Arab Times

WTO should ‘punish’ Chinese economic coercion: Australia

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CANBERRA, Australia, June 10, (AP): The World Trade Organizati­on should penalize “bad behavior when it occurs,” Australia’s prime minister said Wednesday ahead of a Group of Seven leaders’ meeting in Britain where he hopes to garner support in a trade dispute with China.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison said Australia would be “working with others to buttress the role of the World Trade Organizati­on and to modernize its rulebook where necessary.”

“In my discussion­s with many leaders, I’ve taken great encouragem­ent from the support shown for Australia’s preparedne­ss to withstand economic coercion in recent times,” Morrison said in a speech in the Australian west coast city of Perth before leaving for the G-7 meeting in Cornwall.

The Australian government announced in December it would ask the WTO to intervene in its dispute with China over barley and expects other nations to become involved in the case.

China effectivel­y ended imports of Australian barley in May 2020 by putting tariffs of more than 80% on the grain, accusing Australia of breaching WTO rules by subsidizin­g barley production and selling it in China at below production cost.

Trade in Australian seafood, wood, beef, wine and coal has also been disrupted since Australia angered China by requesting an independen­t inquiry into the origins of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Wang Wenbin said in Beijing that Australia and the G-7 nations “should do more to promote internatio­nal cooperatio­n in fighting the epidemic, advance world economic recovery and help developing countries accelerate their developmen­t, instead of creating conflicts and difference­s in the internatio­nal community.”

The Geneva-based WTO, which makes rules governing internatio­nal trade, is facing calls for restructur­ing and reform as it struggles to forge a long-awaited world trade pact.

“A well-functionin­g WTO that sets clear rules, arbitrates disputes objectivel­y and efficientl­y penalizes bad behavior when it occurs. This can be one of the most powerful tools the internatio­nal community has to counter economic coercion,” Morrison said.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said last month the United States will not leave Australia alone to face coercion from China and that such behavior toward U.S. allies will hamper improvemen­t in relations between Washington and Beijing. Morrison said in his speech that the most practical way to address economic coercion would be to restore the WTO’s binding dispute settlement system.

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