China Daily Global Edition (USA)

US urged to scrap ‘non-market’ status

- By ZHONG NAN zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

Ministry calls on Washington to adopt level playing field in trade with China

The Ministry of Commerce on Thursday urged the United States to scrap its “non-market economy status” treatment of trade with China, and treat the country’s goods shipment fairly, as such a measure is outdated and does not exist in World Trade Organizati­on rules, the Ministry of Commerce said on Thursday.

The ministry’s comments came after the US Commerce Department announced last week that it would postpone issuing its preliminar­y determinat­ion in an anti-dumping duty probe into imports of aluminum foil from China, as it needs more time to analyze “China’s non-market economy status”.

Commerce Ministry Spokesman Gao Feng said the so called “non-market economy status” was used in domestic law by certain countries during the Cold War period, and today only a few economies of the 164 WTO members still practice this.

Under this status, trading partners can use a surrogate country whose economic situdumpin­g ation is similar to China’s as a reference when determinin­g whether they think China is dumping in their countries.

“It is clearly not included in the WTO’s multilater­al trading rules,” Gao said at a regular media briefing in Beijing.

According to Article 15 of the WTO’s rules, member economies should have ceased from using the surrogate country approach in anti- investigat­ions on China on Dec 11, 2016, the 15th anniversar­y of the nation’s accession to the global trade body.

A total of 30 US states saw their exports to China double over the past decade, while four states witnessed fivefold growth in the shipping of goods such as agricultur­al products, automobile­s and passenger aircraft to China, according to data published on Wednesday by the Ministry of Commerce.

Besides, 29 US states gained more than $1 billion trade volume by doing business with China in 2016, compared with 17 states in 2006.

Apart from simultaneo­usly launching anti-dumping and anti-subsidy investigat­ions against Chinese manufactur­ers on a regular basis since 2006, the US government has more than once used “market economy status” as a bargaining chip in exchange for China’s concession­s in trade negotiatio­ns.

Gao also remarked that the European Union’s newly reached consensus against China’s imports lacks the legal basis of WTO rules and will have a negative impact on the WTO’s anti-dumping legal system as it doesn’t have dumping-related articles on labor and the environmen­t.

The European Union last week adopted a similar approach, known as “significan­t market distortion”, as an excuse for anti-dumping and anti-subsidy measures, blurring the disparitie­s between market and non-market economies.

“Under normal circumstan­ces, dumping indicates the selling of products below domestic prices, but the EU will make exceptions in cases of ‘significan­t market distortion’, allowing investigat­ors to compare export prices with internatio­nal benchmarks, this certainly will affect imports of Chinese products,” said Li Guanghui, vice-president of the Chinese Academy of Internatio­nal Trade and Economic Cooperatio­n in Beijing.

number of US states that saw their exports to China double over the past decade

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