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 |  | EU faces new standoff with China over shoes (International Herald Tribune)
 Updated: 2006-02-21 09:20
 http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/02/20/business/tariff.php
 After 
a battle last summer over textile imports, the European Union faces a 
potentially tense new trade standoff after it accused China and Vietnam on 
Monday of dumping cheap shoes on European markets and prepared to impose tariffs 
to protect European producers.
 
 The move to impose tariffs on surging 
imports of footwear could inflame trade tensions between the EU and China. But 
Peter Mandelson, the EU trade commissioner, faces a delicate task: reconciling 
calls from protectionist-minded countries like Italy to coddle home-grown 
industries, while preventing a rerun of the embarrassing pile-up of women's 
undergarments at European ports the last time the EU got tough on cheap 
clothes.
 
 "Mandelson hates this situation," said Emma Ormand, an 
international trade consultant at PricewaterhouseCoopers in London. "He got 
caned in the bra wars and he absolutely does not want a 'Bra Wars 2,'" she said. 
Mandelson, she noted, is trying to seek a compromise that balances free trade 
with European political realities.
 
 The anti-dumping duties could be 
phased in from April 7, two days before a general election in Italy, where 
competition between domestic clothing makers and their Asian rivals is a 
political issue.
 
 Peter Power, a spokesman for Mandelson, said on Monday 
that an investigation showed the need for the EU to take some form of 
protectionist measures. Imports of leather shoes to the EU from China amounted 
to 95 million pairs in the 11 months ended March 2005. Over the same period, 
imports to the EU from Vietnam totaled 120 million pairs.
 
 Commission 
officials said Monday that they were still calculating the scale of the increase 
for Vietnam. But they said figures for imports from China rose 300 percent from 
January to October 2005, compared with the like period in 2004.
 
 Power 
said the Asian manufacturers were able to produce cheap shoes in such large 
numbers because of state support including "cheap finance, nonmarket land rent, 
tax breaks and improper asset valuation." EU officials had concluded that there 
was "evidence of dumping and injury," Power added.
 
 But even as he 
prepares measures against the Asian imports, Mandelson also is taking steps to 
avoid a repeat of what happened in 2005, and to mollify China at a time when 
governments in Europe and the United States are seeking to persuade China to do 
more to stop piracy of music, movies and luxury goods.
 
 Under the EU 
suggestions, if a majority of member state governments agree, tariffs could 
start as low as about 4 percent by early April. That temporary level could rise 
to just below 20 percent by early October. But Mandelson also would aim to 
ratchet any duties lower if China and Vietnam later show signs of making 
changes.
 
 Rather than impose quotas, which the EU used last year in a 
protracted battle with China over imports of undergarments, officials seem 
likely to avoid measures that would limit the freedom of retailers to meet their 
import needs. Any measures in this case would leave the actual amounts of 
imports untouched.
 
 Horst Widmann, the president of the Federation of the 
European Sporting Goods Industry, which includes Adidas and Timberland among its 
members, called measures to exclude athletic footwear from tariffs a step in the 
right direction. Mandelson is "making a genuine effort to minimize the harmful 
effects of antidumping," said Horst Widmann, the president of the Brussels-based 
group.
 
 But Widmann warned that about a quarter of all leather footwear 
imported by the European sporting goods industry would still be affected by the 
proposed antidumping measures, leaving consumers paying higher prices and 
threatening the health of the retail sector and hurting the European 
economy.
 
 EU officials have contested claims of massive price increases, 
saying that the possible duties could increase the cost to consumers by less 
than £¿, or $1.20, on a pair of shoes that cost £¿5 or more.
 
 To meet an 
April 7 deadline, Mandelson must send proposals to EU member states this week or 
next. Brussels insiders said a decision - requiring a simple majority - could be 
taken in mid-March.
 
 But Mandelson still could face a hard sell to get 
through a compromise arrangement.
 
 Ormand of PricewaterhouseCoopers said 
an "unholy alliance" of countries like Italy, which want greater protection, and 
countries in Scandinavia, which look askance at tariff plans, could be a deal 
breaker.
 
 "This is not a done deal," she said. "There are clear risks for 
Mandelson because if his plan falls through he could be seen as failing to do 
anything to protect the Italian manufacturers."
 
 Mandelson traveled to 
Milan and Rome in recent weeks to meet with Italian industry chiefs and 
government officials in a bid to temper their desire for punitive duties of as 
much as 100 percent. But there are signs of continued dissatisfaction. Italian 
shoemakers are unhappy that Mandelson planned to exclude sports shoes from the 
antidumping measures and are complaining that the duties will be too 
low.
 
 "This proposal is not satisfactory," Leonardo Soana, a director with 
the Italian National Shoemakers Association, told Reuters. "The Italian industry 
has been waiting for months for measures to slow the imports of Chinese 
footwear," Soana said.
 
 Mandelson will resume contacts in the next few 
days, including with the chiefs of the Italian industry lobby Confindustria. In 
those meetings, Mandelson is likely to remind Italian business leaders that the 
future of Europe is ever-more open markets and that the region should embrace, 
rather than reject, the benefits of a free and open global economy.
 
 That 
view was supported on Monday by Robert Sturdy, a spokesman on trade issues for 
British Conservatives in the European Parliament, who warned that the 
introduction of trade restrictions could weaken the European case for opening up 
markets in developing countries to goods from wealthier countries during the 
continuing round of global trade talks that began in Doha in 2001.
 
 "We 
must accept that Asian countries make cheaper shoes than we can in Europe and 
find ways for European and Asian businesses to work together rather than just 
impose barriers," Sturdy said.
 
 "The 'Bra Wars' saga showed what happens 
when the EU gets it wrong and Commissioner Mandelson shouldn't allow himself to 
be influenced by a bunch of Mediterranean cobblers," he said.
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