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Australia suspends WTO case against China to resolve barley dispute
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  • Australia suspends WTO case against China to resolve barley dispute

Australia suspends WTO case against China to resolve barley dispute

FP Staff • April 11, 2023, 14:52:35 IST
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China closed its doors to Australian barley in May 2020 by imposing a huge 80 per cent tariff after the previous Australian government called for an independent inquiry into the origins of and responses to the COVID-19 pandemic.

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Australia suspends WTO case against China to resolve barley dispute

Canberra: In a bid to renew and repair its relations with Beijing, Australia has suspended a complaint to the World Trade Organization to reopen the Chinese market to Australian barley for the first time in three years. The move is taken by the new government to get access to the Chinese market for Australian barley. It may be noted that China closed its doors to Australian barley in May 2020 by imposing a huge 80 per cent tariff after the previous Australian government called for an independent inquiry into the origins of and responses to the COVID-19 pandemic. The previous conservative government responded by challenging the tariff in the Geneva-based trade body. Foreign Minister Penny Wong on Tuesday said her centre-left Labor Party government, which was elected in May, had reached an agreement with China that “creates a pathway for the resolution of the dispute over Australian barley.” China had agreed to review its duties on the grain over three or four months, she said, and Australia will temporarily suspend the WTO dispute during that review period. “Obviously, if the duty is not lifted at the end of the review period, we’ll resume our dispute in the WTO,” Wong said. The Chinese Embassy in Australia did not immediately respond to a request for comment Tuesday. Wong said the Chinese review offered a “significantly shorter time frame” to resolve the dispute than the WTO offered. Official and unofficial trade barriers are costing Australian exporters an estimated $14 billion a year in products including beef, seafood and wood. Trade Minister Don Farrell said Australia hoped the review would become a template for resolving other trade disputes with China, particularly over wine. While barley growers have found other markets, Australian wine producers have struggled to find alternative buyers after China imposed trade barriers in late 2020. Australia has denied China’s claims that it was subsidizing wine to export it at artificially low prices. Grain Producers Australia, which represents barley exporters, welcomed the new agreement. “This process to reach a resolution would be significantly shorter than if the WTO process continued,” Grain Producers Australian chair Barry Large said in a statement. “We welcome the Labor government’s constructive dialogue and positive progress towards stabilizing the relationship with China, and creating this process and opportunity to recommence the barley trade,” Large said. In February, Australian and Chinese trade ministers held their first bilateral meeting since 2019, showing signs of improved relations since the previous government was voted out after nine years in power. During the online exchange, Farrell accepted his Chinese counterpart Wang Wentao’s invitation to visit China. A date has yet to be set. In December, Wong became the first Australian foreign minister to visit China in four years. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese raised his concerns about trade in November when he took part in the first formal bilateral meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping by an Australian government leader since 2016. China recently lifted trade restrictions on Australian coal that were first imposed in late 2020. With inputs from agencies. Read all the  Latest News ,  Trending News ,  Cricket News ,  Bollywood News , India News  and  Entertainment News  here. Follow us on  Facebook,  Twitter and  Instagram.

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