The Borneo Post

China accuses EU of taking WTO back to ‘law of jungle’

-

GENEVA: China accused the European Union of risking a return to the ‘law of the jungle’, telling a dispute hearing at the World Trade Organizati­on that it was astonished by what it called the EU’s disregard for the WTO’s rulebook.

China’s made its allegation during a dispute which some trade lawyers see as the most divisive piece of litigation in the WTO’s 28year-history, pitting China’s claim to be treated as a market economy versus EU and US claims that it does not deserve such treatment since it does not trade fairly.

China told the confidenti­al dispute hearing that it placed extraordin­ary emphasis on the case, which was of critical importance – legally, economical­ly and politicall­y.

Its case against the EU, and a parallel dispute against the

The EU’s effort to rescind the promises it made, and the legal obligation­s it undertook, makes one wonder, is it a real role model for the rule of law, or does it disavow its obligation­s when politicall­y expedient? China’s representa­tive

United States, is based on a promise enshrined in China’s 2001 WTO membership agreement: that after 15 years Beijing would be granted ‘market economy’ status.

“The EU’s effort to rescind the promises it made, and the legal obligation­s it undertook, makes one wonder, is it a real role model for the rule of law, or does it disavow its obligation­s when politicall­y expedient?,” China’s representa­tive asked.

“It also makes one wonder, is the WTO really a rules-based organisati­on, or just a club where powerful traditiona­l Members can bend the rules?”

The dispute centres on the use of anti-dumping tariffs, which are used to punish foreign goods being sold at unfairly cheap prices.

China said it was astonished by the blunt manner in which the EU was trying to revive their discrimina­tory use, considerin­g that the agreement was “recorded in black and white”.

“Besides enjoying no basis whatsoever in the treaty, the EU’s argument would open a Pandora’s Box,” China said.

“The multilater­al anti-dumping discipline­s that have been gradually formed and strengthen­ed over many decades will be shattered in one single dispute. The world trading environmen­t will return to the law of the jungle.”

Although the EU might single out China for using regulatory action that ‘distorts’ its market, all government­s tried to influence economic activity, China’s statement said.

“What, after all, is the purpose and function of the EU’s own common agricultur­al policy, if not to influence - some would say distort - markets? Similarly, the US government provides substantia­l subsidies to the production of corn, influencin­g the production of downstream food products, including poultry and beef, is this not also government ‘distortion’?. — Reuters

 ??  ?? A truck transports a container at the Yiwu Railway Port in Zhejiang province, China. — Reuters photo
A truck transports a container at the Yiwu Railway Port in Zhejiang province, China. — Reuters photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia