China's ambassador to the World Trade Organization Yu Jianhua (L) and Swiss Federal Councilor Johann Schneider-Ammann attend a press conference held in the Rhine port in Basel, Switzerland, July 1, 2014.(Xinhua/Zhang Miao)
Free-trade agreements between China and Switzerland and China and Iceland took effect on Tuesday, marking a new dawn for business between the countries.
The agreements, which apply a zero-tariff policy to a wide range of merchandise, covers areas including government procurement, employment cooperation and intellectual property.
Under the agreement, 99.7 percent of imports from China to Switzerland will be exempted from customs duties, while 84.2 percent of Switzerland's exports enjoy the same policy. Duties on China's exports including textiles, clothes, auto parts and metalware will be reduced substantially.
Trade between Switzerland and China increased 126 percent year on year to 59.5 billion U.S. dollars in 2013. China is Switzerland's largest trade partner in Asia, while Switzerland is China's fifth-largest trade partner in Europe.
Trade between China and Iceland stood at 220 million U.S. dollars last year.
FTA between China, Switzerland to enter into force in July
2014-05-01Groundbreaking FTA inked with Switzerland
2013-07-08Ministry hails FTA with Switzerland
2013-05-28Hopes rise for enhanced trade as China-Iceland FTA comes into force
2014-07-02China-Iceland FTA effective July 1
2014-05-22China-Iceland FTA effective later this year
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