Why in news?
The United States recently submitted a document to the WTO, stating its opposition to granting China the market economy status.
What is the market economy status?
- A market economy is an economic system in which economic decisions and the pricing of goods and services are guided solely by the market.
- The aggregate interactions of a country's individual citizens and businesses operate behind the key economic decisions.
- This is the opposite of a centrally planned economy, in which government decisions drive most aspects of a country's economic activity.
What does China aim for?
- Central to China’s quest is the acknowledgement from trading partners of its market economy status.
- In other words, a recognition that its domestic prices are determined by open competition rather than by the government.
- This will help China counter the attacks by importer countries of its unfair dumping.
- Conversely, as long as it is treated as a non-market economy, China has to ascertain the value of goods with reference to prices in a third country.
- This is for the trading countries to ensure that the domestic firms did not gain an unfair trade advantage.
Is China's demand valid?
- Supporting claims - The provisions in China’s Protocol on the Accession to the WTO 2001 has been a subject of controversy.
- China insists that as per the provisions in the Protocol, its upgrade as a market economy was automatic on the completion of 15 years of its WTO membership in 2016.
- Several nations have endorsed China’s position in return for bilateral cooperation in trade and investments in infrastructure projects.
- Even a WTO appellate body’s 2011 ruling highlights that as per the protocol, China cannot continue to be treated differently by other member states for an indefinite period.
- Opposing claims - The alternative interpretation draws upon the sub-clauses of the protocol.
- It specifies the conditions when importers may take recourse to a different methodology to impose anti-dumping tariffs.
- Accordingly, onus is on Chinese firms to prove that they were operating under conditions of a competitive market economy.
- If they fail to do so, the importing states would be entitled to invoke rules applicable to a non-market economy while probing firms for dumping.
- Another clause allows for the status of market economy to be decided for specific industry sectors, rather than the entire economy.
Why is the US opposing?
- Excessive Chinese imports flooding domestic markets is the root cause for Western resistance to accord China the market economy status.
- Countries that are opposing Chain's claims say that the use of state subsidies in China distorts market prices.
- And is also consequently causing job losses in the manufacturing sector.
- If China is granted the coveted status, it would be hard for the US to defend its anti-dumping rulings against Chinese firms at WTO.
- There is also a concern that China’s economic liberalization seemed to have slowed or reversed, with the role of the state increasing.
- Evidently, the following are being witnessed -
- backtracking on some aspects of the financial areas
- clamping down capital outflows
- monitoring investments of corporations
- placing more party officials in the nominally private sector
- state-owned enterprises playing a leading role in the economy
Source: The Hindu