BEIJING, Aug. 11 -- China-ASEAN (Association of
Southeast Asian nations) Free Trade Area would be completely operative in 2010
as scheduled, according to sources from the Fourth Pan Beibu Gulf Economic
Cooperation Forum held recently in Nanning city, the capital of south China's
Guangxi autonomous region.
By then, more than 90 percent products between China
and ASEAN nations would enjoy the zero tariff treatment and the Pan Beibu Gulf
rim will become an area of the most vigorous economic and trade cooperation
between China and ASEAN.
As a new sub-region cooperation scheme under the
framework of China-ASEAN (10+1), Pan-Beibu Gulf economic cooperation is expected
to attract increasing global attention. The Pan-Beibu Gulf economic cooperation
zone comprises seven countries, namely, China, Vietnam, Malaysia, Singapore,
Indonesia, Brunei and Philippines, which was proposed at the first Forum on
Economic Cooperation Beibu Gulf region held in Hanoi, the capital of Vietnam in
July 2006 and won an ensuing active support and energetic promotion from the
governments of China and the related countries.
China-ASEAN bilateral trade reached 231.12 billion US
dollars in 2008, up 13.9 percent despite an impact from the ongoing global
financial crisis. China and the ASEAN became each other's fourth largest trade
partners, and China's trade with the Pan Beibu Gulf countries amounted to 226.96
billion dollars, accounting for 98.2 percent of the total trade volume between
China and ASEAN.
The first half of 2009 was the toughest time for the
whole world with a downturn of global trade due to dwindling demands from
overseas markets. Nevertheless, Ma Biao, the chairman of the Guangxi Zhuang
Autonomous Region, said in his speech at the forum that the guangsxi region's
cross-border trade with Vietnam and other southeast neighboring countries rose
8.7 percent in the first half year.
The practice has given an eloquent proof that the
enhanced sub-regional cooperation has not only turned local resources of
individual countries into regional resources and limited local markets into
greater regional markets but also facilitate the absorption and rational use of
international capital and exterior resources in a bid to tap each other's
advantages for the common development.
It is particularly compelling to further regional
financial cooperation, noted experts and scholars at the recent forum, either
proceeding from the present reality of coping with global financial crisis or
from the long-term economic planning for the Pan Beibu Gult region.
In April, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao announced on
behalf of the Chinese government that China will set up a 10 billion US dollar
"China-ASEAN Fund on Investment Cooperation" to support infrastructural
development the region. Over the next three to five years, China planned to
offer credit of 15 billion dollars to ASEAN countries, including loans with
preferential terms of 1.7 billion dollars in aid for cooperative projects.
China also considers providing a total of 270 million
RMB yuan this year in special aid to the less developed ASEAN countries,
including Cambodia, the Laos and Myanmar, to help them meet pressing needs and
get through the most difficult time.
Moreover, China has proposed speeding up the
multi-lateralization process of the Chiang Mai initiative and called for setting
up a common foreign reserve pool and extending its scale. Meanwhile, ASEAN
finance chiefs in late February agreed to increase the size of joint currency
pool to 120 billion dollars from an earlier-proposed 80 billion dollars, to
expand their system of bilateral currency swaps under the Chiang Mai Initiative
to a more multilateral system, and to accelerate the development of the Asian
bond market.
At present, China's State Development Bank (SDB),
Industrial and Commerce Bank (ICBC) and Construction Bank (CCB) have all speeded
up preparations to set up their subordinate institutions in ASEAN countries,
whereas the Singapore-based DBS Group and the Ho Chi Min City-based Sai Gon
Thuong Tin Currency Joint Stock Bank have set up their representative offices in
the city of Nanning.
The "soft" environment for the Pan Beibu Gulf
economic area has continued to improve or upgrade and its "hard" environment,
however, is yet to be further improved, as indicated by trade and investment
deals signed by various countries. In this context, resources integration should
focus on freeway and railway networks from the city of Nanning in south China to
Singapore, coastal ports should be revamped to raise their handling capacity,
and major river navigation webs be further upgraded to complement one another.
In the Guangxi autonomous region, major breakthroughs
have been made with regard to the construction of the Guilin-Beihai Expressway
and Nanning-Guangzhou expressway, and the renovation of such leading ports at
Fangcheng, Beihai and Qinzhou is now well under way. By the end of this year,
ports across Guangxi will have a handling capacity of more than 100 million tons
of cargo and approximately 1.4 million 20-foot equivalent container units
(TEUS).
(Source: People's Daily)