The Philippine Star

US seeks $350 M sanctions in Indonesia trade dispute

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GENEVA (Reuters) – The US has asked the World Trade Organizati­on to let it impose sanctions on Indonesia after winning a trade dispute that it said cost US business up to $350 million in 2017, a US filing published by the WTO showed on Monday.

The US and New Zealand both won WTO rulings last year against Indonesian import restrictio­ns on food, plants and animal products, including apples, grapes, potatoes, onions, flowers, juice, dried fruit, cattle, chicken and beef. Indonesia also lost an appeal. The latest US filing said Indonesia had not complied with the ruling, so Washington was seeking annual sanctions to compensate for the damage done to US interests.

“Based on a preliminar­y analysis of available data for certain products, this level is provisiona­lly estimated at up to approximat­ely $350 million for 2017,” it said.

“The US will update this figure annually, as Indonesia’s economy continues to expand.

Indonesia is still studying the US move to seek sanctions, said Oke Nurwan, trade ministry’s director general of foreign trade, adding that authoritie­s believe Jakarta had complied with the WTO panel decision. He said rules on Indonesian food imports had already been revised.

The process of seeking compensati­on often take years, and Indonesia is likely to contest the size of any potential sanctions.

There was no immediate sign of a similar sanctions request from New Zealand, which said last year Indonesia’s restrictio­ns were estimated to have cost New Zealand beef sector up to NZ$1 billion ($673 million).

Indonesia has been lobbying senior US officials to keep the Southeast Asian nation on a list of countries that receive special trade terms under the Generalize­d System of Preference­s, a facility that gives reduced tariffs to about $2 billion of Indonesian exports.

The US Trade Representa­tive’s Office in April said it was reviewing Indonesia’s eligibilit­y for GSP in light of Jakarta’s imposition of a wide array of trade and investment barriers that create serious negative effects on US commerce.

Indonesia’s trade minister Enggartias­to Lukita in July said he would advise Washington that Indonesia would remove trade barriers for US apples following a WTO ruling as part of lobbying for GSP.

Indonesia scrapped a quota system for beef imports in 2016.

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