<http://news.moneycentral.msn.com/printarticle.asp?Feed=FT&Date=20060915&ID=6027166>
September 15, 2006 11:41 PM ET
Merkel eyes free trade zone to help the west rival China
Financial Times

Spurred by concern about China's growing economic might, Germany is
considering a plan for a free-trade zone between Europe and the US.

A senior aide to Angela Merkel said the chancellor was "interested" in
promoting the idea as long as such a zone did not create "a fortress"
but rather "a tool" to encourage free trade globally, "which she is
persuaded is a condition of Germany's future prosperity".

Separately, on Friday, the US, Canada and the European Union
complained to the World Trade Organisation about China's tariffs on
car parts, raising the prospect of Beijing facing its first WTO
dispute.

The three said they had lost patience with Beijing's refusal to
further open the $19bn-a-year market.

News that the free trade zone, last pursued by Sir Leon Brittan, when
European trade commissioner in 1998, is being debated in the German
chancellery testifies to the rapprochement between Washington and
Berlin since Ms Merkel's election last November.

This convergence of views was underlined this week when Wen Jiabao,
Chinese premier, was politely chided by Ms Merkel for China's poor
human rights record and recent restrictions on foreign news agencies,
during an official visit to Berlin.

As German perceptions of China have grown more American, Washington's
approach has shifted too. Speaking before his first trip to Beijing,
Hank Paulson, US Treasury secretary, this week outlined a more
balanced policy mixing traditional US criticism with praise for
China's reforms.

Ms Merkel's aide said it was "far too early" to tell whether the
project of a transatlantic free-trade zone would be part of Germany's
priorities when it assumes the six-month presidency of the European
Union and chairs the G8 group of leading industrial nations from
January.

Two of Ms Merkel's most senior advisers, Jens Weidmann on economic
policy and Christoph Heusgen on foreign policy, have warned her the
initiative could be construed as protectionism.

Yet the notion has struck a chord with Ms Merkel, who has often called
for "a global framework of rules" – minimum social, environmental and
ethical standards – to prevent competition from sophisticated yet
authoritarian low-wage economies eroding western achievements in these
domains.

"The west needs to pull together," Gabor Steingart, Berlin bureau
chief for the Spiegel weekly, told the FT yesterday. His book,
World-War for Prosperity, a warning about the dangers of globalisation
published this week, is credited with influencing the debate in the
chancellery.

"What Nato did for the west under the cold war, Tafta (Transatlantic
free-trade area) can do in the current battle."

Additional reporting by Andrew Bounds in Brussels

Copyright 2006 Financial Times

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