China launches suit against US at WTO over chip curbs: Report | International Trade News
In October the United States published a sweeping set of export controls aimed at kneecapping China’s semiconductor sector.
China has launched a suit at the World Trade Organization (WTO) against the United States over its chip export control measures, the state-backed Global Times said in a tweet, citing China’s commerce ministry.
The suit, filed on Monday, December 12, is a way of seeking to address Chinese concerns through legal means and a necessary way to defend China’s “legitimate interests”, the tweet said on Tuesday.
The Chinese mission to the WTO in Geneva and the US Trade Representative did not immediately respond to Reuters’ requests for comment. A WTO spokesperson declined to comment.
If the alleged Chinese complaint is confirmed, it would represent the first step in a long procedure. The US has blocked appointments to the WTO’s top ruling body on trade disputes, meaning some rows never get settled.
In October the US published a sweeping set of export controls aimed at kneecapping China’s advancement in the semiconductor industry.
The alleged complaint by China on US chip export curbs comes days after a WTO ruling against Washington in a separate suit about metal tariffs that had been brought by China, among others. The US, a regular critic of the WTO’s arbitration proceedings, rejected the WTO’s findings.
That complaint dated back to the administration of US President Donald Trump, which imposed 25 percent tariffs on steel imports and 10 percent on aluminium in 2018, using Section 232 of a 1962 act that allows the president to restrict imports if they are threatening national security. Free trade partners Canada and Mexico were later exempted.
The tariffs prompted several WTO members including China to challenge the measure and last week, a three-person WTO panel issued its findings in the cases brought by China, Norway, Switzerland and Turkey. Cases brought by India and Russia are still pending.
The administration of US President Joe Biden has kept in place the metals tariffs that were one of the centrepieces of Trump’s “America First” strategy.
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