China Daily Global Edition (USA)

China submits case against US to WTO

- By ZHONG NAN zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

Move targets Washington’s refusal to recognize country as market economy

China has submitted a case to the World Trade Organizati­on seeking fair treatment, after the United States rejected the nation’s demand to be treated as a market economy under global trading rules, the Ministry of Commerce announced on Thursday.

The US recently launched a number of trade remedy investigat­ions into Chinese goods, which has had negative implicatio­ns for companies in both countries, particular­ly for US firms that are eager to either work with local partners or enlarge their presence in China, ministry spokesman Gao Feng said.

“Adopting trade-protection­ist measures will not be effective or sustainabl­e to develop healthy business ties between the two countries, and China expects the US to adopt adequate measures to ensure its companies’ interests,” Gao said at a regular news briefing in Beijing.

China filed a WTO dispute case over the surrogate country approach last year, arguing the approach should be dropped after the expiration date on Dec 11, 2016, in accordance with Article 15 of the accession protocol.

“The case has nothing to do with whether China has been granted market economy status or not, as there are no standards in the WTO rules for the status,” said Xue Rong jiu, deputy director of the Beijing-based China Society for WTO Studies.

“It is about ‘surrogate country approach’, not ‘market economy status’, which means the former is within multilater­al trade rules, while the latter is regarded as a domestic law issue,” Xue added.

So far, more than 80 economies — including Australia, Brazil, Russia and Switzerlan­d — have recognized China as a market economy.

Wei Jianguo, vice-president of the China Center for Internatio­nal Economic Exchanges, a major government think tank, said the US practice mixes two issues together, contradict­s multilater­al trade rules and breaks some countries’ internatio­nal commitment­s and promises.

It is clear that such behavior is a US-planned attempt to protect its trade with China, Wei said.

Trade volume between China and the US amounted to 3.21 trillion yuan ($485 billion) from January through October, up 17.2 percent yearon-year. Bilateral investment also surged, exceeding $170 billion by the end of 2016, data from the Ministry of Commerce show.

On Thursday, the ministry also announced that China and Canada have almost completed feasibilit­y studies on a free trade agreement after more than a year of talks.

Gao said a free trade deal with Canada would be beneficial to both sides as their trade contents are fairly complement­ary.

Trade volume between China and the United States from January through October

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