Trump trade office takes aggressive view of WTO rules - document

Reuters  |  WASHINGTON 

By David Lawder

(Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump's administration said on Wednesday that it will take aggressive action to combat other countries' unfair practices and may defy World Organization rulings that it views as interfering with U.S. sovereignty

In an annual policy agenda document, the U.S. Representative's office said the administration "will not tolerate" unfair practices that distort markets, including currency manipulation, unfair government subsidies, intellectual property theft and state-owned enterprises.

The document publicly released to Congress on Wednesday signals that the administration may try to push the limits of what is acceptable under rules in its quest to make good on campaign promises to slash U.S. deficits with China and Mexico, and bring manufacturing jobs back to the United States.

The document represents a departure from the Obama administration's strict adherence to compliance in its challenges to unfair foreign practices.

"Unlike earlier presidents, is signalling a willingness to impose import restrictions -- especially against a country like China -- where the justification under rules for doing so may be highly questionable," said Chad Bown, a senior fellow and expert at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in

"The downside of the United States going down this path is that it is likely that other countries will follow suit immediately," Bown added.

The USTR document said it was not in the United States' interest to let some rulings undermine the use of effective remedies that the Geneva-based body expressly allows to fight unfair

"Accordingly, the administration will act aggressively as needed to discourage this type of behaviour -- and encourage true market competition," the USTR said in the document.

Laying out many of Trump's plans in writing for the first time, the document said the administration plans to strictly enforce U.S. laws, defend U.S. national sovereignty over policy, and use all possible leverage to open foreign markets to U.S. exports, the document said.

It makes clear the administration's view that U.S. law supersedes rules -- a view that could be invoked should Congress adopt a border tax adjustment plan to impose new taxes on imports that is later challenged as violating tariff rules by other member countries.

"The administration will aggressively defend American sovereignty over matters of policy," the report said.

The nominee to be Trump's top negotiator, veteran steel industry lawyer Robert Lighthizer, in 2010 advocated "aggressive interpretations of provisions that might help us deal with Chinese mercantilism."

Lighthizer is awaiting confirmation by the U.S. Senate. He served as a deputy USTR in the Reagan administration, helping to negotiate import quotas on Japanese goods in the 1980s, with the help of powerful law provisions that have largely gone unused since the was launched in 1995.

(Reporting by Eric Beech; Editing by Sandra Maler)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Trump trade office takes aggressive view of WTO rules - document

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump's administration said on Wednesday that it will take aggressive action to combat other countries' unfair trade practices and may defy World Trade Organization rulings that it views as interfering with U.S. sovereignty

By David Lawder

(Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump's administration said on Wednesday that it will take aggressive action to combat other countries' unfair practices and may defy World Organization rulings that it views as interfering with U.S. sovereignty

In an annual policy agenda document, the U.S. Representative's office said the administration "will not tolerate" unfair practices that distort markets, including currency manipulation, unfair government subsidies, intellectual property theft and state-owned enterprises.

The document publicly released to Congress on Wednesday signals that the administration may try to push the limits of what is acceptable under rules in its quest to make good on campaign promises to slash U.S. deficits with China and Mexico, and bring manufacturing jobs back to the United States.

The document represents a departure from the Obama administration's strict adherence to compliance in its challenges to unfair foreign practices.

"Unlike earlier presidents, is signalling a willingness to impose import restrictions -- especially against a country like China -- where the justification under rules for doing so may be highly questionable," said Chad Bown, a senior fellow and expert at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in

"The downside of the United States going down this path is that it is likely that other countries will follow suit immediately," Bown added.

The USTR document said it was not in the United States' interest to let some rulings undermine the use of effective remedies that the Geneva-based body expressly allows to fight unfair

"Accordingly, the administration will act aggressively as needed to discourage this type of behaviour -- and encourage true market competition," the USTR said in the document.

Laying out many of Trump's plans in writing for the first time, the document said the administration plans to strictly enforce U.S. laws, defend U.S. national sovereignty over policy, and use all possible leverage to open foreign markets to U.S. exports, the document said.

It makes clear the administration's view that U.S. law supersedes rules -- a view that could be invoked should Congress adopt a border tax adjustment plan to impose new taxes on imports that is later challenged as violating tariff rules by other member countries.

"The administration will aggressively defend American sovereignty over matters of policy," the report said.

The nominee to be Trump's top negotiator, veteran steel industry lawyer Robert Lighthizer, in 2010 advocated "aggressive interpretations of provisions that might help us deal with Chinese mercantilism."

Lighthizer is awaiting confirmation by the U.S. Senate. He served as a deputy USTR in the Reagan administration, helping to negotiate import quotas on Japanese goods in the 1980s, with the help of powerful law provisions that have largely gone unused since the was launched in 1995.

(Reporting by Eric Beech; Editing by Sandra Maler)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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