Cross-strait(海峽) service trade pact signed
DEEPENING EXCHANGES:Under the pact, 64 Taiwanese
industries will be opened to Chinese investment, while China will open
up 80 industries to Taiwanese investment
By Mo Yan-chih
/ Staff reporter
Straits Exchange Foundation Chairman Lin Join-sane, left, shakes hands
with his Chinese counterpart, Association for Relations Across the Taiwan
Straits Chairman Chen Deming, during a meeting in Shanghai yesterday.
The Straits Exchange Foundation and the Association for Relations Across
the Taiwan Straits (ARATS) yesterday signed a cross-strait service trade
agreement in Shanghai
during the ninth round of cross-strait talks, opening the service sectors on
both sides to further cross-strait exchanges.
Under the pact, which includes four chapters and 24 articles, 64 Taiwanese
industries will be opened to Chinese investment, while China will open up 80 industries to Taiwan .
The Taiwanese industries include transportation, tourism and traditional
Chinese medicine, while China
will open up its finance, retail, electronics, publishing and travel sectors.
Under the agreement, Chinese investors will be allowed to open hotels in Taiwan .
Taiwanese investors will be allowed to set up travel agencies in China , as well
as open restaurants or hotels.
Chinese companies will be allowed to open beauty parlors or hair salons in
Taiwan ,
but would only be allowed to employ Taiwanese.
While China will open
its publishing industry to Taiwanese investment, Taiwan will allow Chinese companies
to invest in Taiwanese businesses in the printing service industry, with a
maximum of 50 percent stock ownership.
On financial services, Taiwanese companies will be allowed to invest security
companies in Shanghai , in Shenzhen and Chinese-controlled Fujian Province .
In signing the pact, foundation Chairman Lin Join-sane (林中森) and ARATS Chairman Chen Deming (陳德銘) both lauded the agreement for
deepening cross-strait exchanges in the service sector.
Lin said 80 percent of the deal opens the two sides’ service sectors to
the same or greater degree as the Closer Economic Partnership Arrangement
(CEPA) that was signed between Hong Kong and China in 2003, with 90 percent of
financial services covered in the cross-strait agreement opened, just like in
the CEPA.
The cross-strait service trade agreement is a major follow-up to the
Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement (ECFA) and the General Agreement on
Trade in Services under the WTO.
“The service trade agreement is a pact that benefits related sectors
across the Taiwan Strait and promotes the
interests of the public on both sides. It will result in a win-win situation
for both sides,” Lin said.
After signing the pact, Taiwan
and China
cannot revise or cancel the agreement within the next three years.
The two sides will hold an annual meeting to review the implementation of
the pact.
The agreement also includes an emergency negotiation mechanism, which
gives related industries from each side the right to demand negotiations and
seek solutions if the agreement negatively affects their businesses sectors.
(Sources: http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/front/archives/2013/06/22/2003565371)
Structure of the lead
who- Straits Exchange Foundation Chairman Lin Join-sane.
what- Signed a cross-strait service trade agreement.
why- Opening the service sectors on both sides to further cross-strait exchanges.
where-
when- Yesterday
how- During the ninth round of cross-strait talks.
Key words
1.counterpart(功能相當的人或事物)
2.sectors(部分/區域/部門)
3.parlors(小店)
4.printing(發行)
5. lauded(稱讚)
6.Framework (觀點/組織/機構)
7.implementation(履行)
8.mechanism(機制/途徑)