EU: China Pulls Back on Trade Terms

..c The Associated Press

 By CHARLES HUTZLER

BEIJING (AP) -- Domestic resistance to opening China's markets has
caused  Chinese leaders to retreat from trade concessions the United
States thought it won last month, a senior EU official said Thursday.

The assessment by European Commission Vice President Leon Brittan
confirms that momentum for getting China into the World Trade
Organization has slowed since U.S. President Bill Clinton rejected broad
market-opening offers Premier Zhu Rongji made in Washington.

Since Zhu's return to China two weeks ago, opposition among
protectionist officials has coalesced. A U.S. negotiating team came, but
left after running into new obstacles. The powerful telecommunications
minister tendered his resignation, partly in protest over the Washington
concessions, Western diplomats and industry insiders said.

Brittan reported that an EU trade negotiating team ``made no new
progress'' in 10 days of talks with the Chinese. Brittan, who is the
EU's acting trade minister, spent two days presenting EU demands to
Chinese leaders.

``I was not expecting dramatic results now, and of course I am very well
aware of the domestic pressures on the Chinese government,'' Brittan
told reporters.

In Geneva, meanwhile, the WTO was trying anew on Thursday to break a
deadlock over selection of a new director-general. The meeting -- the
fourth since last Friday -- comes nearly a week after Renato Ruggiero
left office and a year after he announced his intention to do so.

Brittan said that in a meeting Wednesday, ``Premier Zhu stressed the
major concessions made by China in Washington and indicated that he had
a limited room for maneuver.''

During Zhu's April 8 meeting with Clinton, the two sides came as close
as they have to striking a deal in 13 years of fitful bargaining by
China to enter world trade's rule-making body. Afterwards, the United
States released a list of stunning concessions by China, throwing open
previously closed sectors such as agriculture, telecommunications and
insurance.

Foreign Trade Minister Shi Guangsheng, who spent 3 1/2 hours with
Brittan on Thursday, afterwards told Chinese reporters that the U.S.
list included issues still under negotiation and American demands China
has never agreed to, the official Xinhua News Agency reported.

Brittan and his negotiating team found Chinese negotiators balking over
the 51 percent foreign ownership in telecommunications and insurance
ventures the United States believed China agreed to last month.

China's offer now stands ``somewhat short'' of the ``high-water mark''
claimed by Washington, Brittan said. ``We too would like to get back to
where the U.S. thought it was.''

U.S. negotiators who left Beijing last week had a similar experience.
Chinese negotiators backpedaled on reinsurance and brought up new
restrictions on access to the telecommunications services, said a
Western diplomat familiar with the talks. The diplomat spoke on
condition of anonymity.

``There is no doubt at all there has been criticism in China on the
extent to which they have gone with the Americans,'' Brittan said. He
added that China may need ``a period of consolidation, reflection and
consultation'' before it can begin serious bargaining.

Despite the setbacks, the EU wants China in WTO by year's end, Brittan
said. U.S. negotiators, who return to China in 10 days, had hoped to
reach an agreement by June.

In talks Thursday, Foreign Trade Minister Shi Guangsheng provisionally
offered to lower tariffs on some goods Brittan did not identify. If
agreed to by Zhu, the lower tariffs would be progress, but there was a
``considerable way to go.''

``It was inconceivable'' a final deal will be struck in time for the
visit
next week by German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, who holds the EU's
rotating presidency, Brittan added.

AP-NY-05-06-99 1121EDT

 Copyright 1998 The Associated Press.  The information  contained in the
AP news report may not be published,  broadcast, rewritten or otherwise
distributed without  prior written authority of The Associated Press.




Reply via email to