China and US trade barbs at WTO litigation

China and the US have accused each other of hypocrisy as litigation begins at the WTO over tariffs on steel and aluminium imposed by the Trump administration.

The United States and China have clashed at a World Trade Organisation meeting with a US envoy accusing Beijing of using the WTO to pursue "non-market" policies and a Chinese official saying it was Washington that was flouting the rulebook.

US President Donald Trump has outraged US trading partners by erecting a tariff wall against imports of steel and aluminium - justified by US national security concerns - and has hit Chinese goods with huge tariffs over accusations of stealing US intellectual property.

At the meeting on Wednesday, where a slew of legal disputes over Trump's trade policies entered a formal adjudication phase, US ambassador Dennis Shea said China was using the WTO to promote "non-market" policies, which had distorted world markets and led to massive excess capacity, especially in steel and aluminium.

The Chinese official retorted that Beijing did not want to get into a blame game and said the US had failed to back up its "unfounded" claims about China's economy, which it was using to disguise its own violations of the WTO rulebook.

Both sides accused each other of hypocrisy.

Shea said the WTO should throw out a lawsuit brought by China, along with those brought by the European Union, Canada, Mexico, Norway, Russia and Turkey, because WTO rules allowed exceptions for actions taken for national security concerns.

"Some (WTO) members have expressed concerns that invoking the national security exception in these circumstances would undermine the international trading system. This is erroneous, and completely backwards," Shea said, according to a copy of his remarks provided to Reuters.

"Rather, what threatens the international trading system is that China is attempting to use the WTO dispute settlement system to prevent any action by any Member to address its unfair, trade-distorting policies."

The US also triggered its own litigation to contest retaliatory measures by Canada, Mexico, China and the EU, which say Trump's metal tariffs are thinly disguised US protectionism.

"The United States cannot abide this level of hypocrisy," a second US official told the meeting.

In response to the US intellectual property complaint, China's representative highlighted the fact that the WTO still had several unresolved disputes on its books, including a 2004 ruling against a US violation of the WTO's agreement on trade-related aspects of intellectual property (TRIPS).

At the same time, the US was suggesting its intellectual property protection was supreme.

"That claim itself lacks the credibility given the simple fact that the US has deliberately delayed the implementation in this case for more than 14 years," the Chinese official said.

"China has fully complied with the TRIPS agreement while the US has not. And we believe that until the US faithfully and entirely honours its TRIPS obligations, the comparison suggested by the US is clearly without the legal benchmark."


Share
3 min read

Published

Source: AAP


Share this with family and friends


Get SBS News daily and direct to your Inbox

Sign up now for the latest news from Australia and around the world direct to your inbox.

By subscribing, you agree to SBS’s terms of service and privacy policy including receiving email updates from SBS.

Download our apps
SBS News
SBS Audio
SBS On Demand

Listen to our podcasts
An overview of the day's top stories from SBS News
Interviews and feature reports from SBS News
Your daily ten minute finance and business news wrap with SBS Finance Editor Ricardo Gonçalves.
A daily five minute news wrap for English learners and people with disability
Get the latest with our News podcasts on your favourite podcast apps.

Watch on SBS
SBS World News

SBS World News

Take a global view with Australia's most comprehensive world news service
Watch the latest news videos from Australia and across the world