Chinese shoe-makers will continue to fight the European Union's
(EU) dumping claim, after the EU revealed it is likely to implement
punitive quota-based measures on Chinese leather shoes.
The vow to battle on came from Wu Zhenchang, president of a
Guangzhou-based shoe-making company and leader of a shoe-makers
coalition.
Under the European Commission's draft final anti-dumping
charges, importers will be allowed to buy 140 million pairs of
leather shoes each year from China and 95 million from Viet
Nam.
The figures are about 80 percent of the EU's current imports
from the two countries.
And the union will collect punitive duties of up to 23 percent
for leather shoes from China and 29.5 for Vietnamese shoes, sold
over the annual quotas.
"We have already submitted our opinion on the final ruling," Wu
said in a telephone interview yesterday.
He said the proposal indicated the EU's attempt to re-introduce
quotas for shoe imports, which were eliminated among World Trade
Organization members at the beginning of last year, and violated
free trade rules.
The proposal has aroused great concerns in China's shoe-making
industry.
Yu Shengxing, a lawyer who represents Chinese firms in the case,
said he was worried the proposal would drive Chinese exporters into
a price war.
He said with EU importers only allowed a limited number of
imports every year, Chinese firms would be forced to slash prices
to win contracts.
The European Commission is expected to publish its official
final rulings before October 6 after a vote of member states. The
quota-based system is likely to take effect before next April.
Worried about increasing footwear imports from China flooding
its markets and hurting local shoe-makers, the European economic
bloc launched a dumping charge against Chinese leather shoe makers
last July.
The EU is now phasing in anti-dumping duties, which will be
increased up to 19.4 percent by October, on Chinese leather
shoes.
China exported 6.9 billion pairs of shoes to Europe last
year.
(China Daily July 20, 2006)