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2022 m. sausio 27 d., ketvirtadienis

WTO Sides With China in U.S. Tariff Fight


"WASHINGTON -- The World Trade Organization on Wednesday authorized China to impose retaliatory tariffs worth $645 million on imports from the U.S. in a decade-old dispute over Chinese subsidies to promote exports of products such as solar panels and steel pipes.

The ruling was made by a WTO arbitration panel in a case dating back to 2012. China had complained about the tariffs the U.S. imposed between 2008 and 2012 on solar panels and other products that the U.S. said were produced with unfair subsidies to state-owned companies.

The WTO's high-level dispute-settlement court delivered a mixed ruling on the fight in 2018, saying the U.S.'s tariffs were in violation of WTO rules.

Since then, the two countries squabbled over the compliance with the ruling and the amount of the compensation China should be allowed to collect in retaliatory tariffs, handing the case to a WTO arbitration panel.

Adam Hodge, a spokesman for the U.S. Trade Representative's Office, blasted the decision, saying the WTO protects "China's nonmarket economic practices and undermines fair, market-oriented competition."

The decision "reinforces the need to reform" the WTO's rules and dispute settlement functions, he added.

It wasn't clear if China planned to impose the retaliatory tariffs. A spokesman for the Chinese embassy in Washington referred questions to the Chinese Ministry of Commerce, which couldn't be reached for comment.

Chad Bown, a senior fellow at Peterson Institute for International Economics, said that if China chooses to implement the retaliatory tariffs authorized by the WTO, it would risk "re-initiating a tariff escalation of the U.S.-China trade war, that is now in a fragile state of truce."

The U.S. and China signed a trade pact in 2020 that called for China to increase its purchases of U.S. goods. China has failed to meet those commitments, and tariffs remain on Chinese apparel, electronics, furniture and other items.

The latest case is among several the two nations have fought at the WTO over the role played by China's state-owned enterprises in promoting exports of manufactured goods using subsidies. The U.S. and other free-market nations have complained that Beijing gives unfair advantages to Chinese manufacturers over companies from their nations.

Complaining that the WTO gave favorable treatment to China in disputes over such issues, the U.S. has in recent years blocked the appointments of judges to the Appellate Body, the group's high-level trade settlement court, effectively shutting it down in December 2019.

The decision comes as the Biden administration begins conversations with some WTO member nations to overhaul the organization. The latest decision favoring China is "one more motivation for why the U.S., China, EU and other major WTO members need to figure out new rules [on] countervailing duties," Mr. Bown said." [1]

1. World News: WTO Sides With China in U.S. Tariff Fight
Hayashi, Yuka. Wall Street Journal, Eastern edition; New York, N.Y. [New York, N.Y]. 27 Jan 2022: A.8. 

 

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