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China launches WTO dispute resolution case against US and EU

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The US says China must address “serious imbalances” in its state-directed economy, including overcapacity in steel. Photo: AFP

China said on Monday it had launched a dispute resolution case at the World Trade Organisation over the surrogate country approach used by the United States and European Union to calculate anti-dumping measures against Chinese exports.

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When China joined the WTO in 2001, it agreed to let WTO members treat it as a non-market economy when assessing dumping duties for 15 years. That gave trade partners the advantage of using a third country’s prices to gauge whether China was selling its goods below market value.

But that clause expired on Sunday, and China has demanded that countries abide by the agreement. US Commerce Secretary Penny Pritzker said in November the time was “not ripe” for the United States to change the way it evaluates whether China had achieved market economy status, and there was no international trade rules requiring changes in the way US anti-dumping duties were calculated.

The Commerce Ministry said in a statement on its website that 15 years on, all WTO members had an obligation to stop using the surrogate country approach. “Regretfully, the United States and European Union have yet to fulfil this obligation,” the ministry said.
A man reads a newspaper supplement about China's accession into the World Trade Organisation on November 11, 2001. Photo: AFP
A man reads a newspaper supplement about China's accession into the World Trade Organisation on November 11, 2001. Photo: AFP
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The United States and European Union are some of the biggest levellers of anti-dumping measures under this process against China. The measures had seriously affected exports and employment for Chinese firms, the ministry added.

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