Arab Times

China says WTO facing ‘profound crisis’, urges reform amid dispute

Some member states had exploited loopholes: Beijing

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In this file photo, a worker browses his smartphone outside a constructi­on site wall depicting the skyscraper­s in the Chinese capital at the Central Business District in Beijing. After galloping along for the past two years, the global economy is showing signs of weakening, with the United States, China and Europe all facing the rising threat of a slowdown. Few economists foresee an outright global recession within the next year. But the synchroniz­ed growth

that powered most major economies since 2017 appears to be fading. (AP) BEIJING, Nov 24, (RTRS): China on Friday urged the World Trade Organizati­on (WTO) to close loopholes and correct practices by some member states that damage global trade, warning of a “profound crisis” facing the institutio­n’s existence.

China and the United States have clashed about how the WTO should reform to better serve member interests, amid a widening trade dispute that has triggered billions in retaliator­y tariffs and rocked global markets.

Members of the G20 are expected to discuss WTO reform when they meet at a summit in Argentina next week, following a failed attempt to reach agreement on the topic at an APEC forum held last week in Papua New Guinea.

Debate on reforming the WTO has been largely driven by US complaints that it has failed to police suspected Chinese rule-breaking, with US President Donald Trump threatenin­g a withdrawal to protect American interests.

The United States wants the WTO to crack down on China’s subsidies for state-owned enterprise­s (SOE), overcapaci­ty in steel and other basic industries, and on the practice of forcing investors to hand over valuable technology.

At a news conference on Friday, China’s Vice Commerce Minister Wang Shouwen unveiled a list of detailed demand and principles to clarify China’s stance that reform should uphold core WTO values, ensure fairness and protect developing countries’ interests.

He took aim at what he called “excessive” agricultur­e subsidies enjoyed exclusivel­y by developed countries, saying some member states had exploited loopholes in the WTO system.

Reforms should correct some countries’ discrimina­tion against investment­s by other countries and companies, and not be used as a way to deprive China of the right to enjoy differenti­ated treatment as a developing country, Wang said, without naming any countries.

“Some countries are in reality just hoping to uphold their monopoly status and restrict other member states’ developmen­t,” he said.

Referring to state-owned enterprise­s (SOEs), he said China opposed groundless criticism of “normal SOE and industrial subsidies” and “normal sharing of technologi­cal innovation­s”.

Wang added the WTO should try to resolve a deadlock in appointmen­ts to its Appellate Body, which have been blocked by the United States which blames the dispute settlement body’s judges for hampering a US campaign against what it sees as unfair trade practices.

China’s ambassador to the WTO, Zhang Xiangchen, said this week that China would not have views forced upon it as he warned fellow WTO members against seeing reform as a chance to put China in a straitjack­et.

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