The Pak Banker

Is the World Trade Organisati­on era ending?

- WASHINGTON

Is the era of so-called ‘unfettered free trade’ and multilater­al trading system under the World Trade Organisati­on (WTO) regime coming to an end? These challenges mostly come from developed countries trying to bend the rules to undermine competitio­n or hamper the working of important organs, like dispute and settlement systems, to protect their business interests. Now, these powers seem to be drifting further away even from the principles of free trade and have started adopting protection­ist policies, breaching the WTO regime, in the name of a green transition to protect the climate.

In recent years, the United States (US) has more often than not enacted policies to suppress competitio­n in the name of national security, protect jobs and industry, and disrupt global supply chains. The US Congress, for instance, has passed the American Innovation and

Competitio­n Act, which offers $52 billion to boost domestic semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing and $200bn for scientific and innovative research and developmen­t.

In 2022, Congress enacted the Chips and Science Act. Later that year, the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) was passed. The enactment of the contentiou­s IRA, a multi-billion-dollar subsidy programme for the country’s auto industry struggling to cope with looming competitio­n from China’s cheaper electric vehicles (EV), is being seen as a fresh threat to the multilater­al trading order.

The law explicitly excludes investors from benefiting from the subsidies for every new energy vehicle produced if they include so-called foreign entities of concern (FEOCs) in their supply chains, which clearly breaches the WTO rules. The IRA stipulates that the new energy vehicle tax credits save consumers $7,500 per unit. Still, an eligible clean vehicle must not contain any battery components manufactur­ed or assembled by the FEOCs, companies or entities listed by the US. Thus, American car buyers are ineligible for subsidised EVs if certain components were produced by Chinese, Russian, North Korean or Iranian manufactur­ers.

China, which became the world’s largest electric car exporter last year and is believed to be the main target of this subsidy programme, has filed a complaint with the WTO to initiate consultati­on over the IRA. China argues that the Act unfairly discrimina­tes against cars that use Chinese battery components. “This move is not only to protect the interests of Chinese EV companies and promote a fair, competitiv­e environmen­t for the global EV industry but also to firmly uphold the rule-based multilater­al trading system,” a Chinese official said after filing the complaint.

Beijing says the IRA has a serious negative impact on the stability of the global industry supply chain and the environmen­t for fair competitio­n, and its filing against the US at the WTO echoes the internatio­nal community’s concerns. However, wrapping up her China visit last Monday,

US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen says said a flood of below-cost Chinese steel into the global market over a decade ago “decimated industries across the world and in the United States”. She affirmed that Washington “will not accept” a situation where underprice­d Chinese goods flood the global market again, battering industries elsewhere, adding that the US allies and partners share similar concerns.

Even though the IRA is a China-specific action, its impact is also being felt elsewhere. Initially, South Korea had considered resorting to the WTO against the IRA. The European Union (EU), Canada, New Zealand and other WTO members have also criticised the IRA. In a letter sent to the US Treasury by the European Commission in November 2022, it argued, “If implemente­d in its current form, the Act risks causing not only economic damage to both the US and its closest trading partners, resulting in inefficien­cies and market distortion­s but could also trigger a harmful global subsidy race to the bottom on key tech

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