China is taking such concrete measures as increasing
imports, strengthening protection of intellectual property rights,
and implementing opening-up policy, aiming to promote trade and
investment cooperation with other APEC members, said a Chinese
minister.
China is changing trade promotion modes, expanding
imports and promoting protection of intellectual property rights,
making contribution to the development of the region and the world,
Finance Minister Jin Renqing said at the 13th APEC (the
Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation) Finance Ministers' Meeting which
started in Hanoi Thursday.
The country is pursuing development policies of peace,
opening-up, cooperation for mutual benefit, he said, noting that it
pledges to cooperate with other APEC members to build a world of
harmonization, long-term peace, and common property.
Trade between China and APEC members, which annually
accounted for 70 percent of the country's foreign trade in recent
years, has increased 30 percent each year since 2003, he
said.
Out of 10 countries and regions with which China had
trade deficit in the first six months of this year, seven are in
the Asia-Pacific region, he said, adding that the country's trade
deficit stood at US$78.44 billion in the period.
At the two-day ministerial meeting, finance ministers
from the 21 APEC economies, which represent more than half of the
world's domestic product and over 41 percent of the world trade,
are to focus their discussion on two main themes: "Promoting Public
Finance Efficiency and Sustainability: Toward Stable and Efficient
Revenue Sources," and "Financial Sector Reform to Attract Capital
Flows."
Since its inception in 1989, APEC, which gathers some
of the world's large economies, including China, the United States,
Russia, Japan, Singapore and Vietnam, has worked to reduce tariffs
and other trade barriers across the Asia-Pacific region, create
efficient domestic economies, and dramatically increase
exports.
(Xinhua News Agency September 8, 2006)
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