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TRADE WARS
China links EU trade probe with eurozone debt help
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Feb 23, 2012


China said Thursday a European investigation into imports of Chinese-made specialised steel products would "undermine" efforts to combat the eurozone crisis.

The European Commission has launched an anti-subsidy and anti-dumping investigation into coated sheet steel products, widely used in the building industry, after complaints Chinese imports were hurting European manufacturers.

At the same time, European leaders have sought contributions from Beijing to the eurozone's bailout fund.

China's commerce ministry expressed its "strong dissatisfaction" at the steel investigation and said it would send the "wrong signal to the world of trade protectionism", according to a statement on its website.

The probe "not only casts a shadow over China-EU steel trade, but it would also undermine the joint efforts of China and Europe to deal with the crisis", the statement said.

China and Europe have locked horns over a range of trade issues in recent years, including metal fasteners, potato starch and modems, but this appears to be the first time they have linked a trade spat to its debt crisis assistance.

European leaders last year approached China, which holds the world's largest foreign exchange reserves, to invest in a bail-out fund to rescue debt-stricken states.

Chinese leaders said last week they were considering using Europe's bail-out funds to help address the continent's fiscal woes, but stopped short of saying how the Asian power might be prepared to contribute.

Chinese companies, meanwhile, have been ramping up investment in Europe, buying utilities, energy firms and even luxury yacht makers, raising concerns that Beijing could gain too much influence over debt-laden economies.

Premier Wen Jiabao responded to these worries earlier this month saying China had neither the ability nor the intention to "buy Europe".

But the remarks by the commerce ministry suggest Beijing may try to leverage its help in the debt crisis to silence critics of its trade policies.

Europe, along with the United States, has repeatedly criticised China over a range of issues including the value of its currency and restrictions on exports of rare earths, vital in the manufacturing of many high-tech products.

At a summit in Beijing last week, China and Europe agreed to give fresh impetus to Beijing's efforts to attain full market economy status for China, a technical designation that would remove certain restrictions to Chinese exports and investments in Europe.

But EU leaders say the Asian giant has not yet met the necessary conditions, pointing out that most of China's largest companies are state-owned and their leaders appointed by the government.

The European Commission said the two investigations would take up to 15 months to complete, according to a statement on its website.

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Hong Kong exports drop sharply in January
Hong Kong (AFP) Feb 23, 2012 - The value of goods exported from Hong Kong fell sharply in January compared to a year earlier, official figures showed Thursday, as Europe's debt woes played havoc with global markets.

The value of total exports from the southern Chinese trading hub dropped 8.6 percent from a year earlier to HK$259.3 billion ($33.43 billion), after a rise of 7.4 percent in December, the statistics office said.

"Apart from destinations in Asia, decreases were also registered in the values of total exports to some major destinations in other regions, in particular Germany (-8.6%) and the USA (-4.0%)," it said in a statement.

The value of imports fell 10.5 percent from a year earlier to HK$268.2 billion, compared to a year-on-year increase of 8.1 percent in December.

The trade deficit stood at HK$8.9 billion in January.

A government spokesman said Hong Kong's export outlook "remains bleak in the near term, as the evolving eurozone debt crisis continues to plague the global economic outlook".

Financial Secretary John Tsang warned earlier this month that Hong Kong's economy could shrink in the first quarter of 2012 due to weak export markets, before rebounding to post growth of 1.0-3.0 percent over the year.

The city's economy contracted in the second quarter of 2011 before returning to positive territory in the third quarter.



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TRADE WARS
Report: Global trade picking up faster
New York (UPI) Feb 21, 2012
Global trade may be picking up faster than originally anticipated and that may be good news for U.S. commerce and business elsewhere. Until recently, hopes were pinned on trade accelerating no earlier than 2015. But recent findings from business activities worldwide suggest international trade growth in the United States and elsewhere around the world will accelerate beginning in 2014, ... read more


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