BEIJING, April 4 (Xinhua) -- China and India will
strengthen cooperation in the financial industry, said Wu Xiaoling, vice
governor of the country's central bank on Wednesday.
Wu made the remarks at a Sino-Indian financial summit
held in western India's Bombay.
The vice governor said China's financial industry
will pay equal attention to competition and cooperation, aiming to find a
win-win solution for both sides.
She said the country will give foreign financial
institutions special treatment and boost competition between domestic and
foreign companies.
Wu also encouraged Chinese financial institutions to
sharpen their competitive edge in the international market by cooperating with
foreign institutions.
The vice governor pointed out China's financial
sector needs to improve its industrial structure, management capacity and risk
control capability.
These tasks will be implemented partly through
international communication and cooperation, said Wu.
China and India face similar challenges on the path
of development and should enhance cooperation in the financial industry, she
said.
Jayant Patil, Finance Minister of India's Maharashtra
agreed with Wu, saying the GDP of the two countries accounted for 50 percent of
the world's total in the nineteenth century but the proportion dropped to 1
percent in the twentieth century.
He also said the two sides should strengthen
cooperation in the financial industry.
Statistics with the central bank show China and India
have enjoyed fast growing economic and trade cooperation since the mid 1990's.
Bilateral trade volume reached 25 billion US dollars in 2006. It is expected the
two sides will register a trade volume of40 billion US dollars in 2008.