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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

USIS Washington File

12 May 2000

Fact Sheet: Permanent Normal Trade Relations with China a Good Deal

(China WTO Accession will promote reform, create safer world) (1450)
Following is the text of the May 12 White House fact sheet:
(begin text)
Permanent Normal Trade Relations With China:
A Strong Deal for America and Ohio
May 12, 2000
China's Entry To The WTO Will Slash Barriers To The Sale Of American
Goods And Services In The World's Most Populous Country.
China's entry into the WTO will dramatically cut import barriers
currently imposed on American products and services. This agreement
locks in and expands our access to a market of over one billion
people. China's economy is already among the world's largest and over
the past 20 years has expanded at a phenomenal annual rate of nearly
10 percent. During this period, U.S. exports to China have grown from
negligible levels to over $14 billion each year, with Ohio alone
accounting for $359 million of that in 1998.
China Made Unilateral Concessions; We Would Simply Maintain The Market
Access Policies We Already Apply To China By Granting It Permanent
Normal Trade Relations.
China made significant, one-way market-opening concessions across
virtually every economic sector, including increasing access to its
markets for agriculture, services, technology, telecommunications, and
manufactured goods, each of which is important to Ohio. China also
agreed to eliminate 'unseen' barriers, such as exclusive rights to
import and distribute goods.
-- Agriculture tariffs will be cut by more than half on priority
products. On U.S. priority agricultural products, tariffs will drop
from an average of 31% to 14% by January 2004, with even sharper drops
for beef, poultry, pork, cheese, and other commodities. China will
significantly expand export opportunities for bulk commodities which
Ohio is a leading producer of, including soybeans, corn, and wheat.
And China will eliminate trade-distorting export subsidies that have
reduced American exports to third markets like Korea. Our producers
may also export and distribute directly inside China for nearly every
agricultural product without going through state-trading enterprises
or middlemen. U.S. Agricultural exports in fiscal year 1999 were $1.1
billion and USDA estimates that China's WTO accession would result in
$2 billion annually in additional U.S. agricultural exports by 2005.
-- Industrial tariffs will be slashed and Information Technology
tariffs eliminated altogether. Industrial tariffs on U.S. products
will fall from an average of 24.6% in 1997 to an average of 9.4% by
2005. By that year Chinese tariffs on Ohio's growing information
technology exports will reach zero as well. Considering that
industrial machinery and computers compose the largest share of Ohio's
$400 million exports to China, the drop in Chinese tariffs is good
news for exporters and workers.
-- Right to import and distribute. At present, China severely
restricts trading rights (the right to import and export) and the
ability to own and operate distribution networks, both essential to
move goods and compete effectively in any market. Under the agreement,
China will phase in trading rights and distribution services over
three years, and also open up sectors related to distribution
services, such as repair and maintenance, warehousing, trucking, and
air courier services. Trading rights and distribution services will
allow our businesses to export to China from here at home, and to have
their own distribution networks in China, rather than being forced to
set up factories in China to sell products through Chinese partners.
This is a top priority of U.S. manufacturers and agricultural
exporters.
-- Broad new access for services like telecom/insurance/banking. The
agreement also opens China's market for services. For the first time,
China will open its telecommunications sector and significantly expand
investment and other activities for financial services firms. And it
will greatly increase the opportunities open to professional services
such as law firms, management consulting, accountants, and
environmental services. China also agrees to ensure the existing level
of market access already in effect at the time of China's accession
for U.S. services companies currently operating in China, protecting
against new restrictions.
The Agreement Strengthens Our Ability To Ensure Fair Trade And To
Protect Ohio Agricultural And Manufacturing Base From Import Surges,
Unfair Pricing, And Abusive Investment Practices Such As Offsets Or
Forced Technology Transfer.
Prior to the negotiations, Democrats and Republicans in Congress
raised legitimate concerns about the importance of safeguards against
unfair competition. As a result, no agreement on WTO accession has
ever contained stronger measures to strengthen guarantees of fair
trade and to address practices that distort trade and investment. This
agreement addresses those concerns through:
-- A China-specific safeguard. For the first 12 years -- in addition
to the existing global safeguard provisions -- China has also agreed
to a country-specific safeguard that is stronger and more targeted
relief than that provided under our current Section 201 law. This
ensures that the U.S. can take effective action in case of increased
imports of a particular product from China that cause or threaten to
cause market disruption in the United States. This applies to all
industries, permits us to act based on a lower showing of injury, and
permits us to act specifically against imports from China.
-- Strong anti-dumping protections. The agreement includes a provision
recognizing that the U.S. may employ special methods, designed for
non-market economies, to counteract dumping for 15 years after China's
accession.
-- Requiring China to eliminate barriers to U.S. companies that can
cost Ohio jobs and technology. For the first time, Americans will have
a means, accepted under the WTO rules, to combat such measures as
forced technology transfer, mandated offsets, local content
requirements and other practices intended to drain jobs and technology
away from the U.S. As stated above, we will be able to export to China
from Akron, rather than seeing companies forced to set up factories in
China in order to sell products there.
-- Provisions in WTO rules that allow the U.S. -- even when dealing
with a country enjoying NTR status -- to continue to block imports of
goods made with prison labor, to maintain our export control policies,
to use our trade laws, and to withdraw benefits including NTR in a
national security emergency.
Refusal To Pass PNTR Would Put Ohio Farmers, Manufacturing, Workers At
A Disadvantage.
The United States must grant China permanent NTR or lose the full
market access benefits of the agreement we negotiated, rights to
enforce China's commitments through WTO dispute settlement, and
special import protections. If Congress were to refuse to allow the
United States to grant China permanent NTR, our Asian and European
competitors would reap these benefits. Farmers, workers, and
businesses in Ohio and elsewhere would be left behind, and we would
lose key elements negotiated in November to protect our workers from
unfair import surges from China.
China's Accession Will Help Promote Reform In China And Create A Safer
World.
The agreement will encourage Chinese leaders to move in the direction
of meeting the demands of the Chinese people for openness,
accountability, and reform. The agreement:
-- Deepens market reforms. Obligates China to deepen its market
reforms, empowering leaders who want their country to move further and
faster toward economic freedom. This agreement will expose China to
global competition and thereby bring China under even more pressure to
privatize its state-owned industries and expand the role of the market
in the Chinese economy. Chinese as well as foreign businessmen will
gain the right to import and export on their own, and to sell their
products without going through government middlemen.
-- Accelerates removal of government from lives of China's people.
Accelerates a process that is removing the government from vast areas
of China's economic life. China's people will have greater scope to
live their lives as they see fit. In opening China's
telecommunications market, including to Internet and satellite
services, the agreement will over time expose the Chinese people to
information, ideas and debate from around the world. As China's people
become more mobile, prosperous, and aware of alternative ways of life,
they will seek greater say in the decisions that affect their lives.
-- Strengthens rule of law in China. Obliges the Chinese government to
publish laws and regulations and subjects pertinent decisions to
review of an international body. That will begin to strengthen the
rule of law in China and increase the likelihood that it will play by
global rules as well. It will advance our larger interest in bringing
China into international agreements and institutions that can make it
a more constructive player in the world, with a stake in preserving
peace and stability.
(end text)
(Distributed by the Office of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)



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