The Borneo Post

China launches WTO complaint against US, EU over dumping

-

BEIJING/ WASHINGTON: China launched a complaint at the World Trade Organisati­on against the United States and Europe after they failed to treat China as a market economy and ease their calculatio­ns of anti-dumping duties on Chinese goods.

Regretfull­y, the United States and European Union have yet to fulfil this obligation. China’s Commerce Ministry

When China joined the WTO in 2001, its accession terms allowed other WTO members to treat it as a non-market economy and use a third country’s prices to assess whether Chinese goods were being sold below cost.

But part of that clause expired on Dec 11, which China says means WTO trading partners must drop their use of such surrogate pricing.

“Regretfull­y, the United States and European Union have yet to fulfil this obligation,” China’s Commerce Ministry said on its website.

The US Commerce Department said China’s WTO accession agreement did not require members to automat ical ly grant market economy status to China, and allowed continued use of “alternativ­e antidumpin­g methodolog­ies.”

“The United States remains concerned about ser ious imbalances in China’s statedi rected economy, such as widespread product ion overcapaci­ty, including in the steel and aluminum industries, and significan­t state ownership in many industries and sectors,” a senior Commerce Department off icial said in a statement. “China has not made the reforms necessary to operate on market principles.”

While the Obama adminsitra­tion made the decision not to change the dumping calculatio­ns, the case will be litigated by the Trump administra­tion, which has promised a much tougher trade stance on China.

The European Commission last month proposed a new way of treating China, but its plans await approval from the EU’s 28 members and the European Parliament.

It said it had received a request for consultati­ons, the first step in a WTO dispute.

“We regret that China is launching this dispute now despite the fact that the Commission has already made a proposal to amend the legislatio­n in question,” a Commission spokesman said.

Last week it angered Beijing by launching an anti- dumping case under the old system – using the prices of a third country – just days before the Dec 11 deadline.

Separately, a Chinese ministry official said in another statement a USinvestig­ationintow­hatitregar­ds as Chinese dumping of plywood products launched last week amounted to abuse of emergency trade relief measures.

The United States and European Union are some of the biggest levellers of anti-dumping measures under this process against China. The measures have seriously affected exports and employment for Chinese firms, the ministry added.

“China reserves the right under WTO rules to resolutely defend its legal rights,” it added, without elaboratin­g. — Reuters

 ??  ?? China launched a complaint at the World Trade Organisati­on against the United States and Europe after they failed to treat China as a market economy and ease their calculatio­ns of anti-dumping duties on Chinese goods. — AFP photo
China launched a complaint at the World Trade Organisati­on against the United States and Europe after they failed to treat China as a market economy and ease their calculatio­ns of anti-dumping duties on Chinese goods. — AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia