The World Trade Organization highlighted China’s “lack of transparency” on industrial subsidies, suggesting the absence of such public information is fueling complaints from other nations about the threat of Chinese goods flooding the global economy.
Beijing’s disclosures are not complete and detailed enough “to have a clear picture of China’s support programs,” the WTO secretariat said Wednesday in a trade policy review of the world’s No. 2 economy and the first such appraisal since 2021.
According to the WTO, China’s notifications on subsidies “do not provide information on expenditure levels in sectors where government support is likely to have global repercussions, such as aluminium, electric vehicles, solar modules, glass, shipbuilding, semiconductors, or steel.”
The Geneva-based trade institution noted that the prevalence of Chinese state-owned companies made it hard to get a full picture of the level of government support. The WTO also criticized the authorities for not providing information on the overall endowment of the funds Beijing has set up to invest into industry.
“The incentives provided by these funds have generally not been notified to the WTO,” the report stated, adding that available estimates of the money they have available range from 1.9 trillion yuan ($260 billion) to 6.5 trillion yuan.
“Given the importance of the Chinese economy and the size of government support accorded to individual companies, China’s support measures can affect global markets, downstream industries, and individual value chains,” the report said.
However, “such effects of China’s support cannot be quantified in general, as relevant data are not publicly available,” the WTO’s staff said in the report, adding that “the overall lack of transparency on China’s government support may also contribute to debates on what is perceived by some as overcapacity in certain sectors.”
On Wednesday in Italy, trade ministers from the Group of Seven developed nations reiterated their collective crackdown on excess production, stopping short of singling out China or any other culprit.
“We will support diplomatic efforts with those contributing to overcapacity to address the issue at its source, while intensifying engagement with developing countries and emerging markets on our shared concerns on these practices,” they said in a joint statement.
In May, the Biden administration announced tariff hikes on $18 billion worth of Chinese goods, targeting an array of imports such as semiconductors, electric vehicles and solar cells. The EU provisionally introduced tariffs as high as 48% on EVs in the beginning of July, with definitive duties planned for November after negotiations with China.
China’s Response
Beijing pushed back against the WTO’s assertions, arguing in its own report that “industrial subsidies are important policy tools” for developing nations to modernize their economies and raise living standards. While the government said it was willing to talk about these subsidies at the WTO, Beijing pushed for a very limited discussion.
“The directions, objectives, formats and terms of reference of such discussions should be clearly defined to prevent generalized and macro discussions of state intervention or industrial policies,” according to the Chinese response which was also released Wednesday. “The discussion shall by no means touch upon the economic systems and development models of members.”
The Chinese report also made oblique criticisms of the US and others, arguing that “some countries advocate to decouple with others, attempting to politicize and weaponize economic and trade issues or overstretch the concept of security.”
This week Beijing requested the WTO start a panel looking into its March complaint about US subsidies for EVs, after the two sides failed to reach agreement on the issue.
While the US and the EU remain China’s most important export markets, their share has decreased over the last three years. Other markets including Russia, India or the Middle East have filled the gap.
Formed nearly 30 years ago as a forum to negotiate lower tariffs globally, the WTO is struggling to convince its biggest members to avoid raising tariffs and erecting other trade barriers. In addition, the possibility that Donald Trump will be elected president again in the US — with his plan to impose universal tariffs of 10% — poses a risk to the WTO’s ability to continue functioning with any relevance.