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Home Latest News

Australia, China sign free trade agreement  

byCustoms Today Report
11/11/2015
in Latest News
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BEIJING: Australian exporters to China should start seeing tariffs fall by the end of the year after parliament passed a bill to enable a free trade agreement between the two countries.

The Senate on Monday passed legislation to enact the agreement, after Labor and the government struck a deal to boost safeguards for Australian jobs last month.

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The government last year finalised 10 years of negotiations on the deal, which it maintains will boost many Australian exports and kick off a new era of opportunity.

Cabinet Secretary Arthur Sinodinos said new export opportunities would be found across value-added manufacturing, aged care, tourism and financial services.

‘It’s a comprehensive agreement between two highly complimentary economies,’ he told parliament on Monday.

Labor agrees Australians should be capitalising on China’s economic growth.

‘Growing, deepening and diversifying the trade relationship with China has the capacity to deliver jobs and prosperity to future generations of Australians,’ opposition Senate leader Penny Wong said.

In the opposition deal, the government agreed to labour market testing for jobs on major projects and the setting of the ‘market salary rate’ for 457 visa workers at the applicable enterprise bargaining agreement rate.

Foreign workers would also have to obtain an occupational licence within 90 days to receive a 457 visa.

Two Senate inquiry reports have endorsed the deal.

But the Australian Greens opposed the agreement, saying it was negotiated in secret with no expert advice from business or academics.

Greens senator Peter Whish-Wilson said while Australia should be working to strengthen trade agreements, the deal was not in the nation’s interest.

‘It’s lopsided,’ he told the parliament.

‘The economic benefits are based on faulty modelling.’

In an embarrassing admission, the government conceded its stated job figures of 178,000 from free trade agreements with Korea, Japan and China by 2035 were grossly miscalculated.

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