US Says No to India on Talks at WTO on 25% Steel and 10% Aluminium Tariffs
·
Second Request on Talks to Result in
Panel
·
India’s Retaliatory Tariff on US due
on 17 Dec
·
Eight Others including EU and China
too in WTO Over US Metal Tariffs
The US has rejected the first requests for panels by
India and Switzerland at the World Trade Organisation
(WTO) to settle the issue of penal duties imposed on their steel and aluminium by Washington. The two countries will now have to
apply again at the dispute settlement body's (DSB) next meeting which the US
will not be authorised to reject.
“The two argued that the US actions were, in effect and
content, safeguard measures and that they were both concerned the US was using
national security as a justification for the tariffs,” a Geneva-based official said.
At the meeting of the DSB on Wednesday 21 November, the
second requests of seven members including China, the European Union, Canada,
Mexico, Norway, Russia and Turkey to challenge the decision by the United
States to impose additional import duties on steel and aluminium
products, was accepted.
The Trump administration imposed an additional 25 per
cent tariff on steel imports and 10 per cent on aluminium
imports against the complainants in March this year. The US contended that the
tariffs were imposed owing to national security concerns and the WTO had no
authority to adjudicate on the matter.
At the DSB meeting, the US objected to the request for a
single panel made by the seven members to look at their similar complaints and
said that the DSB should decide on such matters through consensus. “Apart from
the similarity between the cases, the reason why the members had asked for a
single panel was also the fact that the DSB was short of judges as the appointments
process has been stalled by the US for the last few months and vacancies are
not being filled,” the official said.
In its submission, Switzerland said the US tariffs will
have a harmful effect on the multilateral trading system as a whole and that it
was concerned the spiralling protectionist measures
will have a negative effect on global value chains. India said it shared the
view that the WTO system will be undermined if it fails to allow for review of
another member's unilateral actions.
Some members such as China, Canada, the EU and Mexico
have already imposed retaliatory tariffs against US goods equivalent to the
estimated loss suffered by their steel and aluminium
sectors due to the higher tariffs. India announced retaliatory tariffs totalling around $134 million on 29 American items in June
this year but is yet to impose it.