German Economy Minister Peter Altmaier speaks during a session at the Bundestag (lower house of parliament) on Oct 30, 2020 in Berlin. (ODD ANDERSEN / AFP)

GENEVA – A German minister defended on Monday China-EU investment agreement during the World Economic Forum (WEF) Virtual Event of the Davos Agenda, saying it was not a "mistake" but would create a level playing field.

German Minister for Economic Affairs and Energy Peter Altmaier underlined that "we need to rely more on open markets and multilateralism"

Asked by CNBC whether the China-EU investment agreement was a "tactical mistake" to the European Union (EU), German Minister for Economic Affairs and Energy Peter Altmaier said that he thinks it was not.

The deal duplicates "a lot of the arrangements that the United States already has with China," Altmaier said. "It's about creating a level playing field."

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"I'm confident that we can develop and negotiate and sign more similar agreements worldwide, and that the United States will also follow this path, and then negotiate with other countries worldwide," he added.

Altmaier underlined that "we need to rely more on open markets and multilateralism."

"We're in a critical situation with a recession worldwide, and poorer countries are suffering more," he said. "We have learned lessons from the banking crisis, and were able to re-establish supply chains."

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"The question is how can we encourage economic growth despite the ongoing pandemic, without further distortion of level playing fields," he reiterated.

More than 2,000 business, government and civil society leaders and 25 heads of state or government meet virtually for the WEF Davos Agenda this week to tackle the fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic and address the urgent need for global cooperation.