The Borneo Post

EU to single out Chinese imports in market report

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China will come out first.

BRUSSELS: China will be singled out for special attention under new trade rules to limit excessivel­y cheap imports into the European Union, a European Commission official said.

The Commission, member states and EU lawmakers agreed on Tuesday to treat all World Trade Organizati­on members the same in determinin­g whether they are dumping products.

Under normal circumstan­ces, dumping will mean selling below domestic prices, but the EU will make exceptions for cases of “significan­t market distortion­s”, allowing investigat­ors to compare export prices with internatio­nal benchmarks.

The Commission has said it would produce reports on major countries where it suspects such distortion­s prevail.

For the time being, however, it will produce only one.

“China will come out first,” said a Commission official who requested not to be named.

“There is no clear plan to do other reports than for China.

“It is resource-intensive,” the official continued, adding that

Commission official

the absence of a report on a given country did not mean EU producers could not point to distortion­s there.

The official did not rule out reports on other countries in the future.

EU officials have regularly said that, despite the changes for antidumpin­g cases, China is not a market economy.

Of 32 trade investigat­ions the Commission is carrying out, 22 feature Chinese imports.

The European Union and many of China’s other trading partners have debated whether to treat China as a ‘market economy’, which Beijing says was its right at the end of 2016, some 15 years after it joined the WTO.

The EU kicked off discussion­s early in 2016 and held public consultati­ons, gathering over 5,000 opinions on how to handle trade complaints against China.

The Commission concluded it could not retain the current practice of considerin­g China as a ‘nonmarket economy’ and comparing Chinese export prices with those from another country, such as the United States.

But critics have said that Chinese businesses are subject to excessive state interventi­on with artificial­ly low domestic prices, threatenin­g to expose European markets to more dumping.

EU steelmaker­s associatio­n Eurofer, which has brought a series of trade complaints against Chinese imports, said the new EU agreement was important, but that it wanted to see how it worked in practice. — Reuters

 ??  ?? A man watches containers at the Yangshan deepwater port in Shanghai in this file photo. China will be singled out for special attention under new trade rules to limit excessivel­y cheap imports into the European Union, a European Commission official...
A man watches containers at the Yangshan deepwater port in Shanghai in this file photo. China will be singled out for special attention under new trade rules to limit excessivel­y cheap imports into the European Union, a European Commission official...

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