The federal government is facing calls to remove a special trading deal
that allows China to dump cheap steel and aluminium on the Australia market.
A study by the McKell Institute released today says Australia's
decision in 2004 to award China "market economy" status has backfired
and Australian companies are being damaged by the predatory dumping of products
at below market cost.
The call to review World Trade Organisation (WTO) rules on China's access to Australia's market comes as big steel producers like Bluescope and Arrium
struggle to complete in a world of too much cheap steel.
Source: McKell Institute report on Australias' anti-dumping framework |
Australian Workers Union national secretary Scott McDine seized on the
McKell study and pointed to major construction in central Sydney as evidence to
the damage caused by steel and aluminium dumping.
"We've got Darling Harbour and the convention centre. There is not
one scrap in that whole contruction of Australian steel. That is Chinese and
Korean steel," Mr McDine told the ABC's AM program.
"There is not one bit of steel out of the Port Kembla steelworks
and not one bit of steel out of the Arrium steelworks in Whyalla in
there."
Mr McDine said Australia needs to act on parts of the "China
accession protocol" under WTO rules which will expire at the end of the
year to prevent China's ability to dump products without paying appropriate
duties.
"It seriously needs to be debated by Australia as an absolute
necessity and it needs to be done by the end of this year," Mr McDine
said.
"The rest of the OECD nations around the world have not given
China market status. It is now becoming increasingly apparent that will not be
the case at the end of 2016."
Predatory dumping from China hurts businesses of all sizes including
the Australian company Capral which manufactures aluminium products like
windows and doors to industrial customers.
Managing director Tony Dragicevich told AM that over the past decade
China has flooded 40 percent of the local market.
"It's made life extremely difficult. We've had to lay off a number
of people over the years, we've had to close a factory and our employee numbers
have reduced significantly," Mr Dragicevich said.
"Our business has not been able to pay a dividend to shareholders
for the past 13 years and that's made it difficult to raise capital and to
continue to invest.
"Australia is currently one of only three developed countries
which consider China as a market economy and that means Australia is a
reasonably easy target."
The Australian government recognised China as a "market
economy" in the leadup to the China-Australia Free Trade Agreement which
came into effect last December.
However the Department of Foreign Affairs & Trade says the
recognition "has
not prevented Australia from remedying injurious dumping of products from
China."
"The Australian Government is committed
to a strong anti-dumping regime to ensure our manufacturers and producers can
compete against imports on a level playing field".
The spokesman said investigations into
alleged dumped products from China are treated on a case by case basis by the
Anti-Dumping Commission.
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