Passage 1
China Leaps Towards Top 10 Traders
China this year is expected to enter the “top ten”of the world’s trading nations, leapfrogging Taiwan and South Korea in the process. But China’s extraordinary export growth is also bringing increased pressures for liberalization and improved access to its markets.Sensitive to these pressures, emanating mainly from the US, whose trade deficit with China in 1992 reached $ 18 bn, Chinese officials have promised to quicken the pace of reform. One of China’s main aims is to rejoin the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade as soon as practicable, perhaps this year.The Chinese see early GATT membership as one way of dealing with bilateral pressures from its main trading partners—the US, Japan and Germany—all of which are restive about their yawning trade gaps with China.China’s powerful Ministry of Foreign Economic Relations and Trade will bemonitoring trade signals from the new Clinton administration, expected to be lesstolerant of the imbalance than its predecessor. Congress has also signaled agrowing restiveness on the China trade issue.An early indication of the state of China-US trade relations is likely to come in the next few weeks when officials of the office of the Special Trade Representative—the first high-level Clinton team to come to Beijing—sit down to discuss GATT-related issues.The US officials are certain to press their Chinese counterparts to speed liberalization in line with the US-China market agreement reached last October. Under this, Beijing agreed over the next few years remove about 75 per cent of its non-tariff barriers on a global Most Favoured Nation (MFN) basis.
Before entering the “top 10” of the world’s trading nations, China was behind Taiwan and South Korea.
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