Fight for market economy status
Context
The U.S. protested at the World Trade Organisation against China’s bid for recognition as a market economy. Its opposition is a counter to China’s 2016 legal challenge against the U.S. and the European Union, both of which refuse to accord China the coveted status it wants
Market Economy
- A market economy is a system where the laws of supply and demand direct the production of goods and services. Supply includes natural resources, capital, and labor. Demand includes purchases by consumers, businesses and the government.
- Businesses sell their wares at the highest price consumers will pay. At the same time, shoppers look for the lowest prices for the goods and services they want.
- Workers bid their services at the highest possible wages that their skills allow. Employers seek to get the best employees at the lowest possible price.
- Capitalism requires a market economy to set prices and distribute goods and services
View of US
- The use of state subsidies in China distorts market prices
- Also the U.S. Commerce Department is conducting separate investigations into the dumping of aluminium foil by China.
- Were China to be granted the coveted position, it would be hard for the U.S. to defend its anti-dumping rulings against Chinese firms at the world body.
Prices determined by open competition
Central to China’s quest is the acknowledgement from trading partners that domestic prices are determined by open competition rather than by the government
Effect: Helping China counter unfair dumping
This will help China counter attacks of unfair dumping
China as a non-market economy
Conversely, as long as major trading powers treat China as a non-market economy, they would insist on ascertaining the value of goods with reference to prices in a third country to ensure that domestic firms did not gain an unfair trade advantage
WTO Rules
The protocol to China’s 2001 WTO entry has been a subject of controversy
- Automatic upgradation of China as a market economy: Beijing insists that under Section 15 of the Protocol of Accession, the country’s upgrade as a market economy was automatic on the completion of 15 years of its WTO membership in 2016
- Endorsed by several Nations: Several nations have endorsed China’s position in return for bilateral cooperation in trade and investments in infrastructure projects
- View of the WTO: In support of that contention is a WTO appellate body’s 2011 ruling that the protocol to Beijing’s accession did not provide for the country to be treated differently by other member states for an indefinite period.
An Alternative Interpretation
The alternative interpretation draws upon sub-clauses of Section 15, which stipulates conditions when importers may rely on Chinese prices, or take recourse to a different methodology to impose anti-dumping tariffs
Onus on Chinese firms
- Section 15(1)(i) places the onus on Chinese firms to prove that they were operating under conditions of a competitive market economy in the manufacture and sale of relevant products
- If they fail to do so, the Section provides that importing states would be entitled to invoke rules applicable to a non-market economy while probing firms for dumping.
- Now, a subsequent provision stipulates a 2016 date of expiry for recourse to the alternative methodology of determining prices.
- Another clause allows for the status of market economy to be decided for specific industry sectors, rather than the entire economy
Conclusion
Western resistance to accord China the necessary recognition is rooted in concerns over a glut of Chinese imports flooding domestic markets and causing job losses in the manufacturing sector. But the Trump administration’s attempts to undermine the WTO’s dispute resolution mechanism could further delay an outcome in the appellate body’s process of disposing of cases.
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