(1) About national treatment and market income. Due to the highly developed financial industry, developed countries are generally willing to open the financial service market, with few restrictions on market expectations and national treatment. Although developing countries also promise to give national treatment to foreign financial institutions, they still impose many conditions and restrictions on market expectations.
(2) About the way to provide services. Developed countries allow other countries to set up financial institutions in their own countries, and provide cross-border financial services to their consumers by all possible means, while ensuring that their citizens provide financial services for consumption abroad. On the grounds of protecting domestic consumers, developing countries prohibit or strictly restrict foreign financial institutions from providing financial services across borders in many fields, and only allow them to set up branches in China to provide services, which is more conducive to supervision and control.
(3) About the specific financial sector that is open. Most countries are willing to open the reinsurance service and deposit and loan business of the banking industry, but many developing countries do not make specific commitments or impose strict restrictions on life insurance, clearing and bill exchange of the insurance industry and derivative financial products trading of the securities industry.