China-EU investment deal can bolster the world's post-pandemic recovery

By Cai Daolu
Visiting Senior Fellow, NUS Business School
Cai Daolu

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Cai Daolu of the NUS Business School says that the Comprehensive Agreement on Investment (CAI) between China and the EU can help to reduce uncertainty and facilitate the flow of investment, technology and know-how across borders. In fluid times, good old-fashioned economic integration and openness to foreign direct investment are just the booster shot that the world economy needs.
A pedestrian wearing a face mask walks near an overpass with an electronic board showing stock information, at Lujiazui financial district in Shanghai, China, 17 March 2020. (Aly Song/File Photo/Reuters)
A pedestrian wearing a face mask walks near an overpass with an electronic board showing stock information, at Lujiazui financial district in Shanghai, China, 17 March 2020. (Aly Song/File Photo/Reuters)

While some parts of the world are "turning inward", China has decided to reaffirm its commitment to trade and investment by deepening economic integration with the rest of the world through the Comprehensive Agreement on Investment (CAI) with the EU.

Importance of the China-EU investment deal

The CAI, which has yet to be ratified by both parties, will facilitate investments between the EU and China. If ratified, the CAI will help investors gain better access to these two economic powerhouses.

... China is sending a strong signal to the world about its commitment to openness in trade and investment.

Namely, the CAI will improve market access for European companies to the Chinese market by removing investment restrictions, including equity caps and joint venture requirements.

With the recent signing of the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), the world's biggest free trade agreement, as well as the conclusion of the negotiations on the CAI, China is sending a strong signal to the world about its commitment to openness in trade and investment. In a world where many countries are increasingly preoccupied with their own domestic affairs, the CAI deal is a vote of confidence towards further global integration.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, European Council President Charles Michel, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, French President Emmanuel Macron and Chinese President Xi Jinping are seen on a screen during a video conference, in Brussels, Belgium, 30 December 2020. (Johanna Geron/Pool/File Photo/Reuters)
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, European Council President Charles Michel, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, French President Emmanuel Macron and Chinese President Xi Jinping are seen on a screen during a video conference, in Brussels, Belgium, 30 December 2020. (Johanna Geron/Pool/File Photo/Reuters)

The ins and outs: China as a global investor

China's capital inflows and outflows have increased rapidly during the past decades. Most of these capital flows come as a form of Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), which constitutes business investment by an entity of a foreign country.

In recent decades, China has been a major recipient of foreign investment. Since 2000, FDI inflows to China increased four times. Currently, China receives FDI of about US$235 billion, which is just US$30 billion shy of the US, which is the number one recipient.

Lately, China is growing as a major source of FDI to the rest of the world. FDI outflows from China, from initial minuscule levels in the early 2000s, has increased 25 times in recent years. The International Monetary Fund reported a US$4.6 billion FDI outflow for China in 2000. In the past two years, the outflow of FDI for China has surpassed a whopping US$100 billion per year. Today, China is among the top five major FDI investors in the world.

People look at the skyline of the central business district in Beijing, China, 16 April 2020. (Thomas Peter/File Photo/Reuters)
People look at the skyline of the central business district in Beijing, China, 16 April 2020. (Thomas Peter/File Photo/Reuters)

Undoubtedly, China today is important not only in terms of trade in goods and services, but also as an important source of investment to the rest of the world.

Openness as a tool for global prosperity

There is little dispute over the economic benefits of economic integration. Openness to FDI brings substantial economic benefits for the recipients of FDI and the countries that invest in them. Countries that are more integrated have higher levels of standards of living, higher productivity and higher incomes per capita. Countries that are closed off are stuck with limited access to the world's investments and tend to stagnate in growth.

Access to global investment is the dividing line that separates two worlds: one that is prosperous, with access to the world's technology and increasing productivity and another that is poor, with obsolete technologies and falling productivity.

The EU at its early stage of inception is a perfect illustrative example of the virtues of further openness between countries. Six Western European countries joined the Union in the late 1950s and other Western European countries did not, like Switzerland.

A man rides a bike through an almost deserted Sternstrasse (Star street) shopping street, in Bonn, Germany, 16 December 2020. (Wolfgang Rattay/Reuters)
A man rides a bike through an almost deserted Sternstrasse (Star street) shopping street, in Bonn, Germany, 16 December 2020. (Wolfgang Rattay/Reuters)

We saw a substantial increase in productivity in the six European countries that signed the Rome Treaty in 1957 to form what became the EU.

Furthermore, productivity in these countries caught up rapidly to US levels in the subsequent decades. In contrast, Switzerland, a country that did not join the treaty and never enjoyed the benefits of integration with the Union, saw a negative trend in their productivity levels when compared to its counterparts since 1960.

...openness to FDI is the channel through which a developing economy can catch up with a developed economy.

This is also true in other parts of the world. Several countries in Latin America implemented inward-looking policies that prevented further integration and became more protectionist in the flow of trade and investment. As a consequence, the share of Latin America's exports in the world declined, poverty rates increased, and many economies suffered a prolonged and persistent low productivity level.

In contrast, Asia-Pacific economies, including China, have become increasingly more integrated over the past decades. As a result, standards of living increased while poverty rates decreased. Some Asian economies, namely the Four Asian Tigers (Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea and Taiwan), even caught up with developed countries and became rich economies, and enjoyed a persistent increase in productivity levels.

People visit a shopping district on New Year's Eve in Seoul on 31 December 2020. (Jung Yeon-je/AFP)
People visit a shopping district on New Year's Eve in Seoul on 31 December 2020. (Jung Yeon-je/AFP)

The empirical evidence is clear: openness to FDI is the channel through which a developing economy can catch up with a developed economy.

Investment deals like the CAI can help to reduce uncertainty and facilitate the flow of investment, technology and know-how across borders.

Investment deal as a route for a global recovery

The past year has been a tumultuous year for the global economy. The global economy needs a boost of confidence to guarantee a smooth flow of goods and services, and investment.

To attract FDI, countries must have a conducive environment for businesses, set clear regulatory standards and implement legal transparency. Investment deals like the CAI can help to reduce uncertainty and facilitate the flow of investment, technology and know-how across borders.

Unlike the battle in the search for a vaccine for Covid-19, we do not need to reinvent the wheel this time to ensure a speedy global recovery. More openness creates opportunity; more integration creates stability and prosperity.

The opinions expressed are those of the writer and do not represent the views and opinions of NUS.

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