Industrial associations should play a key role to cope with
trade disputes with overseas competitors, a high-level trade
official said yesterday.
Zhang Xiangchen, director of the WTO affairs department of the
Ministry of Commerce,
told China Daily that the government will offer only
guidance.
Zhang praised shoe exporters in Wenzhou, a city in east China's
Zhejiang Province renowned for its cheap shoes, saying they had
been united under their industrial association.
But the country is lacking national industry associations, which
can make a loud noise in international trade disputes, he said.
"Chinese exporters are hitting the US and European markets with
cheaper goods," he said. "As a result, producers in those countries
are suffering losses, which has hurt many traditional
industries."
Zhang said Chinese exporters should keep this picture in
mind.
When worldwide textile quotas ended at the beginning of last
year, Chinese textiles flooded into US and European markets in such
amounts that it sparked protests from producers in those areas.
Soon afterwards, special protection measures against Chinese
textiles were brought in.
Zhang said fierce trade disputes like this would not happen
again now a textile deal has been reached, but he said minor
disputes could happen.
"As long as the Chinese economy maintains its fast growth, trade
disputes are inevitable," he said.
But he told China Daily that many of the dumping charges faced
by Chinese exporters would not seriously hamper the competitiveness
of Chinese goods.
"Chinese-made furniture and shoes are better than in any other
country," he said. "It's unimaginable that people abroad can live
without them.
"The restrictive measures will be nothing but temporary."
Speaking of the producers who export their goods to Europe and
the US via a third country, like Viet Nam and Indonesia, Zhang said
this is by no means a good solution.
"If the final market countries find out you are doing this, they
can still restrict you," Zhang said.
He encouraged companies to avoid dumping charges by investing in
a third country.
"Overseas investment is a good way out," he said, "It's good for
the target market because it helps local employment."
To diversify export destinations and avoid risk, the Chinese
Government has been encouraging exporters to go to other markets
for more than a decade, but with patchy results.
"The US and European markets are large and mature, and their
legal environments are sound," he said. "It's much more difficult
to explore new markets, but we have to keep doing this."
(China Daily March 28, 2006)