Time to get tough with China on global trade, UK tells G7 allies
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[March 31, 2021] By
William James
LONDON (Reuters) - Britain will on
Wednesday push G7 allies to get tough on China over "pernicious
practices" that undermine the international trading system, calling for
an overhaul of outdated and ineffective World Trade Organization rules.
Trade minister Liz Truss will host her G7 counterparts and the new head
of the WTO, using Britain's platform as current president of the group
of rich countries to promote post-Brexit Britain as a leading free trade
advocate.
"This is the time to get tough on China and their behaviour in the
global trading system, but also modernise the WTO. In many ways it's
stuck in the 1990s," she told the Financial Times in an interview.
Since leaving the European Union and pinning its economic future on
global trade, Britain has stepped up criticism of China's trade
practices.
"People cannot believe in free trade if it is not fair," Truss said in a
statement before the meeting.
"Public trust has been corroded by pernicious practices, from the use of
forced labour to environmental degradation and the stealing of
intellectual property."
China, a WTO member since 2001, denies that it steals intellectual
property, unfairly hurts the environment or improperly trades goods made
with forced labour.
Wider relations between London and Beijing have soured in recent months,
with tit-for-tat sanctions over China's human rights record and a bitter
row over reforms to the governance of former British colony Hong Kong.
Britain and other WTO members argue that China benefits from exceptions
to the rules which were made decades ago and no longer reflect its
status as an economic superpower.
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Britain's Secretary of State of International Trade and Minister for
Women and Equalities Liz Truss is seen outside Downing Street, in
London, Britain March 17, 2020. REUTERS/Henry Nicholls
"The WTO was established when China was 10% the size of the U.S. economy," Truss
told the FT. "It is ludicrous that it is still self-designating as a developing
country — and those rules need to change."
Other G7 allies, including U.S. President Joe Biden, agree on the need to reform
the WTO and to address China's rising global influence. The problem is finding a
solution that all sides agree on.
Echoing the fear of many Western nations that they will lose their grip on
control of the post World War Two international order to China, Truss said that
unless WTO can be reformed, countries will find other frameworks to trade
within.
A strategic review of British foreign policy this month focused on the need to
gain more influence in the Indo-Pacific to balance against China, describing its
authoritarian leadership and economic might as the biggest state-based threat to
Britain's economic security.
The ministers will be joined on the call by recently-elected WTO chief Ngozi
Okonjo-Iweala, who inherited an organisation that has struggled to enforce and
modernise its rule book.
China has expressed confidence in her leadership and also said it wants reforms
and a more effective trading system.
(Reporting by William James; Editing by Elizabeth Piper, Peter Graff, William
Maclean)
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