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TRADE WARS
WTO to rule on China-US dispute on shrimps, sawblades
by Staff Writers
Geneva (AFP) Oct 25, 2011

EU foreign policy chief holds talks in China
Beijing (AFP) Oct 25, 2011 - China's foreign minister called Tuesday on the European Union to act to restore market confidence as he held talks in Beijing with EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, state media reported.

Catherine Ashton met Yang Jiechi during a two-day visit to Beijing which went ahead despite an EU-China summit being postponed to make way for a second emergency summit on the eurozone crisis, Xinhua news agency said.

EU leaders will hold an emergency summit Wednesday to discuss beefing up its 440-billion-euro ($610 billion) rescue fund, the European Financial Stability Facility.

Ashton said she had discussed "a number of foreign policy issues, particularly recent developments in North Africa, including Libya, Egypt, Tunisia and Jordan," during her meeting with Yang.

"I took the opportunity to repeat the EU's consistent position on human rights," she added, without providing details.

She also said she had met China's Defence Minister Liang Guanglie and State Counsellor Dai Binguo, and that the EU-China summit would be rescheduled "as soon as possible".


The World Trade Organization said Tuesday that it would rule on a dispute brought by China to the United States over anti-dumping calculations imposed by Washington on Chinese diamond sawblades and shrimps.

"The DSB (Dispute Settlement Body) established a panel to examine this issue," said a WTO spokeswoman.

The United States had launched an anti-dumping probe against China in 2004 over certain frozen shrimps and in 2005, it launched another investigation against Chinese diamond sawblades.

In both cases, Washington applied a complex anti-dumping calculation called zeroing, which China claims flouts international trade rules.

The United States has lost several major cases at the WTO related to the zeroing method -- which involves counting negative values as zero when calculating an average -- including against Brazil and the European Union.

According to complainants, the zeroing method allows Washington to increase its estimate of the degree of dumping on its markets.

Dumping involves the sale of items abroad at less than the cost price in their domestic market.

The United States said it believed that the dispute "was unnecessary," pointing out that "the US Department of Commerce has discontinued zeroing in the context of average to average comparisons in investigations."

Hong Kong posts first export drop in two years
Hong Kong (AFP) Oct 25, 2011 - Hong Kong's exports dropped in September, official data showed Tuesday, the first decline in almost two years as the southern Chinese city feels the impact of a weakening global economy.

For the first time since October 2009, the city's shipments declined three percent year-on-year as shipments, including electronics and clothing, slumped to markets in Asia and elsewhere.

The total value of exports decreased to HK$271.8 billion ($35 billion) from 2010, according to the Census and Statistics Department, which described the export-driven city's trade prospects in the coming months as "bleak."

The September decline reversed August's 6.8 percent increase in shipments.

"The main drags came from (mainland China) and the US markets, with the former relapsing to a decline and the latter dipping for the fifth straight month," a government spokesman said in a statement Tuesday.

"Exports to the (European Union) and other Asian markets also saw varying degrees of moderation, although those to Taiwan and Thailand continued to see double-digit growth."

The spokesman added that "downside risks to the global economy have continued to increase amid the deepening eurozone sovereign debt crisis and the stalling recovery in the advanced economies."

"Against this background, Hong Kong's export outlook in the coming months is bleak," he added.

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China orders banks to boost credit for small firms
Beijing (AFP) Oct 25, 2011 - China on Tuesday ordered state-owned banks to increase lending to small businesses, amid concerns that an explosion in private financing could lead to widespread bankruptcies and bad debts.

Banks should ensure that the growth of loans for small businesses keeps pace with overall lending and "boost support" for borrowers of less than five million yuan ($785,000), the China Banking Regulatory Commission said.

The regulator also urged banks to "regulate loan fees" for smaller companies, the statement said.

Many independent business owners have been forced to borrow money at high interest rates from private lenders after being rejected by major banks who favour other state-controlled enterprises whose debts are implicitly guaranteed by the government.

But the disappearance of more than 90 entrepreneurs in the eastern city of Wenzhou over high debts has fuelled concerns that the flourishing informal lending market could collapse and destabilise China's financial system.

Analysts estimate China's private lending market is worth as much as four trillion yuan -- or 10 percent of gross domestic product -- and leaders worried about the potential for widespread bankruptcies to trigger unrest have vowed to help.

The State Council, or cabinet, said earlier this month that it would make it easier for smaller businesses to get bank credit by broadening financing channels and offering them tax breaks.



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