Beijing ‘Indefinitely’ Suspends High-Level Economic Dialogue With Australia

Beijing ‘Indefinitely’ Suspends High-Level Economic Dialogue With Australia
Australian flag flutters in front of the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China, on April 14, 2016. (Jason Lee/Reuters)
Daniel Y. Teng
5/6/2021
Updated:
5/6/2021

The Chinese regime has “indefinitely” suspended all future activities under the China-Australia Strategic Economic Dialogue, following last month’s termination of the Belt and Road Initiative agreement by Foreign Minister Marise Payne.

While the move has been publicised by several Chinese state-owned media, one expert has called the action mere “symbolism.”

On Thursday, the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) issued the statement claiming that “Recently, some Australian Commonwealth government officials launched a series of measures to disrupt the normal exchanges and cooperation between China and Australia out of a Cold War mindset and ideological discrimination.”

“Based on the current attitude of the Australian Commonwealth government toward China-Australia cooperation, the NDRC of the People’s Republic of China has decided to indefinitely suspend all activities under the framework of the China-Australia Strategic Economic Dialogue.”

The Dialogue was established in 2013 under the former Gillard government by Foreign Minister Bob Carr and Trade Minister Craig Emerson.

The third and last meeting held under the Dialogue was in 2017, when Prime Minister Scott Morrison, then treasurer, met with Chinese investors and Chair of the NDRC, He Lifeng.
Despite the suspension, China will likely continue to buy large quantities of Australian iron ore, which has seen prices balloon to ten-year highs.
Coal operations at the Port of Newcastle in New South Wales, Australia on Nov. 18. 2015. (William West/AFP via Getty Images)
Coal operations at the Port of Newcastle in New South Wales, Australia on Nov. 18. 2015. (William West/AFP via Getty Images)

Further, dialogue between Australian ministers and their Chinese counterparts has been largely non-existent over the past year, as Beijing’s trade war against Australia ran its course.

Meanwhile, the NDRC has also been a key driver behind the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). In 2018 and 2019, the state body signed two BRI agreements with Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews.

These agreements were cancelled by Foreign Minister Payne last month, who said they were inconsistent with Australia’s “foreign policy” objectives. The BRI has been accused of being a “trojan horse” and leaving developing countries heavily indebted due to predatory loan practices.

In response to the cancellation, the Chinese Embassy in Canberra said the move was “unreasonable and provocative.”

While Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin urged Australia to “revoke” the decision or Beijing would “resolutely take strong actions.”

Suspension of the Dialogue marks the first major material response to the BRI being axed.

Jeffrey Wilson, research director of the Perth USAsia Centre, said the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) had “run out of ammunition.”

“By going ‘thermonuclear’ on trade in 2020, they now have no substantive ways to punish Australia anymore and have to scrap around for impact-free acts of pure symbolism,” he wrote on Twitter.

“China has placed sanctions against practically all Australian exports it can, investment has collapsed, and intergovernmental discussions are non-existent,” he added. “It now has no substantive leverage over Australia and has to resort to largely meaningless acts of symbolism.”

Over the course of 2020, Beijing implemented a series of tariffs and suspensions targeting key Australian exports, including coalbeefwinebarleylobstertimberlamb, and cotton.

The economic coercion campaign began after Australia led the charge in calling for an investigation into the origins of COVID-19.