National Post

Biden picks up where Trump left off

Takes hard line on WTO over national security

- Bryce Baschuk

U.S. President Joe Biden’s administra­tion dashed hopes for a softer approach to the World Trade Organizati­on by pursuing a pair of his predecesso­r’s strategies that critics say risk underminin­g the internatio­nal trading system.

The U.S. delegation to the WTO, in a statement Monday obtained by Bloomberg, backed the Trump administra­tion’s decision to label Hong Kong exports as “Made in China” and said the WTO had no right to mediate the matter because the organizati­on’s rules permit countries to take any action to protect their “essential security interests.”

“The situation with respect to Hong Kong, China, constitute­s a threat to the national security of the United States,” the U.S. delegation said. “Issues of national security are not matters appropriat­e for adjudicati­on in the WTO dispute-settlement system.”

Prior to 2016, WTO members generally steered clear of defending their trade actions on the basis of national security because doing so could encourage other nations to pursue protection­ist policies that have little or nothing to do with hostile threats.

That changed in 2018, when the Trump administra­tion triggered a Cold War-era law to justify tariffs on imports of steel and aluminum. In response, a handful of U.S. trade partners, including Canada, the EU, and China filed disputes at the WTO and a ruling in those cases is expected later this year.

Since then, more nations — including Saudi Arabia, India, Russia and others — have cited the WTO’S national-security exemption in regional trade fights, leading trade experts to warn that such cases could erode the organizati­on’s ability to mediate disputes.

The Biden administra­tion on Monday said the U.S. has consistent­ly argued that national-security disputes are not subject to WTO review because it would infringe on a member’s right to determine what is in its own security interests.

In spite of the U.S. objection, the WTO granted Hong Kong’s dispute inquiry and will establish a panel of experts to deliberate the matter and render a decision, which could take two to three years.

At the same meeting, the Biden administra­tion said it would not agree to appoint new members to the WTO’S appellate body, a seven-member panel of experts who until 2019 had the final say on trade disputes involving billions of dollars worth of internatio­nal commerce.

The Biden administra­tion said it could not do so because the U.S. “continues to have systemic concerns” with the functionin­g of the appellate body as have all previous administra­tions over the past 16 years.

Though the statement was not entirely unexpected, it confirms America’s bipartisan frustratio­n with the functionin­g of the WTO appellate body and the new administra­tion’s willingnes­s to block new panellists until changes can be agreed.

Once Katherine Tai is confirmed as the U.S. trade representa­tive, her office “looks forward to working with” WTO director-general Ngozi Okonjo-iweala to tackle the problems with WTO dispute settlement, including the unresolved issues over appellate-body overreach, USTR spokesman Adam Hodge said in an email. “These are long-standing, bipartisan concerns that we hope our trading partners will work with us to address,” he said.

The Trump administra­tion broke precedent when it refused to consider any nominees to fill vacancies on the panel until there weren’t enough to sign off on new rulings. As a result, the WTO’S dispute-settlement system has been critically damaged because WTO members are now free to veto any adverse dispute rulings by appealing them into a legal void created by the appellate body’s paralysis.

 ?? FABRICE COFFRINI / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? A pedestrian traffic light at WTO headquarte­rs in Geneva. U.S. President Joe Biden’s administra­tion dashed hopes for a softer approach to the
World Trade Organizati­on by stating Hong Kong trade must be seen as the same as China trade, and sticking to steel and aluminum tariffs.
FABRICE COFFRINI / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES A pedestrian traffic light at WTO headquarte­rs in Geneva. U.S. President Joe Biden’s administra­tion dashed hopes for a softer approach to the World Trade Organizati­on by stating Hong Kong trade must be seen as the same as China trade, and sticking to steel and aluminum tariffs.

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