China has been pushing for membership in a high-level Asia-Pacific trade and investment pact and will step up efforts to attract foreign investment, said the country's top trade negotiator.
Beijing has conducted research and assessment of over 2,300 clauses and items of the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) and combed through the reforms, laws and regulations that the country needs to carry out and revise to achieve membership, said Wang Shouwen, China's vice-minister for commerce.
Speaking at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) China CEO Forum 2023 in Beijing on Saturday, Wang said China had submitted a document to the members and was "willing to and capable of" joining the pact.
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"China is proactively aligning its own trade standards to the high thresholds of the CPTPP by piloting test sites for [market] opening, and we will provide new free-trade impetus to the region."
Wang's remarks came as Beijing tries to consolidate its footing in the global supply chain and counter the "de-risking" efforts by the US.
China applied to join the high-level trade pact, which was called the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) before the United States' withdrawal under the Trump administration, in September 2021.
CPTPP membership requires approval from all member countries, namely Canada, Mexico, Peru, Chile, New Zealand, Australia, Brunei, Singapore, Malaysia, Vietnam, Japan and the United Kingdom.
Stephen Olson, a senior research fellow at the Hinrich Foundation, said China's application to join the regional free trade agreement raised issues on the geopolitical front.
"Correctly or incorrectly, the original TPP agreement was perceived as a US-led grouping designed to push back against China's rising influence in the region," he said.
"It would now be ironic if China ultimately ends up in the agreement while the US remains on the sidelines."
The Post reported last month that China failed to secure a public endorsement from Australia to join the trade bloc during Australian trade minister Don Farrell's trip to Beijing.
The CPTPP's membership criteria include ownership and labour standards - two areas where Beijing is viewed as falling short of the requirements.
Wang also said on Saturday that China had "basically opened its doors to foreign investors in the manufacturing sector, and the service sector will be gradually opening up."