinese Premier Li Keqiang (李克強) called China’s “most advanced” with a developed country.
The two governments also promised to work together on China’s “One Belt, One Road” trade and business expansion strategy.
In Wellington, Li signed nine pacts with New Zealand Prime Minister Bill English, who said talks to upgrade their free-trade agreement — in effect since 2008 — would begin on April 25.
Photo: AFP
The upgrade would produce an arrangement of the “most advanced level” between the nations and “the first of its kind between China and a developed country,” Li said.
In a column published yesterday in the New Zealand Herald, headlined “To New Zealand, with love,” Li wrote that rising international instability and uncertainty “have made it all the more important for China and New Zealand to work together to turn challenges into opportunities.”
New Zealand depends heavily on exports, and Li’s remarks echoed those by English and Reserve Bank of New Zealand Governor Graeme Wheeler, who have warned that possible disruptions of global trade is the biggest threat to prosperity.
New Zealand Minister of Regulatory Reform and Science and Innovation Paul Goldsmith would attend a “One Belt, One Road” summit in Beijing in May, English said.
New Zealand was the first Western country to sign a free-trade agreement with China and the first to join the China-initiated Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, after which it helped usher in the UK and Australia.
China is the New Zealand’s second-biggest trade partner, after Australia, which Li visited last week.
Despite agreements on areas from e-commerce to chilled goat exports, thornier issues emerged during Li’s talks with English.
They discussed the South China Sea and English acknowledged the topic was “sensitive,” though he said he did not think it would affect the rest of their relationship.
Li took issue with a local journalist’s question on whether allegations of steel dumping could impact the trade relationship, a spat that English and his predecessor, former New Zealand prime minister John Key, have tried to play down.
Li said China is reducing steel production and exports only a modest amount to New Zealand. He added that while half of China’s dairy imports come from New Zealand, Beijing has not accused New Zealand of dumping them.
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