www射-国产免费一级-欧美福利-亚洲成人福利-成人一区在线观看-亚州成人

US EUROPE AFRICA ASIA 中文
Business / Economy

South Africa expects China to help it move up the value chain

By CHEN YINGQUN (China Daily) Updated: 2015-01-19 10:20

South Africa is looking for help from China to help it move up the value chain and quicken its industrialization, says Rob Davies, minister of trade and industry of South Africa.

"South Africa's exports to China are dominated by primary mineral commodities, and those are very much dependent on the vagaries of world prices. Those commodities are also low on the value chain," he says. "Our ambition in South Africa and the African continent is to move up the value chain and to focus on industrialization, and that ambition is understood and shared by China." Davies said during a news conference in Beijing at the South Africa-China Business Forum last month.

Davies, who was accompanying South African President Jacob Zuma, says China and South Africa are experiencing a higher level of consensus about the direction in which they need to move their economic cooperation.

"Both countries are seeing a very significant quantitative increase in total trade, which continues to grow at very large percentage each year, and China has been South Africa's No 1 trading partner for both exports and imports since 2009. It is also by far China's largest trading partner in the African continent," he says.

Davies says the growth in trade volume is important. Other trading partners have been caught up in the economic crisis, he says, and trade with other countries has not even reached the level of what it was in 2008.

But China-South Africa trade has what he sees as a structural imbalance, since it is not characterized by sufficient two-way trade in value-added products.

Davies says he hopes this situation will change.

A series of comprehensive strategic partnership agreements were signed between China and South Africa during Zuma's visit, such as a program for cooperation that will boost trade, investment and agriculture over the next 10 years. Other agreements include transport, agriculture, nuclear technology and nuclear energy, TV stations and locomotives.

Davies says one of the things South Africa has been doing over the past three years is to promote value-added products in the Chinese market, and to have a number of trade fairs, which already have produced some positive results.

For example, he says, South Africa is now the seventh-largest exporter of wine to China. "Our growth has been much greater than the overall growth of Chinese imports of wine."

There also has been growth in trade of motor vehicles and various kinds of machinery. But South Africa's value-added trade is still too low percentage-wise, he says.

In all of the agreements between the countries, South Africa has emphasized two things. One is to invite more people to South Africa in order to demonstrate the nation's capacity to produce more value-added products; and to cultivate more investment as a way to boost productivity.

"We have seen a pickup in Chinese investments. The last big one was the launch of the first auto plant in the Coega Industrial Development Zone.

"We are looking to the suppliers and component manufacturers to come and support that particular plant," he says.

Other areas in which South Africa is urgently seeking investment include television manufacturing, solar energy equipment, railway equipment manufacturing and steel making.

South Africa also is hoping to learn from China's free trade zones.

"We have benefited from technical support like in the design of our special economic zone programs, and that technical support will continue. We are learning from China about what you call the 'ocean' economy and what we call the 'blue' economy, that is, everything from boat-building, support for service of vessels and rehabilitation of vessels," he says.

Also, advancements in meeting global standards in agriculture products open up a significant amount of trade.

"We know that most of the world's trade, especially the growing part of it, is trade in medium products, and trade in more complex products, where we know the addition of that (value) takes place outside of our borders based on the minerals and other agriculture commodities that we may produce and export and transport," he says.

He also shares an example from a KPMG survey that shows that Africa produces and exports $6 billion in coffee. But the coffee is turned into products beyond Africa's borders that fetch $100 billion. Thus, $94 billion of the revenue is made outside of Africa.

In another example, South Africa used to be No 1 but is now the No 5 gold producing country. Italy earns more from the production of jewelry than South Africa does from the production and export of gold.

Previous Page 1 2 Next Page

Hot Topics

Editor's Picks
...
主站蜘蛛池模板: 国产成人免费午夜在线观看 | 成人国产精品 | 久久久国产亚洲精品 | 黄色网址进入 | 国内精品91久久久久 | 国产系列 视频二区 | 最新毛片久热97免费精品视频 | 成熟的女性强烈交性视频 | 免费欧洲毛片a级视频无风险 | 欧美亚洲国产视频 | 欧洲美女与男人做爰 | 欧美高h视频 | 国产在线视频一区二区三区 | 全国最大色成免费网站 | 一级片免费在线 | 久草在在线视频 | 视频在线色 | 一区二区三区中文 | 欧美性精品videofree | 玖玖这里只有精品 | 欧美成人综合在线 | 玖玖啪| 成年人免费看 | 一国产一级淫片a免费播放口 | 一区一精品| 日本乱人伦毛片 | 舔操| 国产精品亚洲一区在线播放 | 日本高清视频免费在线观看 | 国产亚洲欧美精品久久久 | 视色4setv.com | 欧美高清在线视频在线99精品 | 国产短裙黑色丝袜在线观看下 | 香蕉久久高清国产精品免费 | 久草视频手机在线观看 | 一级毛片免费不卡 | 精品久久成人免费第三区 | 成 人 黄 色 视频 免费观看 | 国内精品线在线观看 | 久久ri精品高清一区二区三区 | 免费黄网大全 |