China premier pledges to hold on to eurozone debt

Published June 30, 2015
The comments by China’s Premier Li Keqiang just before a China-EU summit in Brussels appeared aimed at soothing European financial markets that took fright at the growing risk that Greece will leave the euro.— Reuters/file
The comments by China’s Premier Li Keqiang just before a China-EU summit in Brussels appeared aimed at soothing European financial markets that took fright at the growing risk that Greece will leave the euro.— Reuters/file

BRUSSELS: China promised the European Union on Monday it would hold on to its eurozone debt, Chinese state media reported, saying the Greek debt crisis was Beijing’s problem too.

The comments by China’s Premier Li Keqiang just before a China-EU summit in Brussels appeared aimed at soothing European financial markets that took fright at the growing risk that Greece will leave the euro.

Li told European Parliament President Martin Schulz that China would be “a long-term, responsible holder of euro debt”, according to state television’s main evening news.

Although not directly quoting Li, state media said he told Schulz that “this is not only a European problem, but relates to China-Europe relations too and is a problem for the world.”

China and Belgium signed deals worth more than 18 billion euros ($20bn) on Monday, state news agency Xinhua said, without providing details.

Li is due to address business leaders later on Monday and hold his first summit with the new heads of the European Commission, Jean-Claude Juncker, and the European Council of EU leaders, Donald Tusk.

The European Union has been aiming to broaden its relations with China at the summit, hoping for Chinese investment in Europe’s new infrastructure fund and support for a global climate deal.

Though Greece will likely further be discussed with Juncker and Tusk, the main focus of the summit it to try to move Sino-European ties beyond trade as China seeks a bigger role in international affairs.

An expected multi-billion euro pledge by Beijing to invest in European telecoms infrastructure, reported first by Reuters earlier this month, heads the agenda.

While the amount is still to be decided, the pledge will mark the latest step in China’s efforts to shape global economic governance and follows decisions by EU governments to join the Chinese-led Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) in defiance of Washington.

“We expect Li to announce a very important contribution to the infrastructure plan,” Emma Marcegaglia, the president of Business Europe, which represents 39 industry and employer groups in 33 countries.

Published in Dawn, June 30th, 2015

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