USTR says new trade tools are needed to crack down on China's state trade

The United States needs to follow new strategies and update its domestic trading tools to cope with "China's government non-market policies and practices," the office of the US Trade Representative (USTR) said.

USTR says new trade tools needed to fight China state-led trade

The USTR said in its annual report on China's compliance with World Trade Organization rules that the "Phase 1" trade deal signed by the Trump administration two years ago failed to address fundamental U.S. concerns about China's industrial and supportive policies, including enormous financial resources.

Such support, which includes favorable regulatory support for Chinese industry and limited market access for imported goods and services, is often targeted at specific capacity, production and market share targets, the report said.

The report, released annually to Congress since China joined the WTO in 2001, is the first report issued under US Trade Representative Catherine Tai and reflects her China trade strategy, Reuters reported.

It follows final 2021 trade data showing Beijing's failure to meet promised two-year targets for purchasing U.S. goods, services and energy under the Phase 1 deal, which eased a tariff war between the world's two largest economies.

"China has not moved to embrace the market-oriented principles on which the WTO and its rules are based, despite the representations that it made when it joined 20 years ago," Tai said in a statement. "China has instead retained and expanded its state-led, non-market approach to the economy and trade."

The USTR report said the United States needs to update its domestic trade law tools to reflect the current realities of China's trade policies "to secure a more level playing field for U.S. workers and businesses."

A sweeping China competition bill passed by the U.S. House of Representatives and under consideration in the Senate would expand the use of anti-subsidy tariffs to target cross-border subsidies for Chinese companies that invest in offshore production to skirt U.S. duties.

"It is also apparent that existing trade tools need to be strengthened, and new trade tools need to be forged," USTR said in the report. "China pursues unfair policies and practices that were not contemplated when many of the U.S. trade statutes were drafted decades ago, and we are therefore exploring ways in which to update our trade tools to counter them."

The report said the United States was still pursuing bilateral engagement "to hold China accountable for its existing commitments", including under the Phase 1 agreement.

It also said China had failed to make good on other Phase 1 commitments. These include regulatory approvals for U.S. agricultural biotechnology and a risk assessment on the use of ractopamine, a feed additive used to produce leaner pork and beef in the United States.

SOURCE: meatinfo