EU seeks more assertive strategy with China
March 22, 2019European leaders are set to sign off on a 10-point plan regarding relations with China at the EU summit Friday.
In the face of China's growing economic and political influence, Brussels is seeking a "more realistic" and "assertive" approach towards what the bloc describes as both a "partner" and a "systemic rival" due to China's tightly controlled market.
What Brussels wants
The strategy formulated by the EU includes:
- protection against "unfair practices of third countries and investments that threaten security or public order"
- a more "balanced and reciprocal economic relationship" including a reform of the World Trade Organization (WTO)
- addressing the "distortive effects of foreign state ownership and state financing"
- reciprocal access to public procurement markets
- strengthening cooperation on climate change and in international organizations
Clear messages to Beijing
In a speech in the German Bundestag on Thursday, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said China's "way of acting and trading" posed "fundamental challenges" for the bloc.
"We count on a liberalized social market economy, China counts on a controlled state economy," she added.
Her Austrian counterpart, Sebastian Kurz, said ahead of the meeting that with regard to China there should be "fairer rules," "protection of intellectual property, expertise from Europe."
He also said investors needed to be treated "properly."
Key trading partner: The EU is China's biggest trading partner; China is the EU's second-largest trading partner. Trade between the two is worth more than €1 billion ($1.28 billion) per day.
China's Belt and Road initiative: EU leaders are concerned about Italy signing a memorandum of understanding on the infrastructure initiative. It is set to sign it on Saturday, which would make Italy the first G7 country to sign on to the program that envisages projects in more than 60 countries aimed at boosting Beijing's global impact.
ng/rt (dpa, Reuters, AP)