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China enters new era in opening to outside world
Beijing(China)—China entered a
new period of its opening up policy on Monday, the fifth anniversary of
the country’s entry into the World Trade Organization.
Over the past five years, China has dropped its tariffs, canceled its
non-tariffs measures and opened up its markets in accordance with the
pledge it made when joining the WTO. Overall, China has dropped its
tariffs from 15.3 percent in 2001 to 9.9 percent in 2006. It has
canceled non-tariff measures, some of which have lasted for more than 50
years. In addition, China has opened its service industry, a highly
sensitive issue five years ago. In its latest efforts, China opened its
financial markets to foreign banks on Monday and will allow qualified
firms to wholesale crude and refined oil from Jan. 1, breaking the state
monopoly.
Pascal Lamy, WTO director-general, and Charlene Barshefsky, former U.S.
trade representative, both top negotiators for China’s entry into the
WTO, have praised China’s fulfillment of WTO pledges. Lamy told Xinhua
in Geneva that he gave China’s performance an A-plus. Barshefsky told
Xinhua that China had made remarkable progress in opening its economy
since it joined the WTO.
“China has made remarkable progress in opening its economy, in welcoming
imports and in inviting foreign investment,” she said. Yi Xiaozhun,
vice-minister of commerce, said on Monday that China’s accession to the
WTO over the past five years had led to three major changes in China’s
opening to the outside world. China’s opening has moved from regional
and partial opening to an overall opening. The opened area extends from
goods trade to the service trade. The opening of the market is taking
place under increasingly transparent laws and regulations, he said.
It took China 15 years of talks to join the WTO. When China was finally
accepted as a WTO member, it was granted a three to five year
“transitional period” for certain sectors to prepare for outside
competition.
Over the past five years, China has set about fulfilling the WTO
criteria. It has amended and drafted thousands of laws and regulations.
The Central Government opened its official Website on Jan. 1 this year
and 86 percent of central and local government departments have
established official websites over the past few years.
China has quickened its steps to reform its banking sector. Three of
China’s four major state-owned commercial banks have been listed home
and abroad since last year. By September this year, a total of 25
Chinese cities have allowed foreign banks to run RMB business and 111
foreign banking institutions were allowed to do so.
—Daily Mail, People’s Daily news exchange item |