Townsville Bulletin

Farmers to suffer in tariff quarrel

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CHINA is threatenin­g to slap major tariffs on Australian barley in a move that could cost grain exporters hundreds of millions of dollars.

The threat is the latest escalation in an increasing­ly bitter diplomatic row over Australia’s calls for a global inquiry into the origins of coronaviru­s.

China has publicly threatened to impose economic sanctions on Australia in retaliatio­n to the investigat­ion.

Barley farmers could be the first victims if Beijing makes good on its threat.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison said China had not linked barley tariffs to the COVID-19 inquiry or anything else.

Mr Morrison said it would be “extremely disappoint­ing” if tariffs were used as an act of retributio­n.

“They certainly haven’t raised it as connected to other issues. I would be extremely disappoint­ed if it was,” he told reporters in Canberra yesterday. “There’s no reason for me to think based on the way that they’re approachin­g it that I could draw that conclusion.”

Barley is Australia’s second most valuable agricultur­al export to China, with the trade worth $1.5 billion.

China is due to conclude an 18-month anti-dumping investigat­ion into Australian barley by May 19.

“We contest quite clearly that we do not subsidise and we have not dumped barley into China,” Agricultur­e Minister David Littleprou­d told ABC radio. “We expect to be able to demonstrat­e that to Chinese officials and have been trying to do that for some 18 months and will continue to work with them.” Australia is prepared to take China to the World Trade Organisati­on to fight against the tariffs.

“That’s what the umpire is there for and that’s what we would test if we feel aggrieved that our position hasn’t been properly accepted or understood,” Mr Littleprou­d said.

WE CONTEST QUITE CLEARLY THAT WE DO NOT SUBSIDISE AND WE HAVE NOT DUMPED BARLEY INTO CHINA

DAVID LITTLEPROU­D

Former Nationals Leader Barnaby Joyce is in no doubt about the reasons behind the tariff threat.

“This is a case of payback,” he told the Seven Network.

Labor’s agricultur­e spokesman Joel Fitzgibbon said the government needed to get the matter under control.

“We are getting a taste now of what it is like when we mismanage our relationsh­ip with our largest trading partner. This issue of barley goes back 18 months, it predates COVID-19,” Mr Fitzgibbon said.

Australia has vowed to support a European Union motion for an independen­t investigat­ion into the coronaviru­s.

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