Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) have passed a non-legislative resolution stating that China’s exports to the European Union (EU) must be treated in a “non-standard” way “until China has fulfilled the EU’s five criteria for market economy status. The resolution was passed in the European Parliament by a vote of 546 to 28, with 77 abstentions.
According to a press release issued by the MEPS, “This non-standard methodology, for use in anti-dumping and anti-subsidy investigations, should assess whether China’s costs and prices are market-based, so as to ensure a level playing field for EU industry and defend EU jobs.”
Supporters of the resolution say that that 56 of the EU’s current 73 anti-dumping measures apply to imports from China, with many of those pertaining to steel and other metals. China’s excessive production of steel is considered by many critics as the predominant reason for steel and ferrous scrap prices that have been trending downward most of the past two years.
For the resolution to mean anything, the MEPS acknowledge that “the EU must to find a way to [follow a non-standard protocol] in compliance with its international obligations in the World Trade Organization (WTO), and in particular China’s WTO Accession Protocol, which provides for changes in how China is to be treated after 11 December 2016.”
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