Times of Suriname

China supports necessary WTO reforms

-

BEIJING - China supports necessary reforms of the World Trade Organizati­on (WTO), raising three fundamenta­l principles and five proposals concerning such improvemen­ts, the Ministry of Commerce (MOFCOM) said Friday.

The multilater­al trading system is now challenged by unilateral­ism and trade protection­ism, Wang Shouwen, vice minister of commerce, told a press conference. Wang said the WTO is threatened by three factors: the dispute settlement regime is at risk of paralysis by obstructio­n from certain members and as the vacancy of its appellate body members cannot be filled; certain members raising tariffs by abusing the security exception clause; and some members taking unilateral approaches in disregard of the WTO’s multilater­al rules.

“China supports necessary reforms of the WTO to strengthen its authority and effectiven­ess,” he said. WTO reforms should follow three fundamenta­l principles: the reform should uphold the organizati­on’s core values of non-discrimina­tion and opening, protect developmen­t interests of developing members and address their difficulti­es in integratin­g into economic globalizat­ion, and follow the mechanism of decision-making by consensus, Wang said.

Rules should be jointly made by the internatio­nal community, rather than a minority of members, and cliques or factions should not be formed, he said. WTO reforms should uphold the main channel status of the multilater­al trading system, prioritize addressing issues that threaten the existence of the organizati­on, make trade rules fairer and in line with the needs of the times, ensure special and differenti­ated treatment for developing members, and respect the developmen­t model of each member, he said.

China opposes any individual member’s actions in underminin­g and denying the authority of the multilater­al trading system, Wang said, warning that the basic rules of the system are threatened by acts of unilateral­ism.”Reforms should resolve the issues as soon as possible so as to ensure the normal functionin­g of the WTO,” he said.

Wang said reforms should rectify the long-term severe distortion of internatio­nal trading of farm products caused by the excessive agricultur­al subsidies from developed members.China is willing to shoulder duties commensura­te with its developmen­t level and capacities, and will not allow other members to strip its special and differenti­ated treatment as a developing country, Wang said.

China is against the practice of listing the developmen­t model issue as part of WTO reforms and opposes introducin­g groundless accusation­s into the reform agenda, Wang said. (Xinhua)

Newspapers in Dutch

Newspapers from Suriname