A free-trade agreement (FTA) between China and South Korea should be effective in the second-half of next year if all goes well, ending negotiations that started in 2012, Chinese Assistant Commerce Minister Wang Shouwen (王受文) said yesterday.
The Chinese and South Korean governments said last week that they had “effectively” reached a free-trade agreement that would remove or sharply reduce barriers of trade and investment between the two Asian countries.
“Our next step involves some technical issues and we will conduct some working consultations, striving to finish negotiations entirely within a year,” Wang said.
“Next year, in the first half of the year, we hope both sides will be able to formally sign an agreement,” he said. “If all goes smoothly and in line with our hopes, then next year, in second half of the year, the China-South Korea free-trade agreement potentially could be formally implemented.”
Asked whether there were similar concerns over the South Korean agreement as with stalled trade talks with Taiwan, Wang said he felt regret at the Taiwan talks falling apart and is not willing to see the same happen with South Korea.
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