EU proposes anti-dumping duties on Chinese Updated: 2006-02-24 14:54
European Union (EU) Trade Commissioner Peter Mandelson on Thursday proposed
introducing EU market anti-dumping duties of up to 19.4 percent on Chinese
leather shoes and 16.8 percent on Vietnamese leather shoes, starting from April.
Mandelson recommended that this provisional duty be phased in over a period
of six months, beginning at about four percent on April 7. The anti-dumping
measures will be provisional until October 7 and will be definitive in the
following five years.
However, he recommended that children's shoes and high-tech sports shoes be
excluded from the tariffs.
The EU has conducted an investigation into allegations of dumping of Chinese
and Vietnamese shoes and found "compelling evidence" that there is "serious
state intervention on a large and strategic industrial scale" in the footwear
sector in China and Vietnam, Mandelson said.
He claimed that along with evidence of a flawed accounting practice, the EU
had found what he called evidence of non-commercial loans or capital grants from
the Chinese and Vietnamese governments to footwear producers in their countries,
inappropriate evaluations of assets, non-commercial rates for land use, and tax
breaks for footwear exporters.
But the EU trade chief said children's shoes should be exempted from the duty
as it would "disproportionately affect" families with young children and would
not be in the public interest.
Since there is no longer significant production of leather sports shoes in
Europe and no injury from dumping has been demonstrated, Mandelson also proposed
sports shoes be excluded.
In order to minimize harm to European footwear importers whose goods are now
in the process of being transported to Europe, Mandelson recommended the duty be
phased in in four stages over six months beginning in April.
Mandelson said he had spoken to Vietnamese and Chinese ministers on Thursday
morning over the dumping issue.
The European Commission will continue to discuss with Chinese and Vietnam
governments to address the concerns of the EU, he said.
The commissioner said the EU was still investigating allegations of dumping
of safety shoes from India and China, and at this time no anti-dumping measures
would be imposed on these shoes.
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