Khaleej Times

China’s excessive support limits opportunit­ies for US farmers to export their worldclass products to China

- Robert Lighthizer, US Trade Representa­tive

geneva/beijing — The United States won a World Trade Organisati­on ruling on China’s price support for grains, successful­ly challengin­g a calculatio­n methodolog­y that is also used by India.

A WTO adjudicati­on panel agreed on Thursday with the US complaint that China had paid farmers too much for wheat, Indica rice and Japonica rice in 20122015. A disputed corn subsidy had already expired. “China’s excessive support limits opportunit­ies for US farmers to export their world-class products to China,” US Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer said in a statement. “We expect China to quickly come into compliance with its WTO obligation­s.

China said on Friday it regretted the lack of support from experts, noting that government support for agricultur­e was a common practice and allowed under WTO rules.

China would continue to promote developmen­t of its agricultur­e sector in line with WTO rules and safeguard the stability of the multi-lateral trade system, the Ministry of Commerce said in a statement.

The US trade representa­tive’s office filed the complaint in Septem- ber 2016, saying China had paid farmers nearly $100 billion more than allowed by the WTO rules. That provided an artificial incentive for farmers to produce more, lowering prices worldwide.

China’s WTO membership agreement permits trade-distorting subsidies of up to 8.5 percent of the total value of production.

China argued that it was not breaching that limit because only the grains procured by government should be counted as subsidised. The United States successful­ly argued that state buying at a guaranteed price raised the whole market. The ruling, which may be appealed, could have ramificati­ons for India, which has made similar arguments to China. At a meeting of the WTO’s agricultur­e committee on Wednesday, the United States and Canada rejected India’s claim that its market price support for pulses was 1.5 percent of the value of production, saying that it was actually 31 percent to 85 percent, far above allowed limits.

 ?? — AFP ?? Indian labourers work at a grain market in Lang village, Patiala in the northern state of Punjab.
— AFP Indian labourers work at a grain market in Lang village, Patiala in the northern state of Punjab.

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