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‘WTO steps to resolve tax dispute respected’
Beijing—China will act
according to the rules, officials said Thursday over a World Trade
Organization (WTO) dispute on car parts which some experts have said is
unfair to the country.
“China respects the procedure of the WTO to solve the dispute,” Foreign
Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao said at a regular news briefing. A WTO
panel ruled on Wednesday that the country improperly taxes imported car
parts at the same rate as finished vehicles. The case, initiated by the
United States, European Union and Canada, is the first time China has
been the subject of a complaint that went all the way to the WTO’s
Dispute Settlement Body, since joining the organization in 2001. The
Permanent Mission of China to the WTO said in a statement Thursday that
China is investigating the initial WTO ruling. It said China respects
the WTO procedure but otherwise will not comment before the panel makes
its final decision.
China taxes imported auto parts at the same rate as completed
automobiles if more than 60 percent of parts the finished vehicles are
made from are imported. The rules aim to prevent tax evasion by
companies who import whole cars as spare parts to avoid higher tariff
rates, officials from the Ministry of Commerce had said. The US and EU
filed the case to the WTO in March 2006, complaining China’s taxes on
imports of foreign auto parts discouraged Chinese carmakers from using
them.
But analysts said the status quo will hardly change even if a sanction
is imposed. “I don’t think it will be a big help for them financially
even if China slashes its tariffs on parts as requested,” Liu Yuandong,
an analyst with CSM Worldwide, an international industry consultant, was
quoted by Reuters as saying. Zhou Shijian, a trade expert, said China’s
regulation on car parts aims to prevent tariff evasion and is not to
prejudice against foreign carmakers. He said the WTO decision is unfair
to China. “It could push China to re-examine the rationality of WTO
rules,” Mei Xinyu, a Ministry of Commerce researcher, said.—Xinhua |