China Daily (Hong Kong)

Nation complains to WTO over US tariffs

- By JING SHUIYU jingshuiyu@chinadaily.com.cn

China lodged a complaint on Monday to the World Trade Organizati­on regarding the United States’ proposed tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese imports, the Ministry of Commerce said in a statement.

It followed the recent complaint that the ministry filed on July 6 to the WTO about the US’ early round of levies on $34 billion worth of Chinese goods.

US tariff hikes targeting Chinese goods were based on Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974, its domestic trade law.

“The US’ unilateral initiation of a trade war has no internatio­nal legal basis at all,” the ministry said last week in a pointby-point response to the US statement under Section 301.

The US unilateral­ly launched a Section 301 investigat­ion against China last year despite opposition from China and the internatio­nal community.

It released an investigat­ion report in March, and imposed tariffs on $34 billion worth of Chinese goods on July 6 in disregard of 91 percent opposition in the comments it received.

“The (US) tariffs are typical unilateral­ism, protection­ism and trade bullying. They are a clear violation of the basic WTO principle of most-favored-nation treatment as well as the basic spirit and principles of internatio­nal law,” the ministry stressed.

Wan Zhe, chief economist of Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Center with National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, said the real intention of the US government initiating trade conflicts with other countries is to distract attention from its internal contradict­ions, such as the wealth gap and job losses.

Against such a backdrop, what China should do is to continue to push ahead with economic reform and opening-up, and work with the rest of the world to support free trade and multilater­alism, Wan said at a recent seminar.

Dong Yan, a senior researcher at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said China should firmly uphold the multilater­al trading system while sticking to its establishe­d agenda of further opening-up.

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