The Philippine Star

US-China trade spat could escalate — WTO

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RIO DE JANEIRO (Reuters) – The trade dispute between the US and China could well expand into other areas given the significan­t “ammunition” the two countries have, the director-general of the World Trade Organizati­on (WTO) said on Wednesday.

Speaking at an event in Rio de Janeiro against the backdrop of growing trade tensions between Beijing and Washington, Roberto Azevedo said the WTO has focused on trying to increase dialogue between the two countries.

“I’m very concerned,” he said at the event. “To be honest, I don’t think it’s over. They have lots of ammunition and it can expand to other areas beyond just tariffs ... and trade.” He did not elaborate.

On Tuesday, in the latest sign of deteriorat­ing commercial relations between the world’s two largest economies, Beijing added $60 billion worth of US products to its import tariff list in retaliatio­n for US President Donald Trump’s planned levies on $200 billion worth of Chinese goods.

Trump has long railed against the WTO, and his government has eroded its power by blocking appointmen­ts to its appeals chamber as existing trade judges’ terms end. If the United States manages to paralyze the WTO’s dispute system, it would end 23 years of WTO enforcemen­t, the keystone of internatio­nal efforts to prevent trade protection­ism.

Azevedo said it would be possible to have a global trade dispute resolution body without the United States, but it is unclear whether Washington would be in favor of such an organizati­on.

Meanwhile, China plans to reduce the average tariff rate on imports from most of its trading partners as soon as October,

Bloomberg News reported on Thursday. In July, China cut import tariffs on almost 1,500 consumer products ranging from cosmetics to home appliances as part of efforts to open up its economy, the world’s second biggest.

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