The
leaders of Denmark and Finland said on Friday that China has showed a
willingness to contribute to global efforts to bail out debt-ridden European
countries. However, a senior Chinese policy adviser said there should be
preconditions.
Speaking at the World Economic Forum annual
meeting in Davos, Helle Thorning-Schmidt, prime minister of Denmark, and
Finnish Prime Minister Jyrki Tapani Katainen stressed the need for China and
the European Union to cooperate to help struggling nations.
Both sides are "in the same boat",
said Katainen. "China will suffer from the worsening economic situation in
Europe, and vice versa, so it would be good for China to use part of its
foreign reserves surplus through (the International Monetary Fund) to finance
countries in trouble.
"This would not be free. It would always
be conditional," he said, before describing the IMF as a "good and
trustworthy" organisation for China to invest in.
Thorning-Schmidt, whose country currently
holds the rotating six-month EU presidency, vowed to use the opportunity to
"increase cooperation" with China, adding that the country is
"willing to be part of the solution".
Li Daokui, a scholar close to China's top
decision-makers, said Beijing has never changed its policy to participate in
the financial rescue, but insisted: "There need to be conditions".
The first is that the EU must devise its own effective rescue package, said the
Tsinghua University economics professor and policy adviser to China's central
bank. The second is that the efforts are multilateral, not just bilateral.
"China understands we are in a
multi-polar era, meaning the world is not led by the US and China, so other
global players should have equal chance to solve the global challenge," he
said. "In this context, China will join in IMF process."
However, the process will be complicated, he
said, adding that if "emerging economies such as China, India and Russia
put (in) money the IMF should continue to reform its governance and voting
rights".
European countries currently control more than
40 per cent of the voting rights at the IMF.
"It's reasonable for Europe to show a
willingness (to cede voting rights to creditors)," said the professor.
"(China) can offer help, but we also need promises from the European side.
They cannot ask for help without taking action to help themselves or reform
(the IMF)."
While some in Europe are unhappy at the
prospect of borrowing money from emerging states, some Chinese people are also
concerned about the reality of developing countries rescuing wealthy ones.
After the debt crisis hit in May 2010, the EU
set up the European Financial Stability Fund, which will become a permanent
rescue fund by the middle of this year. Head of the fund Klaus Regling visited
China, Japan and other wealthy countries to solicit help this week, but failed
to obtain any firm agreements.
The IMF recently promised to expand its
resources available to European countries in debt and warned that the worsening
situation could affect the global economic outlook this year.
Song Zhe, who until about a month ago was
China's ambassador to the EU, said: "China will never be absent when it
comes to global efforts to rescue debt-ridden European countries."
China and the EU will hold a delayed annual
leaders summit in February. It is expected that the rescue plan will be on the
agenda.
In the meantime, Finland's Katainen said China
and Europe should try to further boost open trade and bolster common ground on
global policy. Both sides should continue to improve cooperation and
coordination within the United Nations framework, he added.
Thorning-Schmidt added that she was also
confident ahead of Monday's informal summit for European leaders that
debt-affected countries will escape the crisis.
"We are taking (the) right decisions now
in terms of the countries which have large debts, and (are) strengthening our
fiscal disciplines," she said. "After implementing them, the
confidence and trust will start to pick up."
Fu Jing
China Daily
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