China: WTO changes must support developing countries

AP  |  Beijing 

will go along with changes meant to update global trade rules so long as they protect Beijing's status as a developing country, a said Friday.

agreed in June to work with the to propose changes to the Trade Organization to address technology policy, subsidies and state industry all areas in which faces complaints. U.S. officials complain the global trade referee is too bureaucratic and slow to adapt to changing business conditions.

Wang said each country's "development model" must be respected a reference to China's state-dominated economy, which has provoked repeated complaints is violating its market-opening obligations.

has accused Trump of wrecking the global trading system by going outside the WTO to hike tariffs on Chinese imports. Trump says that was necessary because the global body is unable to respond to complaints about Chinese technology theft, subsidies and state-led industry development.

is "willing to assume obligations" that are "compatible with our own level of development," Wang said at a conference.

"We will not allow other members to deprive China of the special and differential treatment that developing members deserve," he said.

Wang gave no details of changes Beijing might support. But he said they also must address agricultural subsidies a frequent complaint by developing countries against industrialized economies and "discrimination against state enterprises," a reference to restrictions on companies abroad.

Beijing's insistence that it is a developing country and entitled to special protections despite having grown into the second-largest global economy and a major manufacturer rankles its trading partners. That might dampen chances of reaching agreement on WTO reforms that would satisfy the United States, and other governments.

Other governments dislike Trump's tactics but echo U.S. complaints about Chinese market barriers and

and Beijing have imposed penalty tariffs on billions of dollars of each other's goods in their dispute over US complaints that China steals or pressures foreign companies to hand over technology.

The United States, and other governments also object to Chinese plans including "Made in China 2025" for state-led creation of competitors in robotics and other technology. American officials worry those might erode U.S. industrial leadership.

The EU filed a WTO challenge in June to Chinese rules on that it said improperly discriminate against foreign companies.

Trump and his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping, are due to meet this month in during a gathering of the Group of 20 major economies. Private sector analysts say there is little chance that meeting by itself will produce a settlement.

Wang, the commerce official, gave no details of Xi's possible negotiating stance. But he said China hopes members can have an "effective discussion" about WTO reform.

"China hopes the meeting can support the multilateral trading system (and) oppose unilateralism and trade protectionism," he said.

Wang warned that an issue that "endangers the WTO's existence" is the status of judges to mediate disputes. The has blocked the appointment of judges to the WTO's appeal body, leaving only three members on the seven-seat panel.

That is a dispute "between the and all other WTO members," said Wang. "We believe this should be resolved as soon as possible.

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

First Published: Fri, November 23 2018. 21:21 IST