U.S. warns at WTO of
China backsliding on economic openness
Send a link to a friend
[July 20, 2016]
By Tom Miles
GENEVA (Reuters) - The United States is
worried that China is retreating from pledges to open its economy to
market forces as it tries to cope with a slowdown in growth, U.S.
trade diplomat Chris Wilson told the World Trade Organization on
Tuesday.
China is undergoing a regular two-yearly review of its trade
policies at the WTO this week, in which the body's other 162 members
get to quiz its officials and critique its policies.
Wilson, the deputy chief of the U.S. mission to the WTO, said
China's leaders had endorsed a number of far-reaching reform
pronouncements, including that the market would be "decisive" in
allocating resources, and it was clear that serious efforts were
being made.
"Over the past year, however, as growth in China’s economy has
slowed, the United States has sensed an increasing reluctance among
China’s economic planners to pursue further reforms," he said,
according to a published transcript.
"In addition, more and more U.S. enterprises have been expressing
concern about a less welcoming business and regulatory environment
for foreign enterprises."

The United States hoped the developments were temporary and China
would aim for a more transparent, predictable and welcoming
regulatory environment, but that this would be impossible as long as
the state supported and favored domestic industries, Wilson said.
China's support for its bloated steel and aluminium industries
clearly showed that state intervention would never be as efficient
as the market, he said.
Other U.S. concerns included quotas and duties on China's raw
material exports, manipulated value-added tax rebates on exports,
thin agricultural imports despite strong demand, and prohibitions on
foreign investment in China’s movie market, the world's
second-biggest.
Wilson was speaking less than a week after the United States
launched a WTO complaint to challenge China's export duties on key
metals and minerals.
[to top of second column] |

An employee rides a bike on a road near refinery plants of Chambroad
Petrochemicals, in Boxing, Shandong Province, China, May 10, 2016.
REUTERS/Meng Meng/File Photo

That complaint was expanded on Monday when the European Union joined the legal
action against China.
Washington and Brussels have also clashed with Beijing over China's demand to be
treated as a market economy at the WTO, which would make it harder to challenge
China's cheap exports.
Another concern cited by Wilson was the "Made in China 2025" initiative, which
aims to ensure Chinese-made components and materials account for 70 percent of
China's manufacturing inputs by 2025.
So-called "local content requirements" have become a hot issue at the WTO, where
they are closely scrutinized in case they are used to illegally promote domestic
firms at the expense of foreign suppliers.
(Reporting by Tom Miles; Editing by Raissa Kasolowsky)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
 |