Others News
- Nation resolves trade dispute with U.S.
Date: 5-Dec-2007 Sources: (Shenzhen Daily)
CHINA has agreed to eliminate a dozen tax breaks and other subsidies the United States challenged this year at the World Trade Organization, resolving one of the series of trade spats between the countries.
'The agreement demonstrates that two great trading nations can work together to settle disputes to their mutual benefit,'U.S. Trade Representative Susan Schwab said Thursday.
China's decision would abolish tax breaks and other subsidies that benefit the broad spectrum of Chinese industries, including steel, wood products and information technology, Schwab said.
To help reduce China's trade surplus and ease friction with its trade partners, the Chinese Government has cut tax rebates on a number of export products this year including steel, paper and plastics, and has said it may raise export taxes on some steel products.
Most of the programs targeted in the case were designed to boost China's exports, which have grown from about US$150 billion in 1996 to US$970 billion last year.
The rest curbed imports by encouraging companies in China to buy local goods. Even so, China's imports also have risen rapidly over the past 10 years to US$792 billion in 2006.
The United States had filed the case in February and was later joined by Mexico.
'The three sides finally reached understanding on the dispute through continued discussions,'the Xinhua news agency said Friday.
Thursday's announcement came just a few weeks before the United States and China are scheduled to hold high-level trade and economic talks in Beijing.
Schwab, the top U.S. trade official, said the timing was not influenced by the upcoming meeting and added she did not expect a breakthrough in three other pending WTO complaints against China.
Under the agreement signed Thursday in Geneva, China would eliminate the 12 subsidy programs by Jan. 1, although one targeted regulation would remain until January 2009, Schwab said.
The United States will suspend its WTO case for now and formally withdraw it once the subsidy programs are ended. The agreement only eliminates China's subsidies that are specifically prohibited under WTO rules.
The United States has launched WTO litigation over China's policies on car parts, tax subsidies, copyright and piracy, and the sale of films, music and books. China is also pursuing a WTO case against the United States over U.S. anti-dumping measures affecting imports of Chinese paper.
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