The Borneo Post

US rejects China WTO protest of steel tariffs as ‘baseless’

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WASHINGTON: The United States rejected as ‘ baseless’ China’s retaliator­y tariffs and complaint in the World Trade Organizati­on over the US tariffs recently imposed on steel and aluminium imports.

President Donald Trump imposed tariffs of 25 per cent on steel and 15 per cent on aluminium early last month, citing national security concerns.

But China invoked the WTO dispute process under a different rule, which does not apply, meaning Beijing’s threat of retaliator­y tariffs on US$ 3 billion in US exports is not justified, the US Trade Representa­tive’s office said in a statement.

“China’s request for consultati­ons... is completely baseless” because the US tariffs “address the national security threat posed by imports of steel and aluminium” and are not part of a safeguard action, USTR said.

A request for consultati­on is the first step in the WTO’s dispute settlement process.

WTO allows temporary tariffs on imports – known as safeguards – as an emergency move when a flood of goods “threatens to cause serious injury” to domestic industry.

But the global trade body also allows import restrictio­ns based on national security concerns.

“Consequent­ly, there is no basis under WTO rules for China’s decision this week to raise tariffs against over US$ 3 billion in US exports,” USTR said.

But in a letter to China’s WTO representa­tive, US Ambassador Dennis Shea said officials “stand ready to fix a mutually convenient date with China to engage in bilateral discussion­s.”

Primarily intended to compensate for China’s overproduc­tion, the US tariffs hit allies as well, prompting the Trump administra­tion to exempt the European Union, Canada, Mexico and four other economies. — AFP

 ??  ?? Soybeans are harvested on a farm on the outskirts of San Jose, Uruguay. American imports including soybeans, planes and cars in retaliatio­n for proposed US tariffs on US$50 billion in Chinese goods, has left Latin America in the middle, analyzing risks and opportunit­ies. — Reuters photo
Soybeans are harvested on a farm on the outskirts of San Jose, Uruguay. American imports including soybeans, planes and cars in retaliatio­n for proposed US tariffs on US$50 billion in Chinese goods, has left Latin America in the middle, analyzing risks and opportunit­ies. — Reuters photo

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