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Wednesday, August 01, 2001, updated at 09:54(GMT+8)
Business  

WTO Entry Challenges Bonded Zones

China's entry into the World Trade Organization (WTO) will not mean the end of its 15 bonded zones, but a chance for their improvement and perfection, according to officials.

"Bonded zone is still a popular thing in the world, and it will play a more important role in China as the country completely opens up to the outside world," Feng Zhijiang, deputy director of the administrative committee of Tianjin Port Free Trade Zone.

About 50 kilometres from the city of Tianjin and 170 kilometres from Beijing, the 7-square-kilometre Tianjin Port Free Trade Zone has developed from a bleak sea shore to a lucrative economic area home to more than 3,000 domestic and overseas enterprises in 10 years.

By the end of 1999, the trade zone had attracted about US$5.3 billion investment, 80 per cent of which are foreign investments.

After opening Shenzhen and other three coastal cities in South China as special economic zones and then dozens of economic and technological development zones in the 1980s, the country introduced free trade zones in the early 1990s in 15 coastal cities, including Shanghai, Guangzhou, Shenzhen and Tianjin.

These zones served as the country's front line to embrace foreign investment and international way of economic and trade practice.

Often located around major seaports, free trade zones are considered as ``inside the territory but outside customs,'' -- companies registered in the zones are exempt from complex customs regulations and tariffs and value-added taxes; they also enjoy a series of preferential treatment as in other special economic areas.

But people were worrying that when China enters WTO and gradually lowers the high tariffs to a moderate level, the free trade zone's duty-free policies may lose their edge.

"The zones are facing challenges when the country gradually lifts quotas of various imported goods and brings the tariff to a relatively low level," said Zhong Weilin, deputy director of the administrative committee of Shanghai Free Trade Zone.

He was attending a seminar last month with representatives from other 14 free trade zones, who gathered in Shenzhen to discuss the future of the free trade zones after China's admission into WTO.

The companies might reconsider where their investment should go when preferential policies on duties or taxies are no longer too much different, Zhang said.

But Feng Zhijiang, who was also present at the Shenzhen seminar last month, said the tariffs are not the major element for free trade zones to attract foreign investments.

The meaning of free trade zones' existence lies in their efficiency in processing goods, the speed to finish the customs procedures, the capability of cargo flow distributions, Feng said.

The free trade zones, which often have convenient geographic advantages and long been good at cargo processing and distribution, will develop themselves into distribution and trade centres for imports and exports.

He said it was true that the decade-old free trade zones in China still had much to do as the country lacks experience and a set of laws is still not in place.

In the developed countries the free trade zones are directly administrated by the State government, and all activities are governed by law. While in China, the zones are watched by local governments, and what can be referred to are only some policies and regulations.

It is urgent for the State government to draft out a law regarding bonded areas, so as to adjust the domestic trade zones onto the international track when the country joins WTO, Feng said.



Sources: China Daily



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China's entry into the World Trade Organization (WTO) will not mean the end of its 15 bonded zones, but a chance for their improvement and perfection, according to officials.

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