WTO largely sides with US in dispute over China grain import tariffs

AFP  |  Geneva 

The on Thursday largely sided with the in its Obama-era case against over Chinese restrictions on imports of American grain.

Back in December 2016, filed a complaint with the global trade body over what it claimed were illegal Chinese restrictions on imports of American rice, wheat and corn, describing China's use of the tariff-rate quota (TRQ) system as "opaque and unpredictable".

estimated at the time that American farmers could have exported some $3.5 billion more of such crops to if the system had been used properly, and charged that had violated its commitments under international trade rules.

A panel of experts established by the WTO's Dispute Settlement Body agreed Thursday that had failed to adhere to the commitments it made when it became a WTO member in 2001 to administer the TRQs on a "transparent, predictable, and fair basis".

The panel however said that the US had failed to show that violated its public notice obligation under the (GATT) in respect to TRQs.

TRQs are two-level tariffs, allowing for a limited volume of imports to come in at a lower "in-quota" tariff level, and all other imports charged at an often much higher "out-of-quota" tariff.

Countries like China that joined the WTO after its creation in 1995 have had their TRQ commitments set out in their accession agreements.

When China joined the WTO, it agreed to allow 2,660,000 metric tonnes of short and medium-grain rice and the same amount for long-grain rice, as well as 9,636,000 metric tonnes of wheat and 7,200,000 metric tonnes of corn to enter the country at the lower duty rates.

Both sides have up to 60 days to appeal Thursday's ruling.

China is the world's largest of wheat and rice, holding significant sway over world markets.

The of the WTO ruling comes as and strive to reach a new trade agreement to avoid escalating their trade war.

The two sides have exchanged tariffs on more than $360 billion in two-way trade since last year, weighing on both countries' and unnerving global stock markets.

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

First Published: Thu, April 18 2019. 22:40 IST