China and EU can Jointly Counter Protectionism - Former French Prime Minister
Dominique de Villepin, former prime minister of France, shares his views on latest global trade policy issues.
Wherever we look today, free trade is facing hard times. Over the past several months, we have been witnessing an unprecedented violent trial of the contemporary world order, which is taking place on several fronts: first, the criticism of cultural globalization, accompanied with the clash of identities; then the fear of political globalization, with the inefficiency of multilateral institutions (the United Nations, World Trade Organization, the 2015 Paris climate accord); and finally, the rejection of economic globalization, which we can see in the protectionist temptation blowing across the Atlantic.
On the latter, there are many examples of regional and international treaties whose hours are counted or the credibility has been compromised. North American Free Trade Agreement member states are divided, ratification of the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement lags behind, the transatlantic partnership is stalled and the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement is structurally weakened by the United States' withdrawal. Only Africa is trying to move forward with the creation of a Continental Free Trade Area, led by the African Union, and with the renegotiation of the Cotonou Agreement.
My conviction is that the stability of the world economy is in the hands of the only powers capable of moderating the jolts of the US, which has become unpredictable and impetuous: Because the European Union and China together weigh nearly one-third of the global GDP, their agreement will be decisive for bending the destructive spiral triggered by the successive setbacks to world trade. China and the EU are facing the same challenges, that of a trade war and a spiral of retaliation.
The 20th EU-China Summit, hosted by Beijing in July, served to identify several common goals. First, China and the EU want to respond to the risk of an economic slowdown by consolidating economic and trade relations, which makes the former the main partner of the latter with more than 570 billion euros ($665 billion) of exports.
Second, they intend to search for concrete means to cope collectively with the protectionist measures of the US, which, in the absence of an alternative, could durably darken the prospects for world growth. The challenge for both parties is to anticipate a decline in trade with the US and to offset in the long term, the potential decline in exports. This means that beyond purely judicial actions, like WTO complaints, the future of world trade must be based on concerted initiatives, combined with the confidence of the people, the commitment of the states and the involvement of civil society.
https://sputniknews.com/analysis/201809271068374134-china-eu-counter-protectionism/