Want China Times, Xinhua 2014-07-03
As the free trade agreement between China and Iceland came into force Tuesday, Icelandic companies believe the FTA will lower consumer prices in Iceland and boost the trade between the countries.
China's minister of commerce Gao Hucheng, right, and Iceland's minister for foreign affairs Ossur Skarphedinsson shake hands at the signing ceremony of the free trade agreement, April 15. (Photo/CNS) |
As the free trade agreement between China and Iceland came into force Tuesday, Icelandic companies believe the FTA will lower consumer prices in Iceland and boost the trade between the countries.
According
to the FTA, China will implement zero tariffs on goods under 7,380 tariff
numbers imported from Iceland, which accounted for 81.6% of China's total
imports from Iceland, including its aquatic products after the agreement comes
into effect.
Iceland
will implement zero tariffs on all industrial products and fishery products
imported from China which accounts for 99.8% of China's total exports to
Iceland.
After the
final establishment of the FTA between China and Iceland, zero tariffs shall
apply to 96% of goods in terms of tariff numbers, or 100% in terms of trade
volume.
Adolf
Gudmundsson, chairperson at the Federation of Icelandic fishing vessel owners,
believed the free trade agreement would be of great importance for fishing
companies in Iceland.
"China,
the biggest market in the world, is opening up for Icelandic seafood
products," Gudmundsson said.
"The
Chinese market will offer enormous opportunities for the Icelandic
companies," he said. He added that it will of course be important that
Iceland is able to offer competitive prices.
"I
believe the free trade agreement will bring good fortune to both Iceland and
China and strengthen the Icelandic fishing industry," Gudmundsson said.
With
Iceland becoming the first European country to sign a FTA with China, Orn
Erlendsson, chairperson at the seafood exporter Triton, believes the deal will
give a headstart to Icelandic companies in competition with other seafood
exporting countries like Norway, Russia and Canada.
Triton has
been selling lumpfish to restaurants in China where its thick skin is regarded
as a delicacy. Erlendsson said the FTA made it possible for Icelandic companies
to offer very competitive prices.
Icelandic
companies import clothing and shoes from China, often through a third country.
Products imported straight from China will no longer have a 15% tariff.
Many
Icelanders expect lower consumer prices as a result of the FTA, especially on
products imported directly from China.
Shoes
manufactured in China will see a 13% price reduction, according to TV channel
Stod 2 in the Icelandic capital Reykjavik.
Margret
Sanders, chairperson at the Federation of Trade and Services, welcomed the FTA,
stating that such agreements are important for small countries like Iceland.
She
believes Icelandic companies will be interested in exploring the possibility of
increasing direct imports from China.
Rumfatalagerinn
is one of the biggest department stores in Iceland. Rumfatalagerinn sells
furniture and textiles manufactured in China and imported to Iceland through a
third country.
Its CEO
Magnus Sigurdsson said the agreement offers great opportunities to import
products directly from China. The company is now trying to find out how best to
utilize the agreement to benefit Icelandic consumers.
Johannes
Gunnarsson, chairperson at the consumer federation in Iceland, sincerely hopes
consumers will feel the effect of the lower prices as a result of the FTA.
"The
Icelandic domestic market is very small. I'm told that the companies have to
make big orders from China so it's hard to see the FTA having a lowering effect
on prices in Iceland," he says.
The FTA has
also boosted other parts of the Icelandic economy. US company Silicor
Materials, a leading manufacturer of high-quality solar silicon, has decided to
build a new silicon plant in Iceland because of the agreement.
The
company's CEO Terry Jester said that the company made the decision to build the
plant in Iceland because of cheap energy and the aluminium industry and plans
to build more silicon plants in Iceland.
Talking
about the FTA to local media, Jester said Silicor Materials' biggest customers
reside in China.
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