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    EU Trade Ministers: Safeguard European trade defense instruments urge European Manufacturers

    npsBy nps22 September 2016Updated:3 July 2024 No Comments2 Mins Read
    — Filed under: Focus
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    — last modified 22 September 2016

    On the eve of the informal meeting of EU Trade Ministers due to take place on 22 and 23 September in Bratislava, AEGIS Europe, an alliance of manufacturing industries, sent a communiqué to Ministers urging them to safeguard European trade defense instruments (TDIs) – and ensure that European manufacturing has a future.

    “Any new methodology that is developed by the EU to address dumping by Chinese producers must be sufficiently defined and include a clear link with the EU’s five long-established market economy criteria. Without these criteria acting as the bedrock of European trade defense there will be an increased danger of legal uncertainty and consequently a greater risk for investments and manufacturing jobs in Europe,” stresses Milan Nitzschke, spokesperson for AEGIS Europe. 

    So long as China does not follow the rules of international free trade and continues to operate along non-market economy lines, with policy planning that favours distortions and over capacities, the EU must defend itself using proven legal principles. Otherwise the state-planned economy of China would play ping-pong with the EU’s market economies.

    “The EU’s five market economy criteria is an essential tool to fend off predatory Chinese manufacturing practices that are borne of massive overcapacity and state-subsidised dumping in the market. They are unchallenged at WTO level and were already in place when China joined the WTO,” points out Mr Nitzschke.

    Furthermore, the European Commission’s suggestion that it intends to shift the burden of proof during an investigation must not result in an increased burden for complainants.  Otherwise, there would be a real risk that European industries, and particularly SMEs, will not be able to bring forward complaints against dumped imports from China.

    “China is claiming to be an economy in transition. Logically it is for China to prove that it fulfills market economy criteria and eliminates market distortions, not the other way around,” states Mr Nitzschke.

    “The European manufacturing sector provides jobs and livelihoods for millions of citizens in Europe across a diverse range of sectors from A to Z, aluminium, bicycles, ceramics, glass fibre, solar and many more. We urge Trade Ministers to be vigilant and stand up to state-subsidised dumping,” concludes Mr Nitzschke.

    AEGIS Europe

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