United States wins WTO chicken ruling against China

Reuters  |  GENEVA 

(Reuters) - The largely won a Organization ruling on Thursday that had failed to comply with an earlier ruling against its punitive tariffs on U. S. chickens.

The ruling means has failed in a bid to use one of Washington's own favourite policy tools - punitive tariffs - against U. S. producers, and will be obliged to lower its tariffs, unless it appeals within 20 days.

The originally went to the WTO in September 2011, complaining about Chinese anti-dumping and anti-subsidy tariffs. later lowered the tariffs but said it had not done enough to comply.

The initial U. S. complaint followed China's 2010 imposition of anti-dumping duties of up to 105.4 percent, and anti-subsidy duties of up to 30.3 percent, on U. S. products.

lowered the duties in 2014 to a maximum of 73.8 percent and 4.2 percent respectively after the WTO ruled in Washington's favour. But the U.

S. Representative said they still broke the rules and went back to the WTO in 2016.

By that time, the said U. S. poultry producers such as and had lost sales of over $1 billion.

"expresses regret over the WTO ruling," the country's said in a statement late on Thursday.

It added that would assess the WTO report and carry out "follow-up work" in accordance with WTO rules.

(Reporting by Tom Miles, and in BEIJING, editing by and Richard Pullin)

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First Published: Fri, January 19 2018. 06:50 IST