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Related: Chinese shoemakers oppose EU
anti-dumping duties
BEIJING, April 7 -- Chinese exporters lose out.
European manufacturers in China lose out.
European exporters lose out.
And European consumers lose out.
The provisional tariffs slapped on Chinese leather
shoes by the European Union (EU) are a lose-lose situation which must be turned
around, a top Commerce Ministry official said yesterday.
The EU was not justified in imposing the anti-dumping
penalties because there was no credible evidence for denying market economy
status to Chinese shoemakers, Vice-Minister of Commerce Gao Hucheng told China
Daily.
He was referring to the EU decision to levy
provisional tariffs on imports of Chinese leather shoes. The measures come into
force today and gradually rise from 4.8 per cent to 19.4 per cent by October,
when a final decision is expected.
"The EU declined to grant market economy status to 13
firms it investigated on the spot. But all of them are privately-owned or
foreign-invested, and comply with the criteria for market economy treatment,"
said Gao, also the ministry's international trade negotiation representative.
"It also denied market economy treatment to
non-sampled companies, about 150 or 90 per cent of the total respondents,
without giving any explanation," he added.
The EU began to give market economy status to some
Chinese firms in anti-dumping cases in 1998. As China has not yet been
recognized as a full market economy by the EU, the status helps individual
companies gain access to the European market.
The EU violated not only World Trade Organization
anti-dumping rules but also its own laws and anti-dumping procedures, Gao said,
because none of the 160 respondents had received disclosure from the EU on their
claim for individual treatment.
The EU's determination on dumping and injury in the
case lacks enough evidence, he said.
Shoemaking is a labour-intensive industry in which
China enjoys comparative advantages in terms of labour and resources; and the EU
should not arbitrarily regard the price advantage of Chinese leather shoes as
amounting to dumping, he said.
"Most Chinese shoemakers are small- and medium-sized
companies that are not able to dump goods in the EU market," he added.
He noted that the European petitioner listed only 6
of 15 injury evaluation indicators required by the WTO Anti-dumping Agreement.
"So the EU lacks adequate evidence to file the case,"
Gao said. Since no harm has been done to the EU industry, there is no reason for
the case, he said.
The penalties were also against EU companies'
interests, Gao pointed out.
According to Chinese statistics, footwear producers
from the original 15 EU member states have set up 478 plants in China with an
actual direct investment of US$737 million; and they also export to the European
market.
"Anti-dumping measures against Chinese footwear
exporters will surely impair the profits of EU footwear producers and investors
in China," Gao said.
Chinese footwear exports are basically low- and
middle-end products, while the EU produces mostly high-end goods, he said.
"Meeting different needs of consumers, the two kinds
of products are not in direct competition; and have obvious differences in sales
channels and market segmentation. The anti-dumping measures are not only
unnecessary but also harmful to the interests of EU middle- and low-end
consumers," he explained.
Gao said footwear exports from China generate
lucrative returns for EU importers and retailers and provide a large number of
jobs in the economic bloc.
The development of the Chinese footwear industry also
ensures EU exports of shoe-making machinery, leather and other raw materials
every year.
According to Chinese customs statistics, in the first
11 months of 2005, leather imports from the EU reached US$570 million, a
year-on-year increase of 27 per cent. China imported US$54.04 million worth of
shoe-making machines from the EU in 2004, up 26 per cent year-on-year.
Gao urged the EU to treat Chinese firms fairly and
re-evaluate the whole case to ensure the development of shoe trade.
Last July, the EU initiated anti-dumping
investigations into leather shoes worth US$730 million from China the largest
single anti-dumping case between the two economies.
According to statistics from the Ministry of
Commerce, the EU is not only China's largest trade partner but also a major
source of dumping charges against China.
(Source: China Daily) |