China farm exports causing trade tension - UC-Davis economist says
03/05/2010
Chinese farm exports are set to become a greater source of trade tension as China boosts its production and becomes a bigger player in world markets for labor-intensive crops, a US agricultural economist has said.
Importers around the globe have already launched more than 30 farm trade cases against China in recent years, including US cases aimed at stemming rising imports of orange juice, garlic and mushrooms.
"Personally, I think there will be more trade disputes," said Colin Carter of University of California-Davis, noting that problems with food safety issues have pared Chinese food exports in recent years.
"China will get through this food quality problem, trade barriers are coming down, and (disputes) will show up as anti-dumping cases," Carter said in an interview on the sidelines of the US Agriculture Department's outlook forum.
US companies, steel producers and unions have filed dozens of domestic trade complaints against Chinese imports as exports of manufactured goods surged at a time of rising US jobless numbers.
China reaction
China has reacted with trade cases of its own, including new anti-dumping duties on US chicken exports, which US poultry exporters have said will price them out of their No 2 market, worth $620 million for the first 11 months of 2009.
The political and trade strains between the two nations are unlikely to spill over into soybean trade, Carter said. Soybeans are the top US export to China, which the USDA forecast will become the top overall foreign market for US farm goods in a few years.
China depends on soybean imports for vegetable oil and the high-protein meal used to feed its massive and expanding livestock sector.
Source: Syndigate.info, March 2, 2010 |
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