The European Commission, the executive body of the European
Union (EU), on Wednesday pushed forward a proposal to impose
definitive anti-dumping duties on Chinese and Vietnamese leather
shoes.
The duties proposed by EU Trade Commissioner Peter Mandelson
were 16.5 percent for Chinese imports and 10 percent for Vietnamese
products.
The proposal had been rejected earlier in the year. EU Member
states in July rejected Mandelson's measure by introducing instead
a deferred duty system that would allow 80 percent of Chinese and
Vietnamese shoes to enter the EU free of any anti-dumping duties,
with shoes entering above that allowance being subject to higher
tariffs.
Mandelson came up with this latest plan in late July, which was
again rejected by member states.
The commission said on Wednesday that it would "try its luck"
since the proposal was rejected by only a narrow margin in July at
the advisory level. "It will now return to member states for a
legally binding vote. Member states may be asked to explain the
legal rationale for their votes."
It said it is confident in the legal merits of the current
proposal.
This proposal has brought to light differences between the free
market supporters such as Britain, Denmark, Germany and Sweden --
who strongly oppose the imposition of protectionist tariffs that
would raise prices for consumers -- and shoe manufacturing
countries such as Italy, Spain, France, Poland and Portugal.
The measure could last five years if approved. The proposal also
includes children's shoes, which were excluded from provisional
duties.
The exclusion of children's shoes in the provisional measures
was for community interest grounds to prevent even small additional
costs being passed on to parents of young families, explained the
commission on Wednesday.
However, there is considerable evidence of very serious fraud by
importers that trade women's shoes as children's shoes. This makes
the exclusion very difficult to implement in practice, the
commission added.
Sport shoes remain excluded from the proposed definitive
measure.
The commission introduced provisional anti-dumping duties
against Chinese and Vietnamese leather shoes in April. The
provisional measure expires on October 6. If member states cannot
agree on a definitive measure, no punitive duties will be imposed
on Chinese and Vietnamese shoes.
According to data released by the commission, Chinese-made shoes
accounted for half of the overall shoe market in 2005: 1.25 billion
pairs out of 2.5 billion pairs. About a third of the shoes sold in
the EU market in 2005 were leather shoes while products covered by
the proposed definitive measure would cover 11 percent of the total
EU shoe market.
(Xinhua News Agency August 31, 2006)