African and Chinese entrepreneurs felt heartened after China announced
Saturday morning a package of preferential policies to boost China-Africa
cooperation and mutual development.
With the governments' determination and increasing efforts to boost bilateral
trade and investment, they are confident about future cooperation and
development, said representatives from Chinese and African business circles to
an entrepreneurs' conference held on the sidelines of the Beijing Summit of the
Forum on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC).
A high-level dialogue and conference of Chinese and African entrepreneurs
opened Saturday afternoon after Chinese President Hu Jintao announced a list of
measures covering aid, trade, investment and social development for Africa at
the opening ceremony of the two-day milestone summit.
The FOCAC mechanism and the entrepreneurs' conference have provided a
platform for Chinese and African business circles to exchange views and tap
cooperation potential to increase mutual investment, said Chairman of the China
Council for the Promotion of International Trade (CCPIT) Wan Jifei.
Such a platform is conducive to the growth of trade and investment between
China and Africa, Wan said.
As China's largest trade promotion organization, the CCPIT has signed
cooperation agreements with 31 chambers of commerce in 20 African countries, and
signed a cooperation memorandum with the African Union of Chambers of Commerce,
Industry, Agriculture, and Professions (UACCIAP), according to Wan.
A joint chamber of commerce between China and African countries, initiated by
the CCPIT and the UACCIAP, will be unveiled on Sunday to further facilitate
cooperation between business circles of the two sides, said Wan.
The proposal to set up such a chamber was raised in the first ministerial
conference of the FOCAC in 2000.
One of the largest economies in the world, China is Africa's first and the
most important cooperative partner, said Mohamed El Masry, head of the UACCIAP.
Africa's cooperation with China is aimed at increasing bilateral trade and
attracting Chinese investment and technology transfer to fully tap the
continent's human and natural resources for better economic growth, he said.
Patrice Motsepe, president of the Business Unity of South Africa and
executive chairman of African Rainbow Minerals, said that the key to Africa's
development lies in the increase of Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) in the
continent.
There is great potential for China-Africa cooperation, as Africa, with more
than 40 percent of its population under the age of 15, means a huge market in
the future, and China can also become a big importer of Africa's manufactured
products, the entrepreneur said.
FDI to Africa nearly doubled from 17 billion U.S. dollars in 2004 to 31
billion U.S. dollars in 2005, according to Motsepe.
China will double its aid to Africa and provide 3 billion U.S. dollars of
preferential loans and 2 billion U.S. dollars of buyer's credits to the
continent in the next three years, President Hu Jintao said at the opening
ceremony of the summit, the largest diplomatic event in China-Africa history.
China will also set up a fund of 5 billion U.S. dollars to encourage Chinese
companies to invest in Africa, Hu told an audience of 41 African heads of state
or government, senior officials from 48 African countries and delegates from
international organizations.