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U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk said in a statement announcing the WTO challenge that Chinese auto and auto parts exporters in government-designated "export bases" received at least $1 billion in subsidies from 2009 to 2011. Employment in the U.S. auto parts sector shrank by roughly half between 2001 and 2010, while U.S. imports of auto parts from China have increased seven-fold, according to the Obama administration. For its part, Beijing faces pressure to hold down potential job losses as export growth plunges and China's domestic consumer demand weakens. Export growth fell to just 2.7 percent in August over the same month in 2011, down sharply from the double-digit increases of recent years. China's auto sales growth tumbled to 3.7 percent in August, down from July's 11 percent growth and June's 15.8 percent rate. That reduces domestic demand for auto parts, increasing the importance of exports. Sales in China by global brands such as General Motors Co., Volkswagen AG and Toyota Motor Co. are growing faster than the overall market. That is squeezing Chinese automakers, especially smaller competitors that local leaders want to support as a source of jobs and taxes. Beijing fired back in the auto dispute last year by imposing anti-dumping and anti-subsidy duties on imports of American-made automobiles worth some $3 billion. The White House said they covered more than 80 percent of U.S. auto exports to China and fell disproportionately on GM and Chrysler LLC because of Washington's financial rescue of those companies following the financial crisis. The United States filed a WTO case in July challenging that move.
[Associated
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