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BEIJING, April 18 -- Australian Prime Minister John
Howard is likely to announce that Australia will grant China "market economy
status" and open talks on a free-trade pact between the two countries when
visiting China today, according to trade experts and political analysts.
If so, Australia, one year after
New Zealand, will be the second developed country to grant China market economy
status.
Chinese officials did not confirm or deny that Howard
would formally announce China's market status and a start to formal negotiations
on a free-trade agreement today when meeting Chinese President Hu Jintao and
Premier Wen Jiabao, but hinted some breakthroughs would be made by saying "the
visit will win remarkable progress."
China has told Australia that after its
acknowledgement of China's market economy status and if the negotiations (of the
free trade pact) start, Beijing will put all economic issues, including
agricultural and service sectors, on the table, according to a Chinese trade
official who declined to be identified since the announcement had not been made
formally.
"If we do concede market economy status it will be in
return for everything being on the table and also a very comprehensive agreement
at the end," Howard told Australia's ABC television last week.
On Saturday, Howard is expected to deliver the
keynote address at the Boao Forum, an annual meeting of Asian business and
political leaders on the southern island of Hainan.
Australian Trade Minister Mark Vaile, who visited
China last month, said the two sides had made remarkable progress, paving the
way for free trade negotiations to continue. He said: "The time is right for
Australia to move into free-trade negotiations with China," according to the
website of the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade of Australia.
Analysts believed such a pact reflects the genuine
wishes of both countries to bolster bilateral economic and trade links.
"Sino-Australian ties will be more concrete and
diversified," said Zhang Yijun, former director of the department of North
American and Oceania Affairs of the Foreign Ministry. He described it a "new
phase" in bilateral relations and paves the way to a better international
trading status for China.
"It would be very significant both economically and
politically," he said.
Forging a free-trade agreement between the two
countries will be complex, and granting China market status will not
dramatically alter China's trade flow to Australia, an analyst said.
A series of complicated issues need time to discuss,
but it is becoming a trend that global players have more bilateral and
multilateral trade negotiations aimed at opening up world trade, Zhang said.
For China, the agricultural industry, which is far
weaker than Australia's, is one of the most sensitive issue since more than 740
million farmers will be affected by a further opening of the sector.
"But the two economies are very complementary which
is a base for long-term, mutually-beneficial economic ties," he said.
In 2004, Australia's exports to China grew by 21 per
cent to US$10 billion.
(Source: China Daily)
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