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The European Union Chamber of Commerce in China in its annual survey out Wednesday (1 September) listed a series of technical barriers to EU investment in the airline reservation, automotive, construction, insurance, oil refinery, research and innovation and telecommunications sectors.
In one example, EU companies seeking a wholesale licence to sell petrol in China must first own a refinery and get an import licence. But another law forbids foreign firms from owning a majority stake in Chinese refineries, while in practice, Chinese bureaucracy has never issued an import licence to a foreign company.
In another example, Chinese state purchases of IT gives nakedly preferential treatment to products developed by native researchers.
As a result EU firms invested just €5.3 billion in the vast country last year, amounting to less than 3 percent of EU foreign investments, the study noted.
The paper took China's leaders to task for failing to live up to commitments in the World Trade Organisation. The business lobby's chief, Jacques de Boisseson, also gently criticised the authoritarian country's top economic official, Premier Wen Jiabao, who in April said foreign firms can compete on a level playing field with Chinese ones.
"I do believe the words of Premier Wen when he says that foreign investment is welcome," Mr de Boisseson told Reuters. "[But China] would probably be satisfied with a lower level of foreign investment and a higher share for Chinese companies."
The plea for help - which, among other things, called for "a more coherent approach" to China diplomacy from EU member states, whose policies it dubbed "fragmented and uncoordinated to the detriment of European business" - comes during a high-level visit by EU foreign relations chief Catherine Ashton to China.
Ms Ashton is not responsible for trade but did on Wednesday discuss a wide-ranging EU-China strategic partnership with the country's most senior foreign affairs official, Dai Bingguo, and will on Thursday meet Mr Wen.
"China expects the EU to treat it as an equal," Mr Dai told Ms Ashton, according to the Xinhua state news agency.
Ms Ashton so far on her trip has also visited EU pavilions, such as the Bulgaria and Romania stands, at the Shanghai "Expo 2010" fair and toured an ethnic Miao village in the country's Guizhou province. "I have seen the beauty of Beijing and the splendor of Shanghai, and I have the great opportunity to see this part of China," she told Xinhua.
The EU foreign affairs chief declined to go to the re-launch of Middle East peace talks taking place in Washington on Thursday in order to complete her China itinerary, attracting criticism from some quarters.
"If the EU wants to play an international role compatible with its political and economic weight, it must clearly understand its priorities!" Portuguese centre-right MEP Mario David said in a statement on Wednesday.
After a day spent visiting the EU pavilions at the World Expo in Shangai, Ms Ashton will co-chair the first EU-China high-level strategic dialogue with state councillor Dai Bingguo on Tuesday and Wednesday in the Guiyang region.
During the meeting they will "address issues of concern and mutual interest," Ms Ashton's office wrote in a statement. These include foreign and security matters such as the Korean Peninsula, Iran, Africa and piracy in the Gulf of Aden.
"Today, EU-China co-operation and exchanges form a rich tapestry of interwoven issues and interests. Inevitably, a relationship such as ours needs constant attention if we are to maintain and build confidence," Ms Ashton said in a written interview with a state-owned newspaper China Daily, published Sunday.
"We need to communicate to speak frankly to exchange ideas and to recognise there have been and will be some difficult moments as our relationship matures. That is why I am in China this week, to coordinate closely our policies and to develop further our cooperation on important international issues," she added.
She went on to highlight some of the areas of dispute including trade and the environment. The EU has upbraided China several times for not protecting intellectual property rights while EU business leaders have increasingly complained about the obstacles they face to doing business in the country. Meanwhile, Beijing has taken a tough line on environmental issues arguing that countries that are catching up on the industry front should not have to pay for the environmental sins of fully industrialised countries.
"Part of China's success comes from the open global economy with common rules. If this system is going to continue it needs active efforts by all the important countries and of course China is now one of the most important ones. This is true in trade, but it is also true in the area of banking, security and the environment," Ms Ashton said.
With the EU-China summit on the agenda on 6 October, Ms Ashton will meet Prime Minister Wen Jiabao and foreign minister Yang Jiechi in Beijing during Thursday and Friday.
This Policy Brief is written from the perspective of European SMEs considering operation in, or already operating in China. However, it also takes into account the wider context of EU-China relations.Go to our China Ideas Community to read more