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China and New Zealand launch negotiations to upgrade free trade agreement

Published 20/11/2016, 21:00
© Reuters. New Zealand's Prime Minister John Key gestures as he shares a laugh with China's Premier Li Keqiang during a signing ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing

By Charlotte Greenfield

WELLINGTON (Reuters) - China and New Zealand have agreed to start formal negotiations to upgrade the pair's free trade agreement (FTA), the Pacific nation's Prime minister said on Monday.

New Zealand Prime Minister John Key said in an emailed statement that the upgrade would ensure the existing trade agreement "takes into account the FTAs that China has negotiated with other trading partners since 2008".

The first round of negotiations would begin in the first half of 2017 and would be followed by an as yet unknown number of talks that would take place in both China and New Zealand. Both nations said they were aiming to speed up the negotiation process.

Issues that would be covered include technical barriers to trade, such as customs rules, as well as e-commerce, competition policy and the environment.

China entered into a free trade agreement with New Zealand, the first Western country to do so, in 2008, which has helped the Asian giant grow to become New Zealand's largest goods export partner. The value of goods and services exported from New Zealand to China was NZ$12.2 billion (7 billion pounds) in the year to June.

© Reuters. New Zealand's Prime Minister John Key gestures as he shares a laugh with China's Premier Li Keqiang during a signing ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing

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