China and Pakistan signed a free trade agreement (FTA) on Friday, which is
projected to triple their current bilateral trade to 15 billion U.S. dollars
within five years.
Under the agreement, China and Pakistan will begin to reduce or eliminate
tariffs on all products in two phases from July 1, 2007.
During Phase I, both sides will reduce the tariffs on 85 percent of the
products based on different extents of tariff reduction within five years of the
agreement entering into force, and 36 percent of the products will be tariff
free within three years.
During this phase, China will mainly reduce tariffs on livestock, aquatic
products, vegetables, mineral products and textiles, while Pakistan will mainly
reduce tariffs on beef and mutton, chemicals and machinery products.
Phase II starts from the sixth year of the entry into force of the agreement.
Both sides will further reduce tariffs on the products on the basis of a review
of the implementation of the agreement. The aim is to eliminate tariffs on no
less than 90 percent of products, both in terms of tariff lines and trade
volume, within a reasonable period of time on the basis of friendly consultation
and accommodation of the concerns of both sides.
The Free Trade Agreement also covers investments, including investment
promotion and protection, treatment of investments, expropriation, compensation
for damages and losses and dispute settlement.
China and Pakistan launched negotiations on the agreement in April 2005. Over
the past a year and a half, the two sides have had six rounds of negotiations.
The deal would further upgrade bilateral trade and economic cooperation and
inject new vigor into the traditionally friendly relations between China and
Pakistan, Chinese officials said.
China-Pakistan trade volume exceeded 4.3 billion dollars in 2005,
representing a year-on-year increase of 39 percent. The officials said the trade
deal could triple bilateral trade to 15 billion dollars within five years.
China mainly exports high-tech products, chemicals, plastics products and
household appliances to Pakistan, and imports textiles, leather and aquatic
products from the south Asian country.
The conclusion of the FTA came after one and a half years of negotiations
between the two countries on market access for goods, rules of origin, trade
remedies, sanitary and phytosanitary measures, technical barriers to trade,
investments and dispute settlement.
The agreement is the third of its kind reached between China and foreign
countries after the China-ASEAN FTA and the China-Chile FTA.
The deal was signed by Chinese Commerce Minister Bo Xilai and his Pakistani
counterpart Jumayun Akhtar Khan, in the presence of Chinese President Hu Jintao
and his Pakistani counterpart Pervez Musharraf.
Hu arrived here on Thursday for a state visit at Musharraf's invitation.
Pakistan is the last leg of Hu's four-nation Asia tour, which has already taken
him to Vietnam, Laos and India.
The visit also coincides with the 55th anniversary of the establishment of
diplomatic ties between China and Pakistan.