03
Jul
In a historic visit by Chinese Premier Li Keqiang to the OECD in Paris, the People’s Republic of China today decided to enhance longstanding collaboration with the OECD and to join the OECD Development Centre.
The visit, the first to the OECD by a Chinese State Leader, coincides with the 20th Anniversary of OECD/China relations as well as with China’s upcoming G20 Presidency in 2016.
“China and the OECD are each undergoing substantial transformations in the 21st century,” said OECD Secretary-General, Angel Gurria. “Today’s agreements are a testimony to our ongoing partnership and to our mutual desire to create better policies for better lives. China’s upcoming G20 Presidency 2016 will offer another opportunity to pursue these goals to the benefit of many people around the world. ” (Read the speech)
In the presence of Premier Li, Chinese Minister of Commerce Gao Hucheng, who is in charge of coordinating the Chinese government’s collaboration with the OECD, and Secretary-General Gurría signed a Medium-Term Vision Statement and a joint Programme of Work for 2015-2016. These documents state the importance of the OECD-China partnership to help address evolving challenges in the years ahead.
The Programme of Work foresees that China and the OECD will strengthen cooperation in 20 policy areas, ranging from macroeconomic management and structural reform to regulatory and public governance to green growth. It will also support China’s efforts to further open up its economy.
As a crucial pillar of this cooperation, the OECD will offer its evidence-based expertise, its working methods as well as its global governance know-how to support China ahead of and during its 2016 G20 Presidency, in particular in the quest for new sources of growth for a more open and more inclusive world economy.
The cooperation in this field will continue to be underpinned by the OECD-China Skills Development Programme created under the authority of the G20 Sherpas of China and the OECD.
As part of the official visit, China also took the important step of accepting the invitation to join the OECD Development Centre in an agreement signed by the President of China’s Development Research Centre of the State Council, Li Wei. This accession brings the Centre’s membership to 49, including 22 non-OECD members, such as Argentina, Brazil, India, Indonesia and South Africa. The OECD Development Centre is a platform to bring together countries at different levels of development to discuss policies that stimulate growth and improve living conditions.
Premier Li delivered a keynote address in the context of the OECD Leaders Programme. The Premier was accompanied by ministers and high- ranking officials of the Chinese government.
China, as a Key Partner of the OECD – along with India, Indonesia, Brazil and South Africa – is invited to participate in the work of the Organisation, with a view to possible membership. As the OECD works to build a stronger, cleaner and fairer world economy, it makes an important contribution to the socio-economic progress and the reform processes of countries at different stages of development.
Source: http://www.hellenicshippingnews.com/china-signs-cooperation-agreements-with-oecd-and-joins-oecd-development-centre/