China voiced regret on Friday that the European Union and the
United States had turned to the World Trade Organization to try to
crack open the country's car parts market.
The United States is filing a complaint against China before the
World Trade Organization in a trade dispute over auto parts,
according to a statement released Thursday by US Trade
Representative's office. The statement said that the United States
is joined in this WTO action by the European Union.
The US alleges that China is imposing high taxes on auto parts
imported from the US and other countries in violation of pledges it
made when China joined the WTO in late 2001.
"The Chinese side expresses regret over this and is earnestly
studying the request for consultations by the EU and the United
States," a statement on the Ministry of Commerce's website quoted a
spokesman, Chong Quan, as saying.
On March 30, the ambassadors of the EU and US missions to the
WTO informed Chinese ambassador Sun Zhenyu to the WTO, requesting
consultations under the WTO mechanism for settling disputes
concerning China's policies for auto industry development, Chong
said.
The International Business Daily quoted an official from
think-tank at the ministry as saying higher labor and production
costs were eroding the 25-nation bloc's competitiveness.
Some EU governments were prone to blaming outside factors, like
China's exchange rate or unfair trading practices, for their own
commercial problems.
"They take anti-dumping measures to transfer their
responsibilities," the paper quoted Zhao Yumin as saying.
The frictions over trade coincided with the fastest period of
export growth that the country has ever seen, the paper said.
Senior officials have said that strains are inevitable in such
circumstances and have repeatedly called for problems to be
resolved at the negotiating table.
(China Daily, Xinhua March 31, 2006)