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China and ASEAN are speeding up the tariff
reduction process to facilitate establishment of the free trade area
(FTA), said a senior foreign trade official yesterday in Beijing.(Xinhua
Photo) Photo
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BEIJING,
Oct. 11 -- China and the 10 members of the Association of Southeast Asian
Nations (ASEAN) are speeding up the tariff reduction process to facilitate
establishment of the free trade area (FTA), said a senior foreign trade official
yesterday in Beijing.
China's average tariff on ASEAN countries' goods was
slashed from 9.9 percent to 8.1 percent last year, while the ratio will drop to
6.6 percent next year, said Yin Zonghua, deputy director with the Department of
International Trade and Economic Affairs of the Ministry of Commerce.
The average tariff level will continue to drop to 2.4
percent in 2009, and finally in 2010, which is the scheduled time for the
establishment of the China-ASEAN FTA, 93 percent of products from ASEAN
countries will be tariff-free, according to Yin.
Yin disclosed the tariff reduction plan at the third
China-ASEAN FTA Seminar, which was organized by the ASEAN Committee in Beijing
and the China-ASEAN Business Council.
ASEAN countries have also made similar arrangements,
said Yin, citing Thailand as the example.
Thailand reduced its average tariff for Chinese
products from 12.9 percent to 10.7 percent last year, while it plans to further
lower it to 2.8 percent in 2009, according to Yin.
"The practice shows that tariff reduction has
remarkably boosted trade between China and ASEAN," said Yin.
Official statistics show that China's trade with
ASEAN totalled 130.4 billion U.S. dollars last year, with imports valued at 75
billion dollars and exports at 55.4 billion dollars.
In the first eight months of this year, China
imported 56 billion dollars of products from ASEAN and exported 44.9 billion
dollars. And the total trade with ASEAN this year is expected to surpass 150
billion dollars, according to Yin.
Both China and ASEAN benefit from the tariff
reduction practice and they will achieve win-win results from the FTA, he noted.
China's then Premier Zhu Rongji proposed the
establishment of China-ASEAN FTA in November 2000 and it was approved by leaders
next year.
In November 2002, the leaders signed the Framework
Agreement on China-ASEAN Comprehensive Economic Cooperation, and set the ball
rolling on the FTA.
By 2010, China will establish FTAs with Brunei,
Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore and Thailand, while Viet Nam,
Laos, Cambodia and Myanmar can enjoy five more years of transition.
Besides pushing the development of goods trade, China
and ASEAN will also speed up negotiations on service trade and investment so as
to construct the FTA in a comprehensive way, according to Yin.
Bambang Khaeroni, trade attach with the Indonesia
Embassy in China, said that co-operation between China and ASEAN "has been
working dynamically."
Indonesia has long been involved in regional
co-operation initiatives such as ASEAN and APEC (Asia-Pacific Economic
Co-operation), said Khaeroni.
"These experiences can be implemented to promote
strategic co-operation between China and ASEAN through China-Indonesia bilateral
co-operation," he noted, showing great enthusiasm towards pushing the
establishment of the FTA.
(Source: China Daily)