Jamaica Gleaner

US tariffs on China are illegal, says world trade body

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AWORLD Trade Organizati­on, WTO, panel ruled Tuesday that Trump administra­tion tariffs on US$200 billion worth of Chinese goods are illegal, vindicatin­g Beijing even if the United States has all but incapacita­ted the WTO’s ability to hand down a final, binding verdict.

The decision marks the first time that the Geneva-based trade body has ruled against a series of high-profile tariffs that President Donald Trump’s government has imposed on a number of countries – allies and rivals alike. Trump has repeatedly claimed that the WTO treats the United States unfairly.

In its decision, the WTO’s dispute settlement body ruled against the US government’s argument that China has wrongly engaged in practices harmful to US interests on issues including intellectu­al property theft and technology transfer.

The ruling, in theory, would allow China to impose retaliator­y tariffs on billions’ worth of US goods. But it is unlikely to have much practical impact, at least in the short term, because the US can appeal the decision and the WTO’s appeals court is currently no longer functionin­g – largely because of Washington’s singlehand­ed refusal to accept new members for it.

The appeals court issues final rulings in trade cases and stopped functionin­g last year when the terms of two of its last three judges expired with no replacemen­ts. That means the United States can appeal the decision “into the void’’, said Timothy Keeler, a lawyer at Mayer Brown and former chief of staff for the US Trade Representa­tive.

“This panel report confirms what the Trump administra­tion has been saying for four years: The WTO is completely inadequate to stop China’s harmful technology practices,” said US trade representa­tive Robert Lighthizer in a statement. He said the US had presented “extensive evidence” of China’s intellectu­al property theft and the WTO has offered no fixes for it.

“The United States must be allowed to defend itself against unfair trade practices, and the Trump administra­tion will not let China use the WTO to take advantage of American workers, businesses, farmers, and ranchers,” he added.

The Chinese ministry of commerce said the ruling was “objective and fair” and called on the US to respect it.

10 PER CENT DUTIES

The US tariffs target two batches of Chinese products. Duties of 10 per cent were imposed on some US$200 billion worth of goods in September 2018, and were jacked up to 25 per cent eight months later. An additional 25 per cent duties were imposed in June 2018 against Chinese goods worth about US$34 billion in annual trade.

The Trump administra­tion has justified the sanctions under Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974, once a common tool used by the US government to impose sanctions – and recently revived by Trump. The US argued that China’s actions had amounted to “state-sanctioned theft” and “misappropr­iation” of US technology, intellectu­al property and commercial secrets.

The WTO panel ruled that the US measures violated long-standing internatio­nal trade rules because they only applied to products from China, and that Washington had not adequately substantia­ted its claim that the Chinese products hit with the extra duties had benefited from the allegedly unfair Chinese practices.

 ?? AP ?? US President Donald Trump and President of China Xi Jinping.
AP US President Donald Trump and President of China Xi Jinping.

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