China said Friday that its own tariffs imposed in an effort to restrain
surging exports won't apply to goods already affected by foreign controls, an
apparent attempt to prod Washington to lift textile import quotas.
China announced a sharp increase in export tariffs last week in an effort to
avert a trade war with the United States and Europe, where imports of Chinese
textiles have soared since a global quota system ended on Jan. 1.
"Enterprises that already are subject to textile limitations abroad will not
be subject to the export tariffs," state television said on its noon national
newscast, citing the Commerce Ministry.
The announcement appeared to be an effort to persuade Washington to let China
use its own measures to rein in the export surge.
The United States imposed import quotas in mid-May on Chinese-made cotton
trousers, underwear, man-made fiber shirts and other goods. They limit annual
growth of Chinese textile imports to 7.5 percent¡ªwell below the 54 percent jump
reported so far this year by the U.S. Commerce Department.
Beijing criticized that action as unfair and said the United States and
Europe were partly to blame for the surge because they failed to keep promises
to open their markets earlier.
The report Friday didn't say which products would be exempt from the tax, due
to take effect on June 1. The government earlier said it would increase export
duties on 74 types of goods by up to 400 percent.
The government of U.S. President George W. Bush has said little about the
Chinese measures, only that it hoped to discuss them with Chinese trade
officials.
Textiles are one of a series of disputes that have strained relations between
China and its trading partners. The United States, EU and other governments also
are pressing Beijing to raise the state-set value of its currency and to stamp
out rampant product piracy.
U.S. Commerce Secretary Carlos Gutierrez, in an interview with The Associated
Press on Friday, wouldn't say whether China's announcement would change the
administration's strategy.
He said he expected this and other trade issues to come up when he is in
Beijing next week to meet with China's Commerce Minister Bo Xilai.
"We'll be talking about a lot of matters of interest to both countries and
one of them of course will be textiles," Gutierrez said. "This is an opportunity
to understand how they are thinking about this important issue, and I will know
a lot more after my visit."
China imposed a 1.3 percent export tax on textiles in December on the eve of
the end of global quotas, but American officials said that was too low to make a
difference.
The EU hasn't imposed controls but began investigating last month after
reporting that imports of some Chinese textiles have risen by up to 534 percent
this year.
The outcome could mean that the bloc re-imposes some
quotas.