Broader access to investment key in EU talks

Updated: 2013-11-21 07:12

By Bao Chang (China Daily)

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The European Union sees broader access for investment in China as a key issue in negotiations on an agreement that will consolidate 27 bilateral pacts, the head of the EU Chamber of Commerce in China said.

"The more open the market is, the more European investors enter. European companies are very interested in entering the telecommunications, energy, construction, railway and financial service industries in China, if access can be further eased through a bilateral investment treaty," Davide Cucino, president of the chamber, told China Daily.

In mid-October, the European Commission authorized the EU to launch long-awaited negotiations on the investment agreement with China.

Two weeks later, Shen Danyang, spokesman at the Ministry of Commerce, called for adequate preparations for the negotiations, which are expected to begin during the China-EU Summit that opens today.

Currently, 27 out of 28 EU members have signed bilateral investment pacts with China, all of which will be consolidated into a comprehensive agreement between China and the EU.

"The agreement needs to secure existing openness and deliver new liberalization of the conditions for accessing each other's investment market. Crucially, it should also improve the treatment of investors and their assets - including key technologies and intellectual property rights," EU Trade Commissioner Karel De Gucht said.

John Ross, former director of Economic and Business Policy (London), said that European companies see China as one of the most important markets.

EU statistics show that EU companies' investment in China accounted for only 2 percent of the bloc's total overseas direct investment in 2012.

China's investment in the EU accounts for 2.2 percent of its total foreign investment.

"A comprehensive bilateral investment treaty is crucial to boost investment between the two large economies," Cucino said.

"Although capital outflow back to developed economies did occur during the financial crisis, China has maintained a business environment that is still very attractive to European investors."

According to a business confidence survey for 2013 conducted by the chamber and Roland Berger Strategy Consultants, of 550 European companies surveyed - all with a presence in China for more than five years - 86 percent are considering further investment to expand operations, while 41 percent are planning merger and acquisition deals this year.

As to boosting China's investment in the EU, the chamber said that the bloc welcomes the entry of Chinese investors into diverse sectors in the region, and it will take more steps to facilitate investment.

baochang@chinadaily.com.cn