WTO Sides With Chinese State Capitalism Against the U.S.
Ian Fletcher Activist Post - 14 March, 2011
The World Trade Organization has a long
history of anti-American actions. They’ve just handed us another one,
and in the process handed a big freebie to Chinese state capitalism.
Unbeknownst to most Americans, huge sections of our nation’s trade
policy aren’t set in this country anymore. They are set by panels of
WTO judges in Switzerland, to whom we have signed over the right to rule
on the legitimacy of our policies.
At issue in a WTO ruling handed down last Friday is how much scope the
U.S. is entitled to in trying to level the playing field for American
companies competing against companies subsidized under China’s system of
state capitalism.
The specific products at issue in the ruling are steel tubing, off-road
tires, and woven sacks. However, as in domestic legal rulings, the
implications go far beyond the immediate subject matter.
Since July 2008, the U.S. has imposed tariffs on $200 million worth of steel pipe imports from China, South Korea, and Mexico.
Why? The American position is that we are entitled to apply what are
called “countervailing duties” against products that are subsidized by
foreign governments. And on top of that, we are also entitled to
apply duties designed to counteract the practice of dumping, or selling a
product below cost in order to destroy foreign competitors.
Both these responses on our part have long histories of being accepted
as legitimate, both under international trade law and in economics.
(This is why the WTO had originally accepted our position; the new ruling is actually the result of an appeal by China.)
In terms of international law, one can trace the legitimacy of our
policies at least as far back as the founding of the General Agreement
on Tariffs and Trade, the WTO’s predecessor, in 1947.
In terms of economics, their justifying logic is very simple.
In the case of subsidies, free trade only makes sense if it really is
free, which means that a thumb on the scale at one end of the
transaction justifies a tariff, or counter-subsidy, at the other end.
In the case of dumping, free trade is not justified if one side sells
below cost in order to wipe out the other and thus eventually grab the
market (or most of it) for itself. Even if the attempt fails, the
damage done to our industries will be real, and by then it will be too
late.
There’s no serious question about whether China engages in subsidies and
dumping. That’s why, in this case, we imposed duties of up to 200
percent to offset their subsidies, plus up to 265 percent to counteract
their dumping.
Enter state capitalism. The flashpoint of the current dispute centers on
the vexed question of what price constitutes dumping in a
non-free-market economy.
In a free-market economy like our own, dumping is considered to occur
when a product is sold abroad for either less than its production cost,
or less than what it is sold for domestically. Unfortunately, in an
economy like China’s, which is so tightly controlled by the government
that many prices are essentially whatever the government says they are,
this logic doesn’t work. There are no normal prices to observe in order
to figure out how big the subsidy is. So the U.S. Government has been
using various statistical techniques to calculate the relevant prices.
The WTO has ruled that our techniques are not legit. Bottom line? We're
supposed to overlook the vast panoply of subsidies—ranging from free
land to cheap loans and a million different tax credits—because state
capitalism makes them tricky to calculate.
Free traders are celebrating this ruling. Unfortunately, “free” is the
last thing trade with subsidized state capitalism is. It’s controlled.
Just not in our interests.
As with many of America’s trade problems, it’s not like we didn’t see
this coming. As Leo Gerard, president of the United Steelworkers, has
rightly pointed out in protest against this ruling,
When China joined the WTO in 2001, it agreed to be treated as a
non-market economy in dumping cases and to be subject to countervailing
duty laws, but today the Appellate Body appears to have created special
carve outs for China that neither the U.S. nor anyone else agreed to ten
years ago.
When will we ever learn? China views trade as economic warfare by other
means, and we keep expecting the WTO to somehow make them play fair.
We will keep losing jobs and industries until we wise up. (original link)
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