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China lodges WTO complaint over US tyre tariffs
Posted: 14 September 2009 2114 hrs

  A dealer sits next to tyres displayed at a tyre shop in Beijing.
 
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China hits back in US tyre import dispute
US slaps punitive tariffs on Chinese tyres


GENEVA - China on Monday hauled the United States to the World Trade Organisation over what it alleged were unfair tariffs imposed by Washington on Chinese tyre imports.

"The United States has adopted protective measures against Chinese tyres shipped to the United States. This is a violation of WTO rules," said Chinese Commerce ministry spokesman Yao Jian.

Amid warnings that a surge in Chinese-made tyres had cost more than 5,000 jobs in the United States, President Barack Obama on Friday imposed punitive duties of 35 percent on the Chinese imports, igniting the first trade spat of his presidency just weeks before hosting his Chinese counterpart Hu Jintao.

The government-run US International Trade Commission (USITC) had urged duties of up to 55 percent after union leaders claimed imports of cheap Chinese tyres had tripled over the last five years.

However, to minimise Chinese anger, Obama had opted for a lower figure, whereby tariffs, already at four percent, will soar by an additional 35 percent in the first year, 30 percent in the second and 25 percent in the third.

Beijing reacted strongly against the move, saying over the weekend that it would in turn investigate possible unfair practices in US exports of car parts and chicken meat.

Xinhua news agency also quoted experts as saying that 100,000 Chinese jobs could be lost as a result of US tariffs and that China's tyre industry would be worse off to the tune of one billion dollars.

"The United States, by making the decision, failed to honour its commitments made at the G20 financial summit and abused trade remedy measures, which is grave protectionism and will undermine China-US economic and trade ties as well as the early recovery of the world economy," said Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu over the weekend.

In Monday's statement, Chinese officials also reminded the United States of its "determination to firmly fight against trade protectionism," adding that its move to go to the WTO was a "correct action ... aimed at safeguarding our interests."

Beijing and Washington now have 60 days to hold bilateral consultations on the issue. If it is not resolved at the end of the period, the WTO would rule on the issue.

- AFP/ir

 


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